Second Nat. Bank v. New York Silk Manuf'g Co.

11 F. 532, 1882 U.S. App. LEXIS 2025
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedApril 21, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 11 F. 532 (Second Nat. Bank v. New York Silk Manuf'g Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Second Nat. Bank v. New York Silk Manuf'g Co., 11 F. 532, 1882 U.S. App. LEXIS 2025 (D.N.J. 1882).

Opinion

Nixon, D. J.

This is a motion of Alfred Wagstaff, receiver of the New York Silk Manufacturing Company, appointed by the supreme court of New York, and Augustus Zabriskie, receiver, appointed by the court of chancery of New Jersey, to strike out the appearance entered by the defendant company to two writs of foreign attachment [533]*533issued by the circuit court of the county of Hudson, New Jersey, against the property of the said company. The admitted facts of the case are these:

Tlie Now York Silk Manufacturing Company is an insolvent corporation, organized under tlie laws of the state of Now York, doing business and having property in tlie state of New Jersey. On the thirteenth of September, 1881, one James Miehin, a creditor, filed a bill in the court of chancery of Now Jersey against the said company, alleging its insolvency, and praying for an injunction and for the appointment of a receiver. Pending this proceeding, to-wit, on the third of October, 1881, the Second National Bank of Paterson caused a writ of foreign attachment to too issued against the property of the company, by virtue of which the sheriff of the county of Hudson levied upon all its goods and chattels within the jurisdiction, and duly returned the writ with an inventory and appraisement of the property seized. On the twenty-ninth of October a second writ was issued out of the same court against the same defendant, by the same plaintiff, which was also levied upon the same property that was inventoried and- appraised under the first writ. Subsequently to the issue of the first attachment, to-wit, on the twenty-first of October, the chancellor of New Jersey signed an order restraining the defendant company, and its officers and agents, from selling, transferring, encumbering, or otherwise disposing of any of the goods, chattels, rights, credits, moneys, or effects of the said company until the further order of the court. On the seventh of November the chancellor signed another order, appointing An gustus Zabriskie receiver, and directing him, before entering upon the office, to take the oath prescribed by law, and to give bond to the chancellor, with approved security, in the sum of $25,000, conditioned for the faithful discharge of its duties. Tlie oatli was taken, and the bond executed and filed, on the following fifteenth day of November.
In the mean time proceedings were going on in the supreme court of the city and county of Now York, whereby several judgments were obtained against the defendant company, among which were two in favor of the Second National Bank of Paterson, upon the same claims on which the writs of attachment were issued in New Jersey. On the sixteenth of November, 1881, one Rufus O. Mason commenced an action there, pursuant to the provisions of section 1781 of the Code of Civil Procedure of the state of New York, against tlie New York Silk Manufacturing Company, William A. M. Grier, William I. Harris, James T. Miehin, Joseph Micliin, Jr., and Frederick II. Harris, the president, secretary, treasurer, and trustees of the said corporation. Upon filing the complaint he obtained from his honor, Judge Donohue, an order upon the defendants to show cause, on the eighteenth of November, why the individual defendants should not be compelled to account for their official conduct in tlie management and disposition of the funds and property of the silk company; why they should not be enjoined from collecting and receiving any debt or demand, or from paying out or transferring or delivering to any person, or in any manner interfering with any money, property, or effects of the said company during the pendency of the suit; and why a receiver should not be forthwith appointed, with the usual powers of receiv[534]*534ers in like cases. On the return-day, the rule was made absolute. Alfred "Wagstaff was appointed receiver, and the company, its officers, agents, and servants were enjoined “ from collecting any debts or demands, and from paying out or disposing or transferring to any person any of its property or effects, except to deliver the same to the receiver.”
Contemporaneously with these proceedings the defendant company moved, in the circuit court of the county of Hudson, to quash the writs of attachment as improvidently issued — the corporation having officers residing in the state at the time of their issue. After hearing the parties the court refused to quash. The same application was subsequently made by the Hew Jersey receiver, but the judge declined to hear argument, treating the question as res adgudieata.
Pending a motion in the state court for the appointment of an auditor in the attachment suits, and for the sale of the property as perishable, Mr. Zabriskie, the Hew Jersey receiver, applied to the chancellor for authority to take the possession and control of the attached property, which authority, after hearing, the vice-chancellor declined to grant, on the ground that the court of chancery had no right to interfere with the proceedings in the courts of law where liens had been acquired before the date of the receiver’s appointment.
leading in these motions, the silk company took the usual steps prescribed in the third section of the act of March 3,1875, to remove the case. Appearances were entered in behalf of the corporation in the attachment suits. Its president made and filed in the state court a petition for the removal of the suits into the circuit court of the United States, accompanied with a bond, with good and sufficient security, which petition and bond were accepted by the state court. By virtue of these steps all further jurisdiction over the cases ceased in the state court and vested here.

The case thus stated presents for consideration questions of interest and importance.

The counsel for the attaching creditors suggested at the outset that neither of the receivers had any standing here, and were not placed by the law of their appointment in a position which authorized them to intervene and make any motion in the suit.

Accepting the decision of the supreme court in Booth v. Clark, 17 How. 322, as the law in the federal courts in regard to the powers of receivers outside of the jurisdiction which appointed them, there would seem to be foundation for this view in respect to the New York receiver. It is there said, (page 335 :)

“We'think that a receiver has never been recognized by a foreign tribunal as an actor in a suit. He is not within that comity which nations have permitted, after the manner of such nations as practice it in respect to .the judgment and decrees of foreign tribunals, for all of them do not permit it in the same manner and to the same extent, to make such comity international or á part of the law of nations.”

[535]*535Then, after distinguishing between the rules existing in the courts of the United States and of Great Britain in respect to foreign assignments in bankruptcy, the court proceeds to say:

“He [the receiver] has no extraterritorial power of official action; none which the court appointing him can confer, with authority to enable him to go into a foreign jurisdiction to take possession of the debtor’s property; none which can give him, upon the principle of comity, a privilege to sue in a foreign court, or another jurisdiction, as the judgment creditor might have done, where his debtor may be amenable to the tribunal which the creditor may seek.”

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Second Nat. Bank v. New York Silk Manuf'g Co.
21 F. Cas. 960 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Jersey, 1882)

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Bluebook (online)
11 F. 532, 1882 U.S. App. LEXIS 2025, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/second-nat-bank-v-new-york-silk-manufg-co-njd-1882.