Olyphant & Son v. Atwood

17 Bosw. 459
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedApril 9, 1859
StatusPublished

This text of 17 Bosw. 459 (Olyphant & Son v. Atwood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Olyphant & Son v. Atwood, 17 Bosw. 459 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1859).

Opinions

Slosson, J.

The question is, whether a discharge, under the English bankrupt law, of a debt contracted and payable in England, and by a person residing there, due to a citizen of this State, can be pleaded in bar to an action upon it in the Courts of this State.

The effect of an assignment under the English bankrupt laws, as operating a transfer of the debts, moneys and property due to or belonging to the bankrupt situated in this country, has been the subject of frequent discussion; and it may now be considered as settled in this State, if not in most of the other States of the TJnipn, that while, by comity, the assignees in bankruptcy are allowed to sue in our Courts in order to recover claims or property due or belonging to the bankrupt within our own territory, they do not acquire, by the assignment itself, a lien on such debts or property so as to entitle them to a priority over a resident creditor who has attached the same subsequently to such assignment, and before the assignee has asserted his claim to the property by a resort to legal process in our own Courts.

As respects property of the bankrupt found within our own jurisdiction, the law gives the preference to resident creditors, if [462]*462they first assert their title. The assignees are considered as standing in the shoes of the bankrupt, having no better rights and subject to the equities to which he is subject; and when permitted to sue here, they do so as representatives of the bankrupt, and not as assignees having an absolute right as against all the world, and they are subject to our laws in respect to the remedy. The assignment in bankruptcy, being statutory, or by virtue of an act of the Legislature, and not voluntary, has no extra-territorial operation, at least in passing the title to the bankrupt’s property beyond the country where the law was passed. It may entitle the assignee to sue here, but, as I have already said, it is by comity' only, and the assignee, when he comes here, has no better title to the property located here than the bankrupt had; so that, if a creditor of the bankrupt has already attached the property, the foreign assignee is remediless. If no such attachment has intervened, there is no difficulty in the assignee acquiring, bv such remedies as the law prescribes, a lien which shall be paramount to any which a resident creditor can afterwards acquire. The State regulates the subject of property found within its limits; and while, by courtesy, it permits foreign assignees in bankruptcy to sue here, it will not give them, by virtue of a mere statutory assignment which can have no extra-territorial operation, a preference in respect to such property over the claims, first asserted, of our own resident citizens.- This is not repudiating or denying any efficacy to the foreign law: it is merely limiting the boundaries of that comity by which the assignees under the law are permitted to act in our Courts in asserting their claims by virtue of it to property of the bankrupt found within the jurisdiction of the Court. It places the assignees on an equal footing with the resident creditors of the bankrupt, and then gives to the one who acquires the first lien, by attachment or other process under our laws, the priority. It is merely asserting that, by virtue of the assignment itself, the foreign assignee does not acquire a priority of title to property of the bankrupt within- our territory over a domestic creditor who has, by due process of our own laws, acquired a lien upon it, before the assignee has asserted his claim in our Courts. The law, which thus permits the domestic creditor to acquire a lien on the personal property of, or debts due, the bankrupt within our own limits, over the title created by [463]*463the assignment in bankruptcy, creates, it is true,, an exception to, or limitation of the rule which is true in general, to wit, that personal property, as to its transmission and disposition, is governed by the law of the domicil of the owner; but it is- an exception created by our own law as against a foreign law which we are not bound to recognize, and in favor of our own citizens and for their special protection. (Story’s Conf. Laws, §§ 410, 412; Holmes v. Remsen, 20 J. R, 229.)

The case of Holmes v. Remsen was fully recognized and sanctioned by the Court of Appeals in Hoyt v. Thompson, (1 Seld., 340, 341,) and the case of Abraham v. Plestoro, (3 Wend., 358,) was held not to have authoritatively established a different doctrine.

It will thus be seen, that under the limitation of a preference in favor of the domestic creditor who first attaches the bankrupt’s property within our own jurisdiction, the foreign law is recognized in our courts, and the question which we are called to pass upon by this demurrer, is, how far we shall recognize a discharge of the debt itself under a foreign bankrupt law, when sued upon in this State.

The decision of this question is in no wise affected by the exceptional rule in favor of the domestic creditor above stated, nor is an argument against our recognition of the validity of such discharge, to be drawn from the discrimination thus made in favor of our own creditors. It depends upon the application of the rule, admitted to be of universal force where the common law prevails, that the law of the place of the contract where it is made and to be performed, is the law of the contract itself. Much ingenuity has been expended in discussing the theory of this rule, in cases where the place of the contract is different from that of the forum in which the action is brought, some founding the rule upon the idea of an implied assent to be bound by it, as a part of the contract, on the part of all the parties to it, and others holding that the law binds by its own force, without the aid of an assent of the parties express or implied. Those who maintain the first of these views, admit that, for all purposes of giving construction and operation to the contract, the parties may well be assumed to have assented to the laws which prevail in respect to it where the contract was made, but that it is absurd [464]*464to suppose that the parties could have assented to the operation of a law which should, against their will, dissolve the contract itself, and of this opinion was the Court of Appeals in Donnelly v. Corbett. (3 Seld., 506.) It is, in my judgment, unnecessary to resort to any such presumption of assent on the part of the creditor to be bound by a law which discharges the contract. The true rule is, that the law of the place of-the contract absolutely governs it, propria vigore, in all respects; it not only gives it life and determines the extent of its obligation, but prescribes the mode of its execution and how it may, and in certain contingencies shall, be satisfied. The principle is well expressed by Chief Justice Parker, in Blanchard v. Russel, (13 Mass., 4,) and quoted and adopted by Chief Justice Shaw, in May v. Breed. (7 Cush., 36.) “We think,” he says, “ it may be assumed as a rule affecting all personal contracts, that they are subject to all the consequences attached to contraéis of a similar nature by the laws of the country where they are made, if the contracting party* is a subject of or resident in that country where it is entered into and no provision is introduced to refer it to the laws of any other country.”

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17 Bosw. 459, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/olyphant-son-v-atwood-nysuperctnyc-1859.