M'Menomy v. Murray

3 Johns. Ch. 435, 1818 N.Y. LEXIS 199, 1818 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 42
CourtNew York Court of Chancery
DecidedSeptember 28, 1818
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 3 Johns. Ch. 435 (M'Menomy v. Murray) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
M'Menomy v. Murray, 3 Johns. Ch. 435, 1818 N.Y. LEXIS 199, 1818 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 42 (N.Y. 1818).

Opinion

The cause stood over for consideration until this day.

The Chancellor.

The great object of the bill is to set aside the deed of trust of the 2d of December, 1799, from Mark 8/ Speyer to John Murray, and the deed of the 21st of Jlpril, 1800, from Speyer to Murray.

1. The trust deed was made to* secure the German creditors several of whom made a loan to Mark fy Speyer, upon the condition that they should be secured by lands in the United States.

One of the objections to this deed is, that it was made upon a condition which has since been fulfilled, which was the discharge of Speyer from the partnership debts, This condition is repeatedly expressed in the deed. The lands mentioned in it were conveyed in trust, for the security and payment of European creditors, until the debts were paid, or Speyer should be “ otherwise exonerated, acquitted, and discharged therefrom.” The manner in which Speyer was to be discharged is afterwards mentioned. It was to be done by the act of the creditors, transferring their demands from the house of Mark 8f Speyer to Mark alone, so as thereby to exonerate Speyer. It is, again and again, declared and repeated, that the German creditors were to exonerate S'. “ so as the said creditors could not thereafter claim, challenge, or recover the debt or any part of it, from himor so that hr [440]*440“ be thereof and from the responsibility to pay, fully acquitted, exonerated, and released.” In a subsequent place in the deed, it is once more mentioned, that when the European debts were all discharged and paid, or when Speyer “ should be wholly and absolutely exonerated, acquitted; atid perpetually exempted of and from all and singular the said debts, dues, arid demands, and of and from all manner of liability for the payment thereof, by any of the means aforesaid, or by good and sufficient transfers by the said creditors of such their said debts to Mark, so as to acquit Speyer,” then the trust estate was to cease.

There cari be no doubt in the mind of any person who will carefully peruse the deed of trust, that the discharge of Speyer was to come from the German creditors, and to be a personal act of theirs, and no other means of discharge were within the purview of the deed. No siich discharge is pretended, and, therefore, the deed remains in force. But it has been urged, that the discharge of Mark fy Speyer iti October, 1800, under the bankrupt act of the United States, was a discharge from the German debts, within the condition of the deed. It is a decisive answer to this objection, that the parties did not mean such a discharge, and that the deed must have operation according to the manifest intent. Nor did the discharge of Speyer, under the bankrupt act, fully and perpetually exempt him from the German débts. These debts were contracted in’ Germany, and payable iti Germany,■ and the discharge of Speyer by the bankrupt law of this country will not discharge him from those debts', unless those foreign creditors have assented to that proceeding, by-coming in and proving their debts under' the commission". I am aware that the opinion has respectable sanction; that “ a céssio bonorum, under the laws of a state where the debtor has his permanent domicil, ought to operate as a discharge from his creditors in every part of the world,” But.such a general rule as this is riot the law of thé [441]*441land, nor do I believe it to be any part of the jus gen-Hum. There are several distinctions taken on this subject, and which I need not now examine. It is sufficient to say, that a contract made in a foreign country, and to be governed and discharged by its laws, cannot be “absolutely” discharged by the statute of another country, tQ which the parties have not bound themselves to submit.

A bankrupt or insolvent act ought not to be presumed to have been intended to reach foreign contracts, unless it be so declared. If Speyer was to be deemed discharged for any suit here, within the United States, for the German debts, by force of his discharge under the bankrupt act, (and this is a point xvhich I am not willing to concede without further consideration,) yet that would not satisfy the terms of the deed of trust, unless the discharge here would operate as a discharge in Germany, where the debts xvere contracted. He must be “ wholly and absolutely and perpetually discharged from all manner of liability for the payment of those debts;” and can we say, or can we believe, that if Speyer had returned to his native German country, where his father resided, and xvhere the debts were contracted, that he could have pleaded his discharge here in bar of a suit there? It does not appear in what part of Germany the debts were contracted; but, vve know, that in several parts of it there is no such thing as a debtor’s discharge by the assignment of his property. Huberus says, (Prcelec. tom. % 1454.) that secundum jus nostrum, cessio bonorum imitis creditoribus, debitorem a carcere publico non liberat. The law is the same in other parts of Germany. Non ubivis tamen locorum hoc beneficium, (says Heineccius, xvhen speaking of the cessio bonorum,) indulgetur obairatis. Cessat sane in Saxonia electorali, ubi debitores nihilominus, urgentibus creditoribus, delrudmtur in carcerern.—Jure Lubecensi, debitor, qui non solvendo est, adjudicaiur creditori sed ita, ut quotidiana qperce debitum minuant. ffeinec. Elem. Jur- Civil. Secund, [442]*442Ord. Band, part 6. lib. 42. tit) 3. De Cessione Pom rum, s. 254.) In Saxonia—Debitoribus non concesso jlebili cessionis bonorum beneficio. (Heinec. Elem. Jus. Germania, lib. 2. tit. 13. s. 387.) And is it not very improbable, that in the German states, where the indefeasible obligation of debts is so strongly maintained, they would suffer their policy to be subverted, and their subjects defeated in their remedy at home, by the bankrupt or insolvent laws of foreign countries? We have said, that we would not suffer such a control; (Van Raugh v. Van arsdale, 3 Caines, 154.) and the same rule prevails in other states; (1 Mass. Rep. 198. 3 Day's Rep. 82. 3 Binney, 201. 5 Binney, 385.) and in England. (Smith v. Buchanan, 1 East, 6.) It has also been decided in one of the circuit courts of the United States, (Van Reimsdyk v. Kane, 1 Gall. 371.) that a discharge under an insolvent act here, is no discharge of a contract made and to be executed abroad.

I am satisfied, upon the whole, that there is no weight in this objection.

Another objection taken to the force of this trust deed; is, that it was to be considered a mortgage, and ought to have been registered, to give it effect against the subsequent assignment of Mark & Speyer.

The answer to this is, that the deed speaks for itself, and appears, most obviously, to be a conveyance in trust for the benefit of the German creditors; and it would be absurd to bring such an instrument, creating such very special and complicated trusts, within the meaning of the registry act.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Johns. Ch. 435, 1818 N.Y. LEXIS 199, 1818 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mmenomy-v-murray-nychanct-1818.