Rundle v. Murgatroyd's assignees

4 U.S. 264
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 15, 1804
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 4 U.S. 264 (Rundle v. Murgatroyd's assignees) 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
Rundle v. Murgatroyd's assignees, 4 U.S. 264 (1804).

Opinion

Shippen, Chief Justice.

— The mortgage given by Murgatroyd is resisted on behalf of his creditors, upon the general ground, that it was given in contemplation of bankruptcy. There is but one exception to the rule, which declares a conveyance so given to be void ; namely, where a creditor obtains a preference, by urging his debtor for payment, and threatening him with legal process. The only question, therefore, is a matter of fact, whether Murgatroyd, at the execution of the mortgage, contemplated bankruptcy, and meant voluntarily to prefer the particular creditor ? If tho evidence proves the affirmative, the mortgage is void; but if otherwise, it is lawful and valid.

It has been urged, in favor of the plaintiff’s claim, that whatever may have been the situation of Murgatroyd, at the time of executing the mortgage, the act was done in pursuance of a previous agreement, entered into for a valuable consideration, when he was perfectly solvent. It would be grateful to our feelings, on the present occasion, could we express sentiments favorable to the maintenance and fortunes of a wife and children; but we cannot seek that gratification, through a sacrifice of the established principles of law. The agreement was executory ; and although it had relation to a possible insolvency, it might, perhaps, independent of the bankrupt law, have been carried into effect. But no antecedent contract can make the mortgage valid, upon the provisions and principles of the bankrupt law, if Murgatroyd *3051 *ac^1iaiiy gave it, when he was insolvent, upon the eve of a legal bank-J ruptcy. The general creditors had then acquired an interest in his estate; and it was too late to perform an engagement for giving preferent es and securities, at their expense, to any particular creditor.

The law respecting marriage settlements, is the same in England and in Pennsylvania. It requires a fair motive, as well as a valuable considera[265]*265tion ; and the interest must be actually declared and vested, at the time of a settlement, or it cannot prevail against the rights of honest creditors.

Rawle and-, for plaintiff ; Ingersoll and Tilghman, for defendant.

The present case by no means resembles the ease of General Stewart's settlement. There, Mr. McClenachan, on his daughter’s marriage, delivered to General Stewart a large sum, in certificates of public debt, expressly stipulating, that those certificates should be held and appropriated to the use of Mrs. Stewart and the children of the marriage. General Stewart always kept the fund represented by the certificates, distinct from his own immediate funds ; and although he subscribed them, first to the new loan of Pennsylvania, and afterwards, to the general loan of the United States, constituting the funding system, it was traced, and ascertained that the real estate specified in the deed of settlement (which, it is true, was made long after the marriage) had been, in fact, purchased with the actual proceeds of the original certificates, delivered by Mr. McClenachan uj>on the marriage. But here, the bequest of the legacy was made without stipulation, or condition ; the money being received by Murgatroyd, was blended with his other property, so that a separate existence or application could never be traced; and, under these circumstances, he acquired a credit, which would be false and delusive indeed, were the property now withdrawn, upon an obsolete and latent pretence, from the creditors who trusted to it.

Smith, Justice.

— I am likewise of opinion, that the mortgage must yield to the superior legal and equitable claims of the general creditors. It is a sound and uniform rule, that settlements made upon a wife and children, by persons who have not a sufficient estate to pay all their debts, are void against creditors. The decision upon General Stewart's settlement was not a departure from the rule ; but simply a recognition of the marriage portion of Mrs. Stewart, transformed and ascertained in a new shape. The late, as well as the present chief justice and myself, delivered our opinions at large in that case ; and united in the result, for the reasons that have been suggested; none of which can be assigned in favor of the present claim, under the mortgage. 1

The jury, according to the charge, found a verdict for the defendant.

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4 U.S. 264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rundle-v-murgatroyds-assignees-pa-1804.