Murrill v. Neill

49 U.S. 414, 12 L. Ed. 1135, 8 How. 414, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1681
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 12, 1850
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 49 U.S. 414 (Murrill v. Neill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Murrill v. Neill, 49 U.S. 414, 12 L. Ed. 1135, 8 How. 414, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1681 (1850).

Opinion

Mr. Justice DANIEL

delivered the opinion of the court

The original bill in this case having been framed upon a palpable misapprehension of the position of the parties, and of the facts connected with and entering into their rights or their obligations, reference to that bill beyond this remark is deemed unnecessary. The object of the amended bill filed by the complainants on behalf of themselves and others, creditors of the mercantile houses of Luke Tiernan and Charles' Tiernan of Baltimore, and of Tiernan, Cuddy, & Co-., of New Orleans, is to procure an appropriation to those creditors of the sum of $ 15,000, remaining in the hands of the defendant Alexander Neill, and derived to him from Charles H. Carroll, the trustee in the deed from Luke Tiernan, filed as an exhibit with the answer of Neill in this cause. This controversy depends, first, upon the construction of those clauses, of the deed above mentioned, which direct the payment by the trustee to Alexander Neill, and the application by the latter of the sum so paid, and, secondly, upon the operation of the rules of law, as controlling such application in reference to the rights of the separate creditors of Luke Tiernan, and of the joint creditors of the firms of Luke <fc Charles Tiernan, and of Tiernan, Cuddy, & Co.

In other words, whether the separate creditors of Luke Tier-nan have a prior right of satisfaction from the subject of the trust constituting the separate private estate of said Tiernan, or have the right to claim against that separate estate pari passu only with the several creditors of the mercantile houses of which Luke Tiernan was a partner. The facts of this case are few and simple, and are scarcely in any respect controverted; the cause turns: as has already been remarked, upon the construction of the deed, and upon the rules of equity as applicable to the position of the grantor, in relation to the different classes of his creditors, at the period of its execution. The language of the deed, as indicative of the intention of the grantor, will in the first place be adverted to. And in considering this language, it may be remarked, that it nowhere speaks of debts due from Luke Tiernan, as a member of the firms of Luke & Charles Tiernan, or of Tiernan, Cuddy, & Co., nor mentions *422 nor alludes to those firms, nor to any other mercantile firms whatsoever. This deed recites the facts of the relinquishment by Mrs. Tiernan of her dower right in a large amount of property previously sold by her husband, and of her consent to a similar relinquishment in future sales to be made by the trustee, Carroll; it recites also a debt due from the grantor to Mrs. Anne E. Brien, deceased, which was still unpaid, and- was due and owing to her son, Luke Tiernan Brien. It then proceeds to declare, — “ That whereas the said Luke Tiernan is indebted to divers other persons, residing in different parts of the United States, in a large sum of money in the aggregate, but the names of all the persons to whom he is indebted, and the amounts due to each respectively, the said Luke Tiernan is now unable to specify particularly. And whereas the said Luke Tiernan is desirous of conveying the lands hereinafter described, in trust that the same shall be sold, and the proceeds thereof applied in the manner hereinafter particularly specified.” The deed then, after directing a sale by the trustee, provides, that he shall remit from time to time, as the same shall be received, to Alexander Neill of Maryland, and payable to his order, of the first moneys arising from such sales, until he shall have remitted the sum of $ 15,000, to be paid by the said Alexander Neill to the creditors of the said Luke Tiernan whose demands shall then have been ascertained; and if the demands so ascertained shall exceed the said sum of $ 15,000, the same shall be applied in part payment of each of the said demands, in the ratio that each of said demands shall respectively bear to the whole sum $ 15,000, so to be applied.” The deed then provides, out of further remittances arising from sales to be made by the trustee, for the payment of $> 12,000 to Mrs. Tiernan, in-compensation-for her right of dower; and next, for the payment of the debt due to the son of Mrs. Anne E. Brien, and then declares,'that after the last-mentioned sum (i. e. the sum due to Mrs. Brien or to her son) shall have been paid, all the moneys arising from such sales (after deducting expenses, &c.) shall be remitted by the trustee to the said Neill, and the same shall be applied by the said Neill to the payment of the debts due from the said Luke Tiernan to all the creditors of the said Luke, whose demands shall then have been ascertained by the said Alexander Neill ; “ and in case that the sum so to be applied shall be insufficient for the payment of all such demands; then, and in this case, the same shall be applied in part payment of each of said demands, in the ratio that each of said demands respectively shall bear to the whole sum to be so applied to that object; and in case the said sum shall be more than equal to the payment of *423 such demands, then, and in that case, the residue thereof shall be paid by the said Alexander Neill to the said Luke Tiernan, his heirs,” &c.

We have already adverted to the circumstance, that the grantor in ibis deed has nowhere alluded to any mercantile concern with which he was associated) that he was disposing of a subject confessedly his own separate property; that he has not said, that'whereas Luke Tiernan &. Son, or Tiernan, Cuddy, & Co., but that Luke Tiernan, was indebted to Mrs. Tiernan and to Mrs. Brien, and to divers other persons residing in different quarters of the country. This would not be the language of a merchant, (still less of a practised and extensive merchant,) when intending to designate the firm of which he makes a part. On such occasions he never mentions himself -individually, unless he. intends expressly to distinguish between himself and his house, and would always be so understood by established mercantile acceptation. And again, if, in the construction of this deed, the name of Luke Tiernan is to be taken as synonymous with Luke Tiernan & Son, and Tier-nan, Cuddy, & Co., we should be driven to the conclusion, that these several firms were indebted to Mrs. Tiernan in consideration of her relinquishment of her dower in her husband’s estaté, and to Mrs. Brien for the private debt due to her, — for all these creditors are grouped in the same category. Their claims originate in the same source, — in the obligations of Luke Tiernan. The language of the deed is, that Luke Tiernan is indebted to Mrs. Tiernan, and to Mrs. Brien; and the same Luke Tiernan it is who is also indebted to divers other persons residing in different parts of the United States. Such a construction of the deed involves, we think, a violation of the plain meaning of the terms of the instruhaent, and leads to confusion and absurdity.

It has been-insisted for the appellants in this case, that the admission by the grantor of a large amount of drums against him, of the diversity of the residence of his creditors, and of the inability on his part at once to designate those*creditors and their demands, should be received as proof that the deed was never intended to be limited to the private creditors of the grantor, who, it is contended, must, as well as the e: .tent of their claims, have been known; but was designed to embrace all his partnership liabilities.

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Bluebook (online)
49 U.S. 414, 12 L. Ed. 1135, 8 How. 414, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1681, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murrill-v-neill-scotus-1850.