Muchmore v. Budd

22 A. 518, 53 N.J.L. 369, 24 Vroom 369, 1891 N.J. LEXIS 37
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedMarch 15, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 22 A. 518 (Muchmore v. Budd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Muchmore v. Budd, 22 A. 518, 53 N.J.L. 369, 24 Vroom 369, 1891 N.J. LEXIS 37 (N.J. 1891).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Reed, J.

It appears from the facts found by the trial court, and already stated in full, that the contest was between,, as defendant-, a purchaser from one Somerville, and, as plaintiff, a purchaser at a sheriff’s sale of the same property under a levy made upon an execution against one Cunningham.

Somerville had taken a bill of sale from Cunningham previous to the levy under which the sale was made to the plaintiff. If that transfer was good in law, then the title [382]*382which Somerville transferred to the defendant was superior to the title of the plaintiff.

The counsel for the plaintiff have therefore attacked the legality of the transfer of the property from Cunningham to Somerville.

They insist that, as against creditors of Cunningham not parties to that transfer, it was a nullity.

There are three lines of attack.

First It is insisted that'the transfer made by Cunningham to Somerville is void, because it is in contravention of the act .concerning assignments for the benefit of creditors.

Second. That it is void by force of the statute of frauds.

Third. That it is invalid for want of a legal consideration.

Under the first mentioned head, it is insisted that the transfer of the property from Cunningham to Somerville was an assignment of Cunningham’s estate, in trust to an assignee for the creditors of said Cunningham, within the meaning of >the first section of the Assignment act. It is thereupon •argued that, inasmuch as the assignment is for the benefit of ■some, to the exclusion of other creditors, a preference arises Avhich avoids the entire transaction.

At the outset, I wish to guard against any apparent admission, that if it should be conceded that the transfer attacked is an assignment, t.he result claimed would follow. It has never been adjudged by this court that a preference contained in an assignment operates to avoid the transfer in toto. The case of Garretson v. Brown, 2 Dutcher 425, affirmed in this court (4 Dutcher 644), called for no opinion upon this point.

The query propounded by the facts in that case was, whether a deed and a transfer of notes, made by a debtor previous to an assignment, affected the lawfulness of the assignment itself. It was held that the assignment was valid. Regarding the question as an open one, it seems to me extremely difficult to accord a significance to all parts of the first section of the Assignment act, by the adoption of the construction now claimed for it. The last clause of that section, in express terms, makes void the preferences. The first [383]*383part of tlie section .contains no words of like import respecting an assignment containing preferences. If such an assignment is void, then the preferences fall with the assignment itself by force of the first clause. The second clause is utterly meaningless.

But a construction of the act which results in sweeping away the preferences, but compels the assignee to execute his trust for the proportional benefit of all the creditors, conforms to the fundamental rule of statutory construction, that every part of a statute shall have its due effect.

This construction would leave the power of sale conferred upon the assignee unimpaired, and his vendee would acquire a complete title.

This question, however, is not, in my judgment, involved in this case. For I am unable to regard the transfer, now attacked as an assignment, within either the letter or spirit of the Assignment act.

Let us recall the facts. Cunningham was indebted to certain persons, among whom was a corporation existing under the name of Wilkinson, Gaddis & Co. Somerville was the ■secretary of this corporation. On February 27th, officers were in possession of Cunningham’s property, under an execution issued on a judgment entered in an action brought by another creditor. Somerville sought to secure the debt due to the corporation, of which he was an officer. Cunningham agreed to give him a bill of sale. Before the bill of sale was delivered, the company paid off the judgment already mentioned. It promised to pay, through Somerville, and afterward did pay, for a bill of goods that day delivered to Cunningham by Muchmore & Son. The bill of sale was then delivered, for which, in advances and in the debt due, there existed a consideration of over $700.

So far, the complexion of the facts do not furnish a hint ■of an assignment.

But there was a verbal agreement which accompanied the bill of sale. Cunningham imposed upon Somerville the condition, which Somerville accepted, that Somerville should sell [384]*384the goods, and, after reimbursing his company for their advances, should apply the proceeds to the payment, not only of the debt of the company, but also of the debts of three other creditors.

If there was not enough to pay all in full he was to pay them pro rata. If there was more than sufficient to pay them he was to return the balance to Cunningham. Cunningham retained the right to redeem the property, at any time before their sale by Somerville, by the payment of these-advances and debts in full.

From this statement of the character of the transaction, it is transparent that the parties to it had not the faintest suspicion that Cunningham was making a statutory assignment. There were no words employed in the negotiation which were-appropriate to or suggestive of an assignment. There was no-list of creditors nor inventory of property, nor was there any talk of these accompaniments of a statutory assignment. No-, bond of Somerville as assignee; no record of any paper; no proceeding in the Orphans’ Court; no notices; no distribution of dividends under judicial supervision; no filing of claims; no discharge from any claim on account of dividend received; none of these statutory features of an assignment appears, at any moment, to have been contemplated. Further-, words, to show that the transaction was not intended as an.. assignment under the terms of the statute, w'ould be wasted.

But it is insisted that the first section of the act includes-every conveyance of property to a trustee for the benefit of a creditor or of creditors. It is admitted that a debtor may sell, pledge or mortgage his projierty directly to one or more creditors, but it is insisted that the moment he does this not directly, but to another person for the use of such creditors, the statute seizes upon the transaction. The test thus applied is, does a trust arise? If so, it is an assignment.

I am unable to yield my assent to this view.

It is, as a matter of course, true, that an assignment, from its essential character, implies a trust. But the opposite is-[385]*385not true, that whenever a trust is created an assignment springs into being.

Property may be sold, pledged or mortgaged in trust.

The trustee in each one of these classes of transfers holds a different interest from that of a trustee in another class, and a trustee under the Assignment act an interest differing from all the rest.

Now, I am of the opinion—

First. That the transaction now in question was a mortgage.

Second. That a mortgage is distinguishable from an assign-. ment; and,

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Bluebook (online)
22 A. 518, 53 N.J.L. 369, 24 Vroom 369, 1891 N.J. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/muchmore-v-budd-nj-1891.