McCall v. Hinkley & Woodward

4 Gill 128
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 15, 1846
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 4 Gill 128 (McCall v. Hinkley & Woodward) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCall v. Hinkley & Woodward, 4 Gill 128 (Md. 1846).

Opinion

Dorsey, J.,

delivered his opinion, as follows :

The only question designed to he decided by this opinion, is that which arises on the deed of the 24th of September 1840, from Carey, Weihered and O' Donnell, to Edward HinJcley and William Woodward, whereby the grantors, being unable to pay their debts, and in failing circumstances, (in other words insolvent debtors,) conveyed all their property to the grantees, in trust, to sell and dispose of the same, and to apply the proceeds thereof, after deducting the expenses incident to the trust, to the full satisfaction and payment of the claims of certain enumerated creditors of the grantors; and, “in the next place, to pay and appropriate the whole of the residue of such money, or so much thereof as may be necessary, to and amongst such of the creditors of the said Carey, Weihered and Company, as shall, within ninety days from the date of this deed, signify their assent to the terms thereof, and execute and deliver to the said parties of the first part, (that is, the grantors,) a full and final release, and discharge, of and from all claims and demands, to the time of executing these presents, &c., and after the full satisfaction and discharge of all the aforegoing claims, and all interest thereon, out of the residue, if any, shall pay all other creditors of said Carey, Weihered and Company.”

Whether an assignment, made by a debtor in insolvent circumstances, of all his property, for the benefit of all his creditors, with a proviso, that each creditor assenting to receive a dividend under such conveyance, shall, within some specified reasonable time, release the debtor from his claim against him, is fraudulent and void, under the 13 of Eliz., chap. 5, is a question on which, in the examination of the case before us, it is not intended to express any opinion. Believing that, even if the validity of such an assignment wore conceded, such a concession would fall far short of removing the fraudulent imputations cast upon the assignment under our consideration.

Before proceeding to an examination of the authorities referred to, as bearing upon this subject, let us see how the case [136]*136would stand upon the broad principles of morality, law, and justice, apart from all adjudications, or expressions of opinion by courts of justice, or eminent jurists. And, first, what are the obligations imposed on the debtor, and what the rights conferred on the creditor, by the character in which they respectively stand to each other? Upon principles of morality, law and justice, debtors are bound to apply their present property, and their future earnings and acquirements, to the payment of their just debts; and creditors, upon the clearest principles of natural justice, and of law, (irrespective of our insolvent system,) have a right to pursue such property, earnings, and acquirements, until their claims be fully satisfied and paid. Of this inherent right of the creditor, unless relinquished by his consent, the debtor has no right to deprive him. All unjust and indirect means, used by a debtor, to extort from his creditor a surrender of such, his rights; all physical or moral coercion, resorted to by the debtor, to effect such a purpose, are fraudulent, as well at common law, as under the statute of Eliz., against creditors, who, withholding their assent to such proceedings, are injured thereby. What is the nature? what was the design of the assignment before us? The answer is so unequivocally apparent upon its face, as to leave not a moment’s doubt upon the subject in the mind of him who reads it. Its object was, by a species of moral duress, by indirect means, by a violation of the principles of natural justice and right, to place a portion of the creditors in a condition, whereby they were to be compelled to relinquish all claim to any part of the present property of their debtor, or to surrender all right to seek payment out of his future earnings and acquirements. The injustice and impropriety of such an effort, on the part of the debtor, must shock the moral sense of every man, and its fraudulent design and effects, in legal contemplation, upon the rights of those creditors who refuse to accede to its terms, cannot, by argument or illustration, be made more obvious.

It was admitted, in the discussion of this case, (and such is the principle established by a current of authorities,) that, if the assignment contain but a part of the property of the debtor; or if, before the full payment of the entire claims of the credi[137]*137tors, any part, of the property assigned be reserved to the debtor, such an assignment is fraudulent and void. Void against whom? Not against the creditors, who, knowing its provisions, have assented thereto, and released their claims. But void as against dissenting creditors. But why fraudulent and void as to them? Is the injustice visited upon them? Is the detriment to which they are subjected? — is the fraudulent hindrance and delay in the recovery of their claims, greater? Nay, are they not much less under such assignments, than they are under that, now for our consideration? Sanction the validity of the present assignment, and it is a fact conceded in this cause, and is practically true, as to almost every assignment containing a provision similar to that which forms the subject matter of the present controversy, that the dissenting creditors are utterly excluded from all participation in any part of the debtor’s property owned at the time of the assignment. But what is the fraudulent injury sustained by a dissenting creditor in the aforementioned cases, in which the assignments are adjudged and admitted to be fraudulent, as against him? Unquestionably less than in the case now before us. He, in those cases, is left in the full enjoyment of his right to recover his claim out of the unassigned portion of his debtor’s property, or out of that part of the property assigned, which was reserved to the debtor. And, yet, in Massachusetts, and, it is believed, everywhere else, where such assignments have been submitted to the cognizance of judicial tribunals, in reference to the statute of Elizabeth, they have been held fraudulent and void, as against dissenting creditors.

Assuming, then, as against dissentient creditors, the invalidity of the assignments, by reason of the requisition of releases from creditors, in those cases where but a part of the debtor’s property is conveyed for the benefit of creditors, upon what possible ground can it be contended, that, as concerns dissenting creditors, assignments of the whole of the debtor’s property, with such stipulations for releases, are not fraudulent, and void? Is the nature of the transaction changed? Is it purified by the fact, that, in the latter case, the noncurring creditor is deprived of the whole of his debtor’s property? whereas, in the former [138]*138case, he is only deprived of a part. Yet, to this result, you must necessarily arrive to draw a distinction between the two cases, favorably to the latter. If the extent of the wrong and injury sustained by the suffering party, could in anywise affect the nature and character of the transaction, it is surely much greater in such latter than in the former case. And it should be borne in mind, that, in most, if not all of the cases in which has been adjudged the invalidity of assignments of part of the debtor’s property, with stipulations for releases by creditors receiving dividends under such deeds, all the property conveyed was not given to the assenting creditors, but their just dividends only.

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

Related

Cunningham v. Feinberg
107 A.3d 1194 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 2015)
Jersey Boulevard Corp. v. Lerner Stores Corp.
178 A. 707 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1935)
Howell v. Wm. T. Dixon & Bro.
21 Fla. 413 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1885)
Clayton v. Johnson
36 Ark. 406 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1880)
Thomas v. Trieber
3 Md. 11 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1852)
Sangston v. Gaither
3 Md. 40 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1852)
Kettlewell v. Stewart
8 Gill 472 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1849)
Albert v. Winn
7 Gill 446 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1849)
Winn v. Albert
2 Md. Ch. 42 (Maryland Chancery Ct, 1847)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Gill 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccall-v-hinkley-woodward-md-1846.