Mayer v. Cahalin

16 F. Cas. 1229, 5 Sawy. 355, 11 Chi. Leg. News 176, 1879 U.S. App. LEXIS 2035
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Oregon
DecidedJanuary 7, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 16 F. Cas. 1229 (Mayer v. Cahalin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mayer v. Cahalin, 16 F. Cas. 1229, 5 Sawy. 355, 11 Chi. Leg. News 176, 1879 U.S. App. LEXIS 2035 (circtdor 1879).

Opinion

DEADY, District Judge.

This action is brought by the plaintiff, a citizen of California, against the defendant, to recover the sum of seven thousand nine hundred and sixty-seven dollars and ninety-three cents, the balance due upon certain goods, wares and merchandise theretofore sold and delivered to him. On December 23. 1S78. the plaintiff sueil out an attachment, upon which the marshal took the defendant’s stock in trade into his possession.

The defendant now moves to dissolve the attachment, upon the ground that on December 30, 187S, he made an assignment of all his property, of the value of twelve thousand nine hundred and seventy-nine dollars and fifty-five cents, to an assignee for the benefit of all his creditors, in proportion to the amount of their several claims amounting in the aggregate to twenty-one thousand three hundred and thirty-eight dollars and fifty-two cents, in accordance with the provisions of the act entitled “An act to secure creditors a just division of the estates of debtors who convey to assignees for the [1230]*1230benefit of creditors,” approved October 18, 1878; and that on January 7, 1S79, the as-signee aforesaid demanded of the marshal the property taken on said attachment, which he refused to surrender.

This act (Sess. Laws 1878, p. 36) provides that no general assignment for the benefit of creditors shall be valid unless made for the benefit of all the creditor's pro rata; and that “such assignments shall have the effect to discharge any and all attachments on which judgment shall not have been taken at the date of such assignment.” It may be remarked, in passing, that judgments are not taken on attachments, but are given in actions wherein attachments may be or have been issued.

By section 933 of the Kevised Statutes an attachment of property in the national courts to satisfy any judgment that may be recovered therein, “shall be dissolved when any contingency occurs by which, according to the laws of the state where said court is held, such attachment would be dissolved upon like process in the courts of the state.”

Upon this section counsel for the plaintiff admits that if the act of October 18, 1S78,. aforesaid, is valid, this motion must prevail; but maintains that this act is unconstitutional and void because (1) it was passed in contravention of section 20 of article 4 of the constitution — the subject thereof not being expressed in the title; and (2) it was passed in contravention of section 22 of said article-certain sections of the Code on the subject of attachments being thereby amended without being set forth and published at full length.

The first objection is sought to be maintained by showing that while the “subject” expressed in the title of the act is the just division of a debtor’s property among his creditors — in effect, the body of the act provides for or permits a very unjust distribution of said property. For instance, while it provides that an assignment shall dissolve an attachment, it leaves judgments by confession, which may have been made in the mean time, or at any time, for the very purpose of preventing a just distribution of the property, in full force. Upon these judgments, executions may issue and be levied upon all the property of a debtor, and leave nothing for the assignment to operate on — its only efl ect in such case being to dissolve the attachment for the benefit of the creditors who have, with the assistance of the debtor, obtained judgments by confession. Besides, it provides that the assignment shall not pass any property not mentioned in the inventory. thus leaving such property liable to be taken on attachment by any creditor after the assignment. The effect of this is practically to invite and legalize a partial and fraudulent compliance with the act itself.

Evidently the object of the act was to prohibit insolvent debtors from preferring one creditor to another, and so far it is not obnoxious to the charge that its subject is not expressed in its title. But it must be admitted that in practice it will not accomplish such purpose, and that most probably it will operate as counsel contend — to secure an unequal, and, therefore, an unjust, distribution of a debtor’s property.

But 1 do not think that a court can say that the “subject” of an act is not expressed in its title because it may appear that, owing to unintentional errors and imperfections in its composition, its practical operation may be somewhat or altogether different from what was expressed or intended. Besides, what constitutes a just distribution of a debtor's property is a subject about which a variety of opinions may be entertained, and as to which there is no absolute or fixed standard to which we may refer as authority, The “subject” of this act is the distribution of an insolvent debtor’s property among his creditors in a certain contingency, and beyond a doubt so much is expressed in the ti-tie. It also purports that such distribution, is just — that is, according to the understanding of the legislative assembly — which I do not think is subject to judicial review.

It is also urged against the act under this head, that the “subject” of attachments is not expiessed in the title, though embraced in the body of the act, and, therefore, it is so far void. But I think the dissolution of attachments is certainly a “matter properly connected” with the “subject” of the distribution of an insolvent debtor’s property — particularly in a country where such property may be liable to attachment at the suit of a creditor — and, therefore, need not be otherwise expressed in the title.

As to the second objection: Section 22, aforesaid, provides that “no act shall ever be revised or amended by mere reference to its title, but the act revised, or section amended, shall lie set forth and published at full length.” In answer to this objection, counsel for the defendant insist (1) that the act in question does not amend any existing act; and (2i that if it does, it is only by implication, aud such an amendment is not within the purview of this provision of the constitution as construed by the supreme court of this state; citing Fleischner v. Chadwick, 5 Or. 153; Grant Co. v. Seis, Id. 243; Hurst v. Hawn, Id. 279.

I think the act does amend the Code as to the effect and discharge of attachments. It is not merely cumulative, as was the case in State v. Berry, 12 Iowa, 59, cited by counsel for defendant. It changes, limits and restrains the operation of section 142 of the Code so that the property taken on an attachment is no longer held as an absolute “security for the satisfaction of such judgment’’ as the plaintiff may obtain, but only upon condition the defendant in the meantime does not make an assignment, which he is almost certain to do, unless he is in collusion or friendly co-operation with the attaching creditor. The same is true of section [1231]*1231109. In effect this section by a reference to sections 128, 129, provides that an attachment shall not be discharged or dissolved unless it satisfactorily appears that there was not sufficient cause for its allowance — that it was issued wrongfully. But this act provides that it shall be discharged if the debtor makes an assignment before judgment.

In short, the provisions of the Code in relation to the effect of an attachment upon property taken thereon as security for a judgment and the dissolution thereof prior to judgment and the provisions of the act cannot co-exist. The application of one to the subject necessarily excludes the other. They are plainly repugnant to one another.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Smith v. Day
64 P. 812 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1901)
The Glaramara
10 F. 678 (D. Oregon, 1882)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 F. Cas. 1229, 5 Sawy. 355, 11 Chi. Leg. News 176, 1879 U.S. App. LEXIS 2035, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayer-v-cahalin-circtdor-1879.