Sackett v. Andross

5 Hill & Den. 327
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1843
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Hill & Den. 327 (Sackett v. Andross) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sackett v. Andross, 5 Hill & Den. 327 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1843).

Opinion

Bronson, J.

The plea of nil debet to an action of debt on the judgment of one of our own courts of record is had. If the defendant wished to put the judgment in issue, he should have. pleaded nul tiel record. (Wheaton v. Fellows, 23 Wend. 375.) The plaintiff is entitled to judgment on the demurrer to the first plea.

There has either been some error in copying the second plea into the demurrer hook, or else it was not drawn with very great skill. Some words are omitted which the pleader seems to have had in his mind, while others are inserted which might better have been left out.

But' there are substantial defects in the plea. It was not necessary to set out all the steps which were taken in obtaining [330]*330the discharge; but it was necessary to show that the court or officer acquired jurisdiction to grant it. And it is not enough to say in general terms that the court or officer had jurisdiction; but the facts on which jurisdiction depends must be specially alleged. The plea shows that the defendant resided within the jurisdiction of the court; but it fails to show that he presented the necessary papers to put the court in motion. As a voluntary bankrupt it was necessary that he should present a petition setting forth a list of his creditors, their respective places of res* idence, and the amount due to each, together with an inventory of his estate, verified by oath. (Bankrupt Act of August 19, 1841, § 1.) Upon the most favorable construction of the plea, the averment is, that the defendant presented a petition duly verified by such affidavits, schedules and other necessary and proper papers as are required by the bankrupt act. Although it was not necessary to set out the contents at large, he should have stated what papers in particular he presented, so that the court could judge whether they were such as are necessary and proper.” The party must plead facts, and leave the law to the court.

The plea does not directly allege that a discharge was granted by any body. But if we look at what the pleader probably intended to say, to wit, that a discharge was granted by Judge Betts, the plea will still be bad. A discharge could only be granted by the court—-not by a. judge. (§ 1, 4, 6.)

Again: The discharge as set out in the plea is restricted to debts “ proveable under the said act;” (and see § 4.) There is no averment in the plea that the debt due to the.plaintiff was proveable under the bankrupt act, and without such averment the discharge does not appear to be a bar to the action.

Finally: There is no averment that this debt was not created in consequence of the defalcation of the defendant as a public officer, or while he was acting in a fiduciary capacity. (§ 1.) The federal courts are not agreed on the question whether one who owes fiduciary debts can become a voluntary bankrupt, so as to obtain a discharge from any of his obligations; but they are agreed that fiduciary debts are not discharged by the certificate, [331]*331unless the creditor comes in and proves the debt. The plea should have shown that this was a debt on which the discharge might operate.

As it is almost a matter of course to allow such defects as have been mentioned to be cured by an amendment, it will be proper to consider the broader question made at the bar; to wit, whether the discharge, if well pleaded, would constitute a good answer to the action. And here it will only be necessary to notice two facts. The defendant is a voluntary bankrupt, or one who has been discharged on his own motion, and not at the instance of his creditors; and the debt was contracted before the bankrupt act was passed. Upon these facts two general questions' arise; first, whether the insolvent or voluntary branch of the statute is to have a retroactive effect, so as to annul existing contracts; and second, whether it was within the constitutional power of congress to pass the law.

First. A law which nullifies existing contracts, or destroys a right already vested; or which in any other way takes the property of one man without his consent, and gives it to another, is so utterly repugnant to the principles of justice, and so demoralizing in its tendency, that it would be a libel upon congress to impute the intention to pass such a law, unless we can find a justification plainly written in the statute book. It is not to be made out from equivocal expressions, nor by tracing general words into remote and unjust consequences. When there is any room for construction, the law should be taken in that sense which will best stand with honesty and fair dealing.

A distinction may be taken between that branch of the statute which is properly called a bankrupt law, and that which is in truth an insolvent law under another name. A bankrupt law proper is not made for the relief of the debtor, but rather for his punishment. It acts upon him in invitum. At an early day the bankrupt not only forfeited all his estate, but he was treated as a criminal, and might be seized and shut up in prison. And although the rigor of the law has since been very justly abated, it is still the leading feature of a proper bankrupt system that it is a remedy in the hands of the creditor for the col[332]*332lection of his debt. It enables the creditor to set aside fraudulent conveyances of the bankrupt’s estate, to overreach preferences among creditors, and to seize all the effects of the debtor before they have been squandered, and cause them to be applied to the discharge of his legal obligations. If such a law be made to retroact, it neither takes away vested rights, nor works injustice in any form. The creditor can have no more than his due, and the bankrupt is only charged with the-payment of his debt. No favor is shown to the one, and no wrong is done to the other.

But when we come to that feature in the statute which enables the debtor, without the concurrence, and against, the will of the creditor, to demand a discharge from his legal obligations, very different considerations arise. If such a law be wholly prospective in its operation, it can be subject to no great objection. The credit is then given with reference to the existing state of things. The law may be said to enter into, and form a part of the contract; and when the debtor is afterwards discharged, it is no more than the creditor could have anticipated as a possible event at the time he parted with his property. But if a law enacted after the credit was given be made to retroact so as to annul the prior obligation of the debtor, it will be nothing less than an act of arbitrary power, without the semblance of justice to support it.

If then we find in this statute expressions which look back upon the past, they should, if possible, be understood as applying only to that class of cases where the creditor, and not the debtor, is the acting party. And in other cases, general words should be understood as applying only to future obligations. In this Avay we shall promote justice, and save ourselves from the reproach of having carried the modern doctrine of repudiating debts into the national legislature.

Let us iioav see Avhat foundation there is for the argument that a voluntary bankrupt may be discharged from the debts Avhich he OAved before the statute was enacted. The first section provides, that “ all persons whatsoever, residing in any state, district or territory of the United States, owing debts [333]

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Related

Bank of Columbia v. Okely
17 U.S. 122 (Supreme Court, 1819)
Wilkinson v. Leland
27 U.S. 627 (Supreme Court, 1829)
Dash v. Van Kleeck
7 Johns. 477 (New York Supreme Court, 1811)
Wheaton & Doolittle v. Fellows
23 Wend. 375 (New York Supreme Court, 1840)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 Hill & Den. 327, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sackett-v-andross-nysupct-1843.