Nichols v. Smith

9 N.E. 810, 143 Mass. 455, 1887 Mass. LEXIS 331
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJanuary 28, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 9 N.E. 810 (Nichols v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nichols v. Smith, 9 N.E. 810, 143 Mass. 455, 1887 Mass. LEXIS 331 (Mass. 1887).

Opinion

W. Allen, J.

In proceedings under the insolvency law, when a creditor has a pledge of property of the debtor for securing the debt, the property shall, if the creditor requires it, be sold and the proceeds applied towards the payment of the debt, and the creditor may prove for the residue; or he may release and deliver up the property to the assignee, and prove for the whole debt. “ If the property is not so sold, or released and delivered up, the creditor shall not be allowed to prove any part of his debt.” Pub. Sts. e. 157, § 28.

Smith and Engle, their security not having been sold or surrendered to the assignee, had no right to prove the secured debt, and it should be expunged, unless the assignee can treat their act as a conclusive election to prove the debt, and as a waiver of the security and an equitable release of it to him. We think that they have done nothing which amounts to a waiver of their security, or which binds them as an election to prove their debt, or estops them from claiming to hold their security. They made proof of their debt, and, on its allowance, voted for assignee, but the result of the vote was the same- that it would have been had they not voted. The proof was made inadvertently. It was made out, in the statutory form, by the counsel of the debtor, and was signed and sworn to by the-creditor, without reading it or seeing the amount of the claim inserted in it. The oreditoi-s duly petitioned the Court of Insolvency for leave to withdraw the proof, and filed in that court a written withdrawal and waiver of it. They did not intend to waive their security, nor consciously elect one of two remedies. They have done nothing to change the condition of the assignee or of the other creditors. On the withdrawal of the proof by leave of court, all parties will be as they would have been had no proof been made, if that is not the effect of the waiver and withdrawal of record by the creditors themselves.

[458]*458Morse v. Lowell, 7 Met. 152, was a case in which a city, having a fiduciary claim, had proved the claim in bankruptcy for the purpose of opposing the discharge of the debtor, and was allowed by the United States District Court to withdraw its proof. The debtor obtained a discharge, and it was held by this court that the debt was not discharged. Chief Justice Shaw says: “ The present was a case of election of remedies for the same right — the security and collection of a debt; and we are of opinion that the defendants, when by leave of court they withdrew their claim under the commission, had not passed the stage at which they had a right to make their election.” See also Watson v. Phoenix Bank, 8 Met. 217.

Bemis v. Smith, 10 Met. 194, was an action by an assignee under the insolvent law of 1838, on a demand due to the insolvent, in which the defendant filed in set-off a debt due to him from the insolvent. The defendant had proved his debt at the first meeting of the creditors, and presented a petition at the second meeting to have his claim expunged that he might set it off against the debt due from him, and at an adjournment of that meeting he filed a written withdrawal and waiver, substantially in the form used in the case at bar. The master dismissed the petition. At the third meeting, a dividend was ordered to the creditors, including the defendant, which the defendant refused td receive, and it remained in the hands of the assignee. It was held that he might set off the debt. The court said, “It has been argued, that the defendant, by proving his debt in part before the master, is precluded from his claim of set-off, as to the part so proved. But we think otherwise. He acted unadvisedly in proving his claim before the master; but he has withdrawn that claim, so far as he was allowed so to do; and there seems to be no good reason why his legal and equitable rights should be barred by a mere mistake.”

In Cook v. Farrington, 104 Mass. 212, it was decided that a mortgagee of personal property, who had proved his debt in bankruptcy without disclosing his security, was not barred from claiming the property against a second mortgagee.

The effect of proof of a debt, in proceedings under the insolvent law, by a secured creditor who has not surrendered his security, is considered, and many cases relating to it are cited, in [459]*459Franklin County Bank v. Greenfield Bank, 188 Mass. 515. The court say, on p. 523 : “ On equitable principles, under the English and United States bankruptcy laws, which contain statutory provisions similar to those in our statutes, it has been held that, if a creditor prove his debt without disclosing his security or without surrendering it, and act upon his proof in such a manner that the rights of other creditors have been impaired, the creditor may be considered to have waived his security. This court has held the same doctrine when the security was not within the statute, and may perhaps hold it, if the security is within the statute, in cases where expunging the proof- would not be an adequate remedy.”

We see no reason why the same equitable principles, as to the effect upon the security of proof in full of a secured claim without giving up the security, should not be applied when the security is within the terms of the statute, as are applied when the security is held not to be within the statute, — as when it consists of property not belonging to the insolvent, or of property of the insolvent held as security by one jointly liable with him on the debt proved. In both cases, the right which the assignee or general creditors acquire is an equitable right, to be determined on equitable principles. In the one case, the statute provides that the creditor shall not be allowed to prove his debt, but does not prohibit him from offering proof, nor impose a penalty for so doing; in the other case, the court will not allow the debt to. be proved when the security is within the control of the creditor. Lanckton v. Wolcott, 6 Met. 305. Richardson v. Wyman, 4 Gray, 553. And it is suggested in Franklin County Bank v. Greenfield Bank, ubi supra, that the same rule should be applied when the right to the security is merely equitable and contingent, as when a solvent accommodation indorser for the insolvent holds a mortgage from him as indemnity, and has not paid the debt. The same rule is applied in administering insolvent estates of deceased persons in the Probate Court. Bristol County Savings Bank v. Woodward, 137 Mass. 412.

The oath required by the statute is the form prescribed for all cases in making proof of a claim, and of itself can be no more than a declaration, which, if not acted on, may be contradicted or explained. We are not considering the effect upon a petition [460]*460to withdraw the claim, or upon the rights of other parties in the security, of such evidence of an intentional waiver of the security and election to prove the whole debt as might be afforded by the oath and proof deliberately made, in view of all the facts and with full apprehension of the meaning and effect of the act. In the case under consideration, the creditor did not intend to give up his security, and, if he has lost it, it is because his acts in reference to it estop him to claim it as against the assignee. To work an estoppel, some right of the assignee or of creditors whom he represents must have been impaired by the acts of the secured creditors 'in relation to their debt or to the security.

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Bluebook (online)
9 N.E. 810, 143 Mass. 455, 1887 Mass. LEXIS 331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nichols-v-smith-mass-1887.