Kimball v. Morris

43 Mass. 573
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1841
StatusPublished

This text of 43 Mass. 573 (Kimball v. Morris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kimball v. Morris, 43 Mass. 573 (Mass. 1841).

Opinion

Dewey, J.

The petitioners ask this court to exescise ns» supervising power over the proceedings of the judge- of probate for the county of Hampden, in a matter pending before him in a case of insolvency arising under the St. of 1838, c. 163, by directing a writ of mandamus to issue, requiring the said judge to issue his process for the arrest and imprisonment of Lemuel Davis, the alleged insolvent, for refusing to obey the order of said judge requiring said Davis to appear before him at a meeting of the creditors, and to produce a schedule of his debts, and submit himself to an examination on oath.

[576]*576To tne granting of the prayer of this petition for a mandamus, various objections were urged in the argument of the case, which we have not particularly considered, as we apprehend, upon the case as stated in the petition for a mandamus, there would obviously be a defect in the preliminary proceedings before the judge of probate, which alone would, in the present state of the application, restrain us from requiring of him any further proceedings of a compulsory nature against the debtor.

The proceedings under the insolvent law did not, in the present case, originate with the debtor, but are compulsory in their character, proceeding wholly from the application of a creditor. The authority for proceedings against a debtor, upon the petition of his creditors, is found in § 19 of the act already cited ; which, after reciting specifically the various grounds upon which such application may be made by a creditor, and what facts are necessary to be set forth in such petition, further provides that “ if the facts set forth in said petition shall appear to be true to the judge or the master in chancery to whom the same shall be presented, he shall forthwith, by warrant under his hand and seal, appoint some suitable person as messenger, to take possession of all the estate, real and personal, of such debtor,” &c. The first step on the part of the petitioning creditor is, therefore, to offer the proper evidence to the judge, or master in chancery, before whom the case is pending, that the facts set forth in the petition are truly and correctly stated ; and upon the sufficiency of the evidence produced, the judge or master must so far adjudicate, as to find that “ the facts set forth in the petition appear to be true,” before issuing the warrant and taking further cognizance of the case.

But this petition for a mandamus does not allege that the facts, set forth in the petition of the creditor seeking this compulsory process against the debtor, were made to appear to the said judge of probate to be true, before the issuing of a warrant appointing a messenger to take possession of the property of the debtor. This, as it seems to the court, is a material allegation, which ought to be distinctly set forth, and shown affirmatively by the prope- evidence, if denied by the other party, before [577]*577this court would proceed to grant the writ of mandamus prayed for, even if the other objections taken were untenable. In the present state of the application no opinion is given with regard to these objections.

Petition for a mandamus refused.

After the preceding opinion was delivered, the petitioners mov jd for leave to amend their petition by inserting therein that “it was made to appear to the judge of probate, upon the original application, and before the issuing of the warrant appointing a messenger, that the facts set forth in said application of the said Robert Ashton were true ; ” which amendment being found conformable to the record of the proceedings on said petition, was allowed by the court. The opinion of the court upon the general questions raised in the case was delivered by

The petition in this case having been amended, so far as to remove the objection stated in the opinion of the court heretofore pronounced, the case now comes before us in such a form as to require an adjudication upon the more important questions raised in the argument of the counsel for the respondent.

The defence is placed upon three distinct and independent grounds. 1. That no proper case existed, which could authorize a proceeding in insolvency of a compulsory character, under St. 1838, c. 163, § 19 : 2. That the insolvent debtor had no notice of the application or proceedings against him, prior to the appointment, by the judge of probate, of a messenger to take possession of his estate : 3. That the judge of probate had no authority to require the attendance of the insolvent debtor at a third meeting of his creditors, for the purpose of producing a schedule of his debts, or submitting himself to an examination on oath upon all matters concerning his estate, and in relation to all debts due or claimed from him.

The proceedings in the present case were instituted before the judge of probate, under that part of § 19 of the statute before mentioned, which authorizes the process, in involuntary insolvency, against “any person whose goods or estate are attached on mesne process in any civil action founded on contract, for the sum of $ 100 or upwards, and who shall not, on or before the [578]*578last day of the term of the court to which the process is returnable, dissolve the attachment in the manner hereinafter provided ” — upon the application of any creditor having a demand against such person to the amount of one hundred dollars.

1. The first inquiry is, whether the goods or estate of Davis, the alleged insolvent, were attached on mesne process, within the meaning of the statute. The suit against Davis was a trustee process, and the attachment of his goods and estate was by summoning a third person as his trustee, alleging, in the usual form, that the debtor had deposited goods and estate in the hands and possession of the trustee. At the return term, the trustee did not appear and file an answer, but was defaulted ; and subsequently the proceedings now brought into question were instituted against the debtor by the judge of probate, on the application of a creditor.

It is contended, upon this state of the facts, that inasmuch as no specific goods or estate of the debtor were attached on mesne process, the debtor was not subject to these proceedings by reason of his neglect to dissolve the attachment. But upon full consideration' of the nature and effect of. such attachment of estate in the hands of a trustee, the court are of opinion, that it falls within the case contemplated by the statute, and equally subjects the party to be proceeded against as an insolvent debtor, as any other form of attachment would. In fact it may be, and often is, virtually an attachment of specific property which might have been reached by the ordinary mode of attachment; and this process is resorted to as a more convenient, but equally effectual mode of acquiring a lien upon the property.

It was suggested in the argument — and the suggestion would have furnished a strong reason for adopting the construction contended for by the counsel for the defendant, if the position had been found tenable — that an attachment under the trustee process was not dissolvable at the election of the principal defendant, and therefore that his omission to dissolve it, during the first term of the court at which the process was returnable, ought not to subject the party to be proceeded against as an insolvent debt- or. But we are satisfied that the provisions of § 20 of the statute [579]*579are broad' enough to embrace an attachment under the trustee process.

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43 Mass. 573, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kimball-v-morris-mass-1841.