Morey v. Milliken

30 A. 102, 86 Me. 464, 1894 Me. LEXIS 58
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMay 31, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 30 A. 102 (Morey v. Milliken) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morey v. Milliken, 30 A. 102, 86 Me. 464, 1894 Me. LEXIS 58 (Me. 1894).

Opinions

Haskell, J.

Morey & Company proved their debt in insolvency against their insolvent debtor’s estate to the amount of $134,815.07. To this proof objections were filed by other creditors that Morey & Company had received a preference in fraud of the insolvent law.

By an agreement in writing between Morey & Company and the assignees, approved by the judge of insolvency, it was stipulated that a fair value of the amount of security received should be considered $53,860.85, and that the same, together with rebates of interest amounting to $637.53, in all $54,498.38, should be deducted from the whole claim, and that the balance, $134,815.07, might be proved upon which a dividend should be paid.

In the insolvent court the objections were sustained and the proof disallowed. An appeal was taken to the court below where the case was heard and decided, and the decree of the insolvent court reversed, and the proof allowed. The case comes up on exceptions.

The insolvent law, E. S., c. 70, § 29 provides: "A person who has accepted any preference, knowing that the debtor was insolvent or in contemplation of insolvency, shall not prove the debt on which the preference was given, nor receive any dividend thereon, until he sui’renders to the assignee all property, money, benefit or advantage received by him under such preference.”

[472]*472Under this statute, knowledge by the creditor of the debtor’s insolvency or contemplated insolvency is made a condition precedent to the rejection of his claim upon which he may have received security. The fact of knowledge is made vital and must appear in order to reject-a claim. It must be determined, too, like any other question of fact, from the evidence in the case. It may be inferred from a variety of other facts that are proved, after giving to each its proper legal significance. For instance, security taken out of the usual course of business has a strong legal significance, and, unexplained by other facts and circumstances, might be considered sufficient in law to show knowledge, but when explained by other facts, as by proof of solvency, Dutcher v. Wright, 94 U. S. 557, or facts that completely destroy its meaning in the mind of the recipient, it could not have that effect. The various facts shown in the case must each be considered, giving to each one its proper significance, and then, after properly weighing each element, the resultant fact becomes apparent.

The court below heard this case and filed a decision finding-various facts upon which the decision rests. The controlling-fact so found relates to the fact of knowledge of the debtor’s insolvency or contemplated insolvency, by the creditors, at the time they received security claimed to be a preference. It is as. follows:

" I find . . that said Morey & Company, when they accepted said securities [those claimed to work a preference], did not know that said Denison Paper Manufacturing Company [the insolvent] was insolvent or in contemplation of insolvency.”

This finding of fact is a resultant fact to be inferred from other facts and circumstances, and must be held conclusive unless shown to be ex-roneous in law.

Morey & Company’s debt was $189,313.47. As security they held certain xxotes, assets and merchandise. Oxx January 20, they wrote their debtors, as near, as can be gathered fx-orn the evidence,— the letter was xiot produced,— calling their attention to the dishonor of cex-tain of their notes, and reminding them that, "unless they attended to the busixxess mox-e [473]*473promptly when they became due we would wind up the whole business , . . would stop.” Deceiving no reply, Morey & Company telegraphed Mr. Denison to come to Boston and received answer that he was unable to go but would write. He did write on the first of February, inclosing the assignment of various accounts and of the merchandise on hand, manufactured paper, and saying, among other things : "The assigned accounts is several thousand dollars short, and it has occurred by shrinkage in the price of paper, and paper rejected and returned, and discounts on lots retained, etc. We turn over all we can to cover the same.” This is the preference complained of.

The letter also stated: "Your dispatch was received and in confirmation of reply to same I wrrote you to say that we have concluded, after a careful consideration of your letter of January 20, to cease operations and let the creditors of the Denison Paper Manufacturing Company say what course, if any, we shall pursue in the future. I am aware that it will be a very uncomfortable position to place you in, as well as many others, but I cannot stand up under the load I have been carrying any longer and am unable to go to Boston for the present. I enclose you a bill of sale of paper on hand and have covered all of the assigned accounts that lies in my power. . . . We wish we could prevent this calamity but we see no relief amid present combination. We have as yet done nothing to precipitate this matter, and shall be at home during the balance of the week, but the amount we have to pay Friday will settle the matter, if no provision is made to protect same.”

These extracts wore written on Tuesday. One of the firm of Morey & Company went immediately to Mechanic Falls, the debtor’s place of business, examined into its affairs, exercised the right of stoppage in transitu and giving no further assistance, the debtor’s paper went to protest Friday.

At the trial the defendants claimed that these letters w'ere notice to plaintiffs of their debtor’s insolvency, and, in lawr, worked knowledge of the same. It is plain enough that the letters conveyed information of the debtor’s insolvency, and alone, without evidence to control their meaning and import, [474]*474would sustain the defendant's contention and make the finding of the court below erroneous in law.

In this connection it is well to consider the meaning of the statute phrase, "knowing that the debtor was insolvent or in contemplation of insolvency.”

I. Of the meaning of the word insolvent or insolvency. It is not always used in the same sense. "It is sometimes used to denote the insufficiency of the entire property or assets of an individual to pay his debts, This is its general and popular meaning. But it is also used in a more restricted sense, to express the inability of a party to pay his debts as they become due in the ordinary course of business.” Toof v. Martin, 13 Wall. 47. The latter is the commercial use. It indicates an inability to continue business in the ordinary way ; an inability to meet business obligations as they mature ; an inability to keep one’s credit good so that his commercial promises bear upon their face an assurance that they will be met as they, mature.

It is also the use adopted in all bankrupt and insolvent laws, when applied to persons in commercial pursuits, where provision is intended for the liquidation of business interests, when they can no longer continue in the ordinary course, securing to the existing creditors an equal division of the assets before they shall be wasted and frittered away in a hopeless struggle, under conditions that compel disaster in the end.

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Bluebook (online)
30 A. 102, 86 Me. 464, 1894 Me. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morey-v-milliken-me-1894.