Patty-Joiner & Eubank Co. v. Cummins

57 S.W. 566, 93 Tex. 598, 1900 Tex. LEXIS 190
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 11, 1900
DocketNo. 896.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 57 S.W. 566 (Patty-Joiner & Eubank Co. v. Cummins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Patty-Joiner & Eubank Co. v. Cummins, 57 S.W. 566, 93 Tex. 598, 1900 Tex. LEXIS 190 (Tex. 1900).

Opinion

GAINES, Chief Justice.

This case comes to us upon certified questions. The statement and questions as certified are as follows:

“The above entitled cause is an appeal from a judgment of the County Court of Hunt County.

“On February 2, 1899, W. S. Bedford & Son executed a general assignment conveying all their property subject to execution to E. B. Cummins, for the benefit of all their creditors who would agree to accept under the same and release them. The assignment was in the usual form, and was a statutory assignment as provided by the statutes of the State of Texas. Attached to the assignment was a list of the creditors and a schedule of the assets of the assignors. The assignee accepted the trust and proceeded to administer the property. Patty-Joiner & Eubank Company, a creditor of the assignors, did not accept under the assignment, but sued and obtained a judgment against W. S. Bedford & Son, and on March 9, 1899, pending the suit, sued out a writ of garnishment against B. B. Cummins, the assignee of W. S. Bedford & Son. The assignee answered the writ of garnishment, denying that he was indebted to or had any effects in his hands belonging to W. S. Bedford & Son, or that he knew of any person so indebted or in possession of effects. Patty-Joiner & Eubank Company controverted the answer, alleging the making of the assignment and that the garnishee had more than sufficient funds, proceeds of the assigned property, to pay their debt, and further alleging that the national bankruptcy act was in force at the time the assignment was made, and contending that the passage of the act suspended the statutory assignment law of the State of Texas, and that E. B. Cummins, the garnishee, who was the assignee under the assignment, was liable under the garnishment for the funds that were in his hands, proceeds of the assigned property, to the extent of the judgment obtained by the Patty-Joiner & Eubank Company against the said W. S. Bedford & Son. On the trial, it was proved that the garnishee had property and money, the proceeds of said assigned property, in his hands which would be subject to garnishment if it should be held that the assignment was invalid. The court below held that the passage of the bankrupt act did not sup end the State assignment law so as to render the assignment invalid, and that it would only have the effect to set aside the assignment upon the institution of bankruptcy proceedings against the assignors, and rendered judgment discharging the garnishee. This court affirmed the judgment of the court below.

“Pending a motion for rehearing, this court, desiring the instruction of the honorable Supreme Court for the proper decision of an issue of law arising upon the record, it is ordered that the following questions *602 be certified to the Supreme Court of Texas in accordance with article 1043 of the Revised Statutes, to wit:

“1. Was the State assignment law of Texas suspended by the passage and going into effect of the national bankruptcy act ? and if so, is the money in the hands of the assignee Cummins subject to the garnishment O'? the Patty-Joiner & Eubank Company, the creditor of the assignors, W. S. Bedford & Son?

"2. By reason of the facts stated, was the assignment invalid?”

But for the fact that the assignors in the deed of assignment in question availed themselves of the privilege conferred by that provision of our assignment law which authorized them to exact discharges of the accepting creditors, provided they should receive from the assigned estate as much as one-third of their respective debts (Revised Statutes, article 73), there would be no difficulty in determining the question. The assignment being of all the debtor’s property and being for the equal benefit of all-the creditors of the assignors, would undoubtedly have been good as a common law conveyance, even if it should be held that the effect of the passage of the United States bankrupt act of 1898 was to wholly suspend the operation of our statutes which provide for general assignments by insolvent debtors.

In Mayer v. Hellman, 91 U. S., 496, it was held that such an assign- ' ment under the laws of Ohio was good, even as against an assignee in bankruptcy, when executed six months before proceedings in bankruptcy were taken against the debtor; and that decision would be conclusive of the question certified but for the fact that the law of Ohio did not provide for the discharge of the assignors. That case arose under the bankrupt law of 1867, and while there is a difference between that act and the now existing law, that difference is immaterial in so far as it affects the question before us. The present law expressly declares the making of a general assignment for the benefit of creditors an act of bankruptcy. It was an act of bankruptcy under the former statute as held by the courts (Boese v. King, 108 U. S., 379), there being, however, no express declaration to that effect in the act itself. Under the former law, proceeding to have a debtor who has made a general assignment declared a bankrupt had to be executed within six months. The period is reduced to four months by the present act.

If, then, the assignment under consideration was good at common law, it is a good assignment in this proceeding, and was from its inception good for all purposes except against proceedings in bankruptcy instituted under the bankrupt act of 1898 within four months from the day of its execution. The only doubtful feature of the instrument is the provision which exacts releases, and the question is, does that make the assignment void at common law? There is a conflict of authority upon the question, and, so far as we have been able to discover, there has been no authoritative decision by this court upon the point. The accepted rule in England seems to be, that, if the assignment conveys all the debtor’s property, "to exact a release as a condition of participating *603 in its benefits does not make it void. King v. Watson, 3 Price, 6; Janes v. Whitbread, 11 Com. B., 406; Jackson v. Lomas, 4 Term, 166. The rule seems to us a logical deduction from that other rule of the common law that a debtor has the absolute right to prefer his creditors and to appropriate all his property to pay one or more of them to the exclusion of all others, provided, that in no case more property be applied to the payment of a debt than is reasonably sufficient to satisfy it.

The failing debtor may also appropriate any or all his property to the securing of one or more of his creditors, provided the surplus be left subject to legal process in behalf of those who are unsecured. Since the debtor may directly appropriate his property to satisfy or secure any one or more of his debts, leaving others unsatisfied and unsecured, we fail to see how a creditor is injured by an assignment which exacts releases from those who accept under it.

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Bluebook (online)
57 S.W. 566, 93 Tex. 598, 1900 Tex. LEXIS 190, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patty-joiner-eubank-co-v-cummins-tex-1900.