Murray v. De Rottenham

6 Johns. Ch. 52, 1822 N.Y. LEXIS 163, 1822 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 29
CourtNew York Court of Chancery
DecidedMarch 10, 1822
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 6 Johns. Ch. 52 (Murray v. De Rottenham) 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
Murray v. De Rottenham, 6 Johns. Ch. 52, 1822 N.Y. LEXIS 163, 1822 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 29 (N.Y. 1822).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

This case has been argued with much ability, and .the points raised admit of some latitude of discussion; but they have been rendered quite embarrassing by the complicated nature of the facts, and the distressingly voluminous documents in which they are involved,

1. The first point is, whether Mark continued bound by his personal covenants in the trust deed to Murray, after his discharge as a bankrupt.

His debt of 40,000 dollars to Count De Rotienham and others, contracted in Germany in 1796, and payable there, was a debt which “ might have been proved” under Ms commission of bankruptcy; and his certificate of discharge under the bankrupt act of the United States, in 1800, was, consequently, a bar to that debt. The. bankrupt act of 1800 was general in its terms, and applied to all the bankrupt’s estate, “ whatsoever and wheresoever,” and to all^ and every the creditors of such bankrupt who should come jn and prove their debts under the commission and, also, to “ all debts which were, or might have been proved under the commission.” It was suggested, that if an insolvent, or bankrupt statute, did not, by express words, or by necessary construction, extend to extra-territorial, or foreign [59]*59contraéis, it Was not to be applied to then). But I do not apprehend, that we are to require an express declaration of the legislature, that foreign creditors are included in the operation of a bankrupt law, when the language of the statute is otherwise sufficiently general and comprehensive, and when the evident policy of the law is to embrace all debts that can be proved under the commission, and to give the unfortunate merchant, who conducts himself fairly, new credit in the commercial world, and new capacity for business. The question may not have been distinctly decided in the English Courts; but, I should infer, from the general language of the British statutes of bankruptcy, and from the silence of the books, that it was the received, and undisputed doctrine there, that the certificate barred the foreign, as well as the domestic creditor. The case of Lynch v. M'Kenny, mentioned in Quin v. Keefe, (2 H. Black. 553.) strikes me as pretty decisive evidence of the English practice. Mr. Justice Aston discharged a bankrupt, who had obtained his certificate in England, from arrest by an Irish creditor, for a debt contracted in Ireland, because the debt arose before the commission, “ and might have been proved under the commission.”

[58]*58A certificate of discharge undev the bank-bar weU°afímnestic debts, prov-commission,

[59]*59The case of Penniman v. Meigs, (9 Johns. Rep. 325.) contains an express recognition of the rule, which, I presume, prevails equally in England, and in this country. It was there held, by the Supreme Court, that they were " bound to consider a discharge under the insolvent act of this state, as a bar to all suits brought here upon antecedent contracts, wherever made. The statute was peremptory and binding on our Courts. It was for the wisdom of the legislature to say, whether foreign contracts should be exempted from the operation of an insolvent act, but they have not made any such exception.”

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Bluebook (online)
6 Johns. Ch. 52, 1822 N.Y. LEXIS 163, 1822 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murray-v-de-rottenham-nychanct-1822.