Reed v. Penrose's Executors

2 Grant 472
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 1, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 2 Grant 472 (Reed v. Penrose's Executors) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reed v. Penrose's Executors, 2 Grant 472 (Pa. 1859).

Opinion

Opinion by

Lowrie, C. J.

— When we directed the affirmance of the judgment in this case, we were entirely clear on most of the points discussed on the argument, and they seemed to us so simple, that we did not deem it necessary to add anything to the opinion of the court below, relative to them. On two points we had some hesitation, because two of our brethren (Justices Thompson and Read,) having been of counsel in the cause, did not sit at the argument, and only two of the remaining three of us were in favor of affirming them. Hence, we did not think that any reasons that we could assign for our judgment, ought to be regarded as of any public importance, and we assigned none.

It was, perhaps, quite natural, under these circumstances, that we were urged to grant a re-hearing. We directed the motion for a re-hearing, to be entered, and that its determination should depend on the two questions already alluded to, and which were stated in the order, and that in the meantime the record should be retained.

On the argument for the motion, these questions were presented in a somewhat different light from that in which they were presented on the principal argument. Then, no reference was made to the pleadings, and the defendant’s plea was not printed with the record, and the questions were argued as if they were raised by the issue. Now .our attention is directed to [485]*485the fact, that the only issue is on the garnishee’s plea of nulla bona, and it is insisted that the principles which remain in doubt are not raised by that issue.

We think that this position is well taken; and if it had been insisted on at first, we should have had no difficulty. The plea of nulla bona is essentially the plea of the garnishee as garnishee, that he has no effects of the defendants, the Erie Canal Company, in his hands. This was stated, on the argument, to be the only plea, and it is so stated in one of the paper-books of the plaintiff in error. This plea was manifestly untrue, and was found by the jury to be so; and therefore the judgment in favor of the plaintiff below, was inevitable. If the garnishee had any title to take defence against the attachment as a creditor of the defendant, he ought to have pleaded his defence as a creditor, and put the issue on that, and not on the plea of nulla bona, which is the plea of the garnishee, and not of a creditor.

And surely he had no right, as garnishee, to take any defence that belonged peculiarly to the canal company. He had their funds in his hands, which the creditors were attempting to reach. As garnishee, he had no right to- set up any defence for the company. If their funds were exempt from execution, it was for them, and not for him, to plead this exemption. They might appropriate this money to the plaintiff’s debt, or allow it to be so appropriated, and the garnishee, as such, had no authority to intermeddle.

The company are a party to the suit, and might have appeared and pleaded any proper defence, but they did not. And no creditor appears as such, to plead that the fund is not attachable. We have no defence on the record, but the untrue one of the garnishee, and all other persons have allowed their rights to depend on that.

Suppose the garnishee had succeeded on his plea of nulla bona. According to the plain rules of legal pleading, he would have thereby established the legal conclusion, as against the plaintiff and the canal company, that he had no funds of the company in his hands; though, by his own.admission, he had nearly $100,000. Then he might legally keep this amount, without having paid a dollar of it. Possibly, equity might have found some mode of averting this result.

It appears, therefore, that the liability of the funds in the garnishee’s hands, to this execution-attachment, is not raised by the issue. The canal company puts in no plea to raise it; no creditor of the company does so; and the garnishee does not, and had no right, as such, to do so. But it was raised on the argument, and twice fully discussed; and it might have been raised in the case,' and we feel that we ought to express the view we have of it.

[486]*486Is tbe fund exempt from execution, because it consists of tolls collected on the canal? No; for, ordinarily, this is the only income that a canal company can have; and to exempt this, would put them beyond all compulsory process. Is it so, because it is the duty of the company to apply the tolls to keep up their works ? No; for it is likewise their duty to pay their debts. Is it so, because the company had resolved to apply $70,000 for repairs ? As well might it be said that a man’s intention or resolution to buy a new suit of clothes with certain money, exempts it from attachment. Is it so, because the company is insolvent, in the sense that their income is sufficient only for the repairs of the works and for the payment of two to four per cent, per annum of their debts ? No; if they were totally insolvent, it is not they, but their creditors, who have a right to claim that no creditor shall gain a preference over another by judicial process; and creditors cannot do so except by first founding a title to the property for the benefit of all. No private corporation, any more than an individual, can keep its creditors at bay, on any general rule of law, so long as it has its own property under its own control, and this corporation has no special privilege that avails it for this purpose. The insolvency that frustrates the ordinary processes of the law in favor of creditors, is not mere actual insolvency or inability to pay its debts, with all its effects, but some legal form of insolvency by which the property of the debtor is taken into the custody of the law by sequestration, assignment or otherwise, to be administered for the benefit of all concerned, and is thus put under an extraordinary process, which the creditors may pursue, according to its nature. Even when the State claims to enforce the application of the tolls to the repairs of the works, it must do so by process in court, and must submit to the rule that the process first attaching shall be first satisfied. It would be strange, indeed, to say that the company may pay all this money to Mr. Reed, on his bonds, or to any other creditor at their pleasure, (as certainly they might if not for this attachment,) and yet that other creditors have no right to attach it; that they may have property which they may dispose of at their pleasure, (subject to the law of fraudulent conveyances,) and yet there is no process by which their creditors can reach it.

Does an execution-attachment, in the ordinary form, lie against a private corporation ? The Act of 20th April, 1845, is express in the affirmative for the general principle; but it adds, that the process “ may be proceeded in to final judgment and execution, in the same manner, and under the same rules and regulations, as are directed against corporations by the Act of 16th June, 1836, relating to executions.” Taking this ad[487]*487dition, as it stands, it is impossible to- put it in practice. The general rule of the act is quite plain, making private' corporations subject to all execution-attachments, and under ordinary circumstances, the form of the process belonging to the general rule, and prescribed in it, is plain and complete in all its parts.

For ordinary cases, the specific mode, referred to in the added words, is not needed, and they would, if applied to the general rule of the act, frustrate it entirely. This cannot have been intended.

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13 N.J.L. 66 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1832)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Grant 472, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reed-v-penroses-executors-pa-1859.