Pinckney v. Lanahan

62 Md. 447, 1884 Md. LEXIS 110
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 19, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 62 Md. 447 (Pinckney v. Lanahan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pinckney v. Lanahan, 62 Md. 447, 1884 Md. LEXIS 110 (Md. 1884).

Opinion

Robinson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellant, a citizen of South Carolina, obtained a judgment on the 13th of March, 1882, for $14,696.85, against Robert W. L. Rasin and Edward K. Cooper, trading as R. W. L. Rasin & Co.

On the 14th of March, 1882, an attachment was issued on this judgment, and laid on the same day in the hands of Thomas M. Lanahan, trustee.

To the plea of the garnishee, the appellant filed eight replications, to all which the garnishee demurred.

Gosnell, the permanent trustee in insolvency of Rasin, the surviving partner of Rasin & Co. also intervened, claiming title, as such trustee, to the property attached in the hands of the garnishee.

The Court below rendered judgment on the demurrer for garnishee, and quashed the attachment. Hence this appeal.

Without setting forth the pleadings at length, it is sufficient to say, the demurrer on which the judgment [449]*449•of tlie Court was rendered admits, that Rasin and Cooper, being embarrassed and in failing circumstances, conveyed to Lanahan and others, their individual and partnership property in trust, for the payment of creditors; that the •conveyances although valid on their face, were in fact fraudulent and void as to creditors; that after their execution and before the issuing of the plaintiff’s attachment, certain creditors of Rasin and Cooper, on February 13th, 1882, filed petitions in the Court of Common Pleas of Baltimore City, praying to have the said Rasin and Cooper, who •composed the firm of R. W. L. Rasin & Co., individually ■adjudged insolvent debtors; that pending these proceedings and before any adjudication had on the same, Cooper died; that subsequently to wit, on November 15th, 1883, Rasin, the surviving partner, was adjudged an insolvent debtor, and a certain Frank Grosnell, was duly appointed his permanent trustee, and as such gave bond according to law.

The main questions arising upon these facts, are:

First. Whether the adjudication of Rasin as an insolvent debtor, vested in Grosnell, his trustee in insolvency, the partnership assets of Rasin & Co., by relation from the time of the filing of the proceedings in insolvency?

And secondly, if so, whether the title to such assets thus vested in the trustee, was a bar to the attachment issued subsequently to the filing of the proceedings in insolvency, by the appellant, a citizen of another State?

No one denies that by a series of decisions beginning with Larrabee vs. Talbott, 5 Gill, 426, it has been decided that as to the claims of non-resident creditors who were not parties to the proceedings, the insolvent law of the State was wholly inoperative and void; and that notwithstanding the transfer by the insolvent of his property to a trustee, such creditors could reduce their claims to judgment, and by issuing attachments thereon, seize any prop[450]*450erty or funds undistributed in the hands of the insolvent trustee.

“The practical injustice of the rule,” says Mr. Poe, 2 vol. Pleading and Practice, sec. 815, “was obvious. It oftentimes enabled the foreign creditors to obtain payment of their claims in full, while the domestic creditors, against whom the discharge of the insolvent was confessedly complete and effectual, received nothing whatever.”

Such a construction of a statute, which dedicated the entire estate of the insolvent to the payment of his creditors, and which declared in express terms, that it should be distributed among them, according to the principle's of equity, cannot be supported, it must be admitted, upon any principle of abstract justice, nor upon any principle of comity or international law.

It rested, and rested solely, upon a series of decisions, in which the power of a State to pass insolvent laws, discharging the person of the debtor and his future acquisitions of property from the payment of his debts, and the effect and operation of such laws upon the rights of resident creditors, and creditors citizens of other States, had been considered and decided by the Supreme Court of the United States. Sturges vs. Crowninshield, 4 Wheat., 122; Ogden vs. Saunders, 12 Wheat., 213; Boyle vs. Zacharie., 6 Peters, 635; Cook, vs. Moffat, 5 Howard, 295.

From the conflicting opinions filed in these cases, and the widely different reasons on which they are based, it may not be easy, especially in Ogden vs. Saunders, to say. precisely what was decided by the majority of the Court. Without extending this opinion by a review of these cases, it is sufficient to say, that the following constitutional principles may be considered as definitely settled:—

1. That a State may pass an insolvent law, discharging the person of the debtor and his future acquisitions of property from the payment of his debts, so far as it con[451]*451cerns contracts between citizens of the State, made within the State, after the enactment of such laws.

2dly. That such laws, do not apply to contracts between citizens of one State and citizens of another State.

Passing by the earlier cases in which these questions were considered, and coming down to Cook vs. Moffat, et al., 5 How., 295, in which it was decided that the discharge of a Maryland debtor under the insolvent laws of that State, did not affect a contract made in New York, with a citizen of that State, although the contract was made after the passage of the insolvent law. Mr. Justice G-rier, in delivering the opinion of the Court, said:

“It is true, that as between the several States of this Union, their respective bankrupt laws, like those of foreign States, can have no effect in any forum beyond their respective limits, unless by comity. But it is not a necessary consequence, that State Courts can treat this subject as if tbe States were wholly foreign to each other, and inflict her bankrupt laws on contracts and persons not within her limits.”

And then after referring to Sturges vs. Crowninshield, in which it was held that a State had the power to pass insolvent laws, provided they did not impair the obligation of a contract, within the meaning of the Constitution of the United States, he says, “It followed, as a corollary from this modification and restraint of the power of the State to pass such laws, that they could have no effect on contracts made before their enactment, or beyond their territory.”

This case was decided in 1841, and in the same year, Larrabee vs. Talbott, was argued in the Court of Appeals of this State, involving the validity of a transfer of property by a Maryland debtor in failing circumstances, and who afterwards became insolvent, to a New York creditor, in plain violation of the insolvent law of Maryland.' In sustaining the validity of the transfer, Judge Marttat said:

[452]*452“We have then before us a contract made and to be performed in New York, between citizens of Maryland and citizens of New York, and it is now settled by the adjudications of the Supreme Court, that the discharge obtained by Rogers & Erick under the insolvent laws of Maryland, could not affect the right of Berrien & Co.

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Bluebook (online)
62 Md. 447, 1884 Md. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pinckney-v-lanahan-md-1884.