Palmer v. Mason

3 N.W. 945, 42 Mich. 146, 1879 Mich. LEXIS 733
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 29, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 3 N.W. 945 (Palmer v. Mason) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Palmer v. Mason, 3 N.W. 945, 42 Mich. 146, 1879 Mich. LEXIS 733 (Mich. 1879).

Opinion

Graves, J.

This bill was filed to quiet complainant’s title against attachment proceedings brought by the defendant Bulen in the name of the other defendants to collect a debt against one Witthans, and the court having decreed a dismissal, the complainants appealed. All the parties are citizens of New York except Bulen, who is a citizen of Michigan.

January 9, 1877, Witthans was indebted to Smith & Mason for about $11,000, and feeling that it was questionable whether the' debt could be collected, they entered into a written agreement with Bulen, who thought he could collect it here, to transfer it to him upon1 his call therefor — whether it should be before or after his payment of the consideration agreed upon. It was likewise a part of the arrangement that in case he should desire [149]*149to do so he might sue in their names before the transfer.

January 12th, or three days later, Witthans being insolvent, conveyed all his real property in this State subject to execution to complainants, but in trust for said Smith & Mason and certain other creditors. The instrument was executed and delivered in New York, and on its face it purported to cover only a portion of his property, and in fact a large amount of real estate situated in New York was not embraced. At the same time those named as beneficiaries were only part of his creditors. He. was heavily indebted to others. The deed was immediately mailed to Saginaw to be recorded, but it did not arrive there until the 18th of January, at which time it was placed on record.

January 16th, being four days after the deed was given, and two days before its registry, the defendant Bulen caused an attachment to be issued in the name of Smith & Mason against Witthans for said debt of about $11,000, and to be levied on said lands, and had the levy perfected by a deposit in the register’s office of a certified copy of the attachment, with a description of such real estate. At the filing of the bill complainants were in actual possession.

The learned counsel for defendants resists the bill on two general grounds: first, that the trust deed on which complainants.found their right is void on its face; but if not, then, second, that Bulen, being equitable owner of the attachment debt, and a resident citizen of Michigan, his attachment levy on the land situated in Michigan is entitled to prevail over the trust deed given in New York between citizens of New York.

As to the first position certain provisions of the deed are claimed to have the effect to authorize the trustees to sell on credit, or mortgage the property, or use it to ¡carry on the former business. And again, inasmuch as :the deed is silent concerning the disposal of any possible surplus after payment of the named creditors, there [150]*150is, it is said, a resulting trust in favor of the grantor. And the consequence is drawn, as before stated, that the deed is void as against Bulen.

By a series of cases the rule is settled in this State that a transfer for the benefit of creditors, or by way of security, will not be adjudged fraudulent, as a conclusion of law drawn from the frame of the instrument, unless that construction is a necessary result in view of its peculiar shape and scope. Wherever the case will permit it, the court, in construing the paper, will ascribe an honest purpose and infer a lawful disposition. No attempt at subtle distinctions or strained inferences will be made to impress a bad character on the transaction. On the contrary, every reasonable intendment will be indulged against a construction implying fraudulent design, or an operation involving infringement of the law of the land. Nye v. Van Husan, 6 Mich., 329; Snook v. Davis, id., 156; Bagg v. Jerome, 7 Mich., 145; Booth v. McNair, 14 Mich., 19; Watkins v. Wallace, 19 Mich., 57; Henry v. Root, 38 Mich., 371; Parsell v. Thayer, 39 Mich., 467; State Bank v. Chapelle, 40 Mich., 447.

Wherever the provisions are susceptible of an honest application, they “ cannot be said to have that necessary evil tendency which justifies the inference of a fraudulent intent.” Watkins v. Wallace, supra.

As Pierson v. Manning, 2 Mich., 445, is relied on by defendants, it is proper to notice it in connection with two other cases. Pierson v. Manning came before the court on two questions reserved by the court below, and the first was whether the assignment was a valid instrument. It was a general assignment for the benefit of -a part only of the creditors of the assignor, and it was ruled down at the instance of a creditor not provided for, as bad for reasons appearing on its face. The assignor expressly required the assignee to delay selling the real estate until the personal assets should be wholly disposed of, and this was held to be a fatal defect, as [151]*151no doubt it was. But another point was noticed. The entire estate of the debtor, both real and personal, was conveyed to the assignee, but not for the benefit of all the creditors. The benefit was expressly confined to three New York firms, and no provision was made for any surplus which.might arise. The whole of the debt- or’s property was placed beyond the reach of the creditors who were unprovided for, and at the same time the residuum, after paying the three firms, was not appropriated.

In the opinion given it was argued ,-that the eventual surplus, whatever it might' be, would result to the assignor, and hence there was involved in the transaction a provision for the future benefit of the assignor, as against such of his creditors as were not beneficiaries under the assignment. The view expressed in this part of the case was not required to uphold the point adjudged by the court, and without assuming to assent or dissent, it is sufficient to say that it has no application to the ease before us. The reasoning manifests clearly enough that stress was placed on circumstances which broadly distinguish the two controversies.

The instrument now in question is not a general assignment, and Bulen, in whose favor the defense is made, can hardly be regarded as an outside creditor. He is proceeding in the name of Smith & Mason, who hold the title, and the debt is one of the debts absolutely provided for.

Sutton v. Hanford, 11 Mich., 513, and Price v. Haynes, 37 Mich., 487, were cases where the instruments were executed as general and not partial assignments. In the first a sale on credit was expressly enjoined, if found necessary to prevent sacrifice, and the assignment was adjudged invalid. In the second, the debtor after ostensibly devoting all his property to' creditors by an assignment colorably general, was enabled to keep' back a portion by means of the restricted terms of conveyance chosen by him, and here too the assignment was held bad.

[152]*152These cases have no application. As already stated, the instrument given to complainants does not profess to be a general assignment, and is very far from being one. In its nature it is a kind of security. Lessee of Wilkins v. Wright, 6 McLean, 340. It is a conveyance by the debtor of a specific portion of his real estate to trustees to pay the defendant’s debt and some others. All the' provisions are susceptible of an honest application,” and the case is quite within the doctrine of State Bank v. Chapelle, supra.

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Bluebook (online)
3 N.W. 945, 42 Mich. 146, 1879 Mich. LEXIS 733, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/palmer-v-mason-mich-1879.