Second Ward Savings Bank v. Schranck

39 L.R.A. 569, 73 N.W. 31, 97 Wis. 250, 1897 Wisc. LEXIS 75
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 22, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 39 L.R.A. 569 (Second Ward Savings Bank v. Schranck) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Second Ward Savings Bank v. Schranck, 39 L.R.A. 569, 73 N.W. 31, 97 Wis. 250, 1897 Wisc. LEXIS 75 (Wis. 1897).

Opinions

PiNNey, J.

Except as to a matter of costs in the entry of the largest judgment against Louis Henes, the question involved in these appeals is whether ch. 334, Laws of 1897, as applied to the facts stated, is unconstitutional, as impairing the obligation of the contracts contained in the notes and warrants of attorney upon which the judgments above ■set forth were entered; the assignee claiming that this statute is a permitted change of the existing remedy, while the plaintiff bank claims that the statute is a law impairing the obligation of these contracts, and its substantial rights under 'them, and therefore void, under the provisions of the constitutions of the state and of the United States prohibiting the passage of any law impairing the obligation of contracts.

1. The act in question took effect April 30,1897, and is “An •act to amend chapter 80, of the revised statutes of the state of Wisconsin for the year 1878, entitled, ‘Of voluntary assignments.’ ” It provides that “ whenever the property of an insolvent debtor is attached or levied upon by virtue of any process in favor of a creditor, or a garnishment is made against such a debtor, such debtor may, within ten days [258]*258thereafter, make an assignment of all his property and estate not exempt by law, for the equal benefit of all his-creditors, as provided by law, whereupon all such attack-"ments, levies, garnishments, or other process shall be dissolved and the property attached or levied upon shall be-turned over to such assignee or receiver.” The act is á general one, and is an amendment to and a part of the voluntary assignment law of the state, which, taken in connection with the act providing for the discharge of a debtor (Laws of 1889, ch. 385), is, in substance and effect, an insolvent or bankrupt law, and as such permitted, in the absence of federal legislation. The notes and warrants of attorney had; been given more than sixty days before the passage of the-act. The remedy given to the plaintiff at the time these-contracts were made was to enter judgment pursuant to the warrants of attorney, issue execution thereon, and levy the same upon the property of the debtor and sell it to satisfy the debt. This right, at the time the notes and warrants of attorney were given, could not be taken' away by the-making of a voluntary assignment by the debtor, if the notes and warrants of attorney upon which the judgment was entered had been given more than sixty days prior to the making of such assignment, even though the maker was insolvent at the time they were given and when the judgment was-entered. McCaul v. Thayer, 70 Wis. 138. Sec. 1693a, S. & B. Ann. Stats., provides that “ every execution levy made-under 'a judgment confessed against any such insolvent debtor, within sixty days prior to any assignment for the benefit of creditors, or under a judgment entered on a judgment note, by any such debtor, within sixty days prior to any such assignment, and the lien of any such judgment upon real estate, shall.be void and of no effect.”

In McCaul v. Thayer, supra, this section was before the court for consideration; and it was held that an execution levy made under a judgment entered within sixty days prior [259]*259to an assignment for the benefit of creditors, upon a judgment note given by the assignor more than sixty days prior to such assignment, was not void. The court, by OetoN, J., said that the only mischiefs to be cured by the act were acts of the debtor by which he preferred creditors, and prevented “ the equal distribution of his property among all • of his creditors,” and that the entry of judgment at the instance of the plaintiff or creditor alone, “ upon a judgment note given,” was in no sense his act at the time of such entry. “ He is entirely passive. He can do nothing to aid it or to prevent it. He has given a power of attorney, wbitoh is irrevocable because coupled with an interest. The .entry of judgment on such a note by the creditor is not one of the evils or within the mischief to be cured, or named in the title, or within the purview of the law.” “ The rights of the parties had become fixed by the giving of such a note when it was lawful and could not possibly change the condition of the debtor as to his creditors, or prevent the equal distribution of his property among them. The entry of judgment is a mere legal consequence of the giving of the judgment note. It is not a new act by the debtor, but a natural and legal result, beyond his control. The judgment, so to speak, is embodied within the note, and a necessary part' and essential element of it, and the note changes its form into a judgment of record, under the statute.” And, further commenting upon such securities, he said: “A judgment nóte is a security, and a valuable one, to the holder, and it is so recited in the power of attorney. This method of business has grown into the very necessities of our business of banking, merchandising, commerce, and of buying and selling in all forms, and of exchange. It is the most common as well as the most valuable method of security in connection with commercial paper, and to destroy or discredit it would derange and unsettle the business of the country, and seriously affect the public interests.” The contention that the debtor [260]*260•cpuld prevent the entry of judgment indirectly, by mating ¡an assignment, was combated, as not within the intention •of the legislature, as it would work .a violation of the contract eights of such a creditor. It was further laid down, that the power of attorney to enter judgment upon the note when due, and which gave the note the name and character of a judgment note, added value thereto in the market, as well as intrinsically, “ and that value neither the debtor nor the legislature has any right to lessen by prohibiting its use in •entering judgment, by any pretext of technical or legal fraud; ” and it was there held that the second clause of sec. 2, ch. 349, Laws of 1883, should be construed as if it read, or under a judgment entered on. a judgment note made by •any such debtor within sixty days prior to.any such assignment.” Under the decision in McCaul v. Thayer, 70 Wis. 138, judgment notes were thus placed upon a basis by which they ■were greatly increased in value, and a much more extended •use was made of them by merchants, bankers, and business men, as securities.

. The remedy given to the plaintiff by the law in force at •the-time these notes and warrants of attorney were given, .and which entered into and formed a part of the contracts, ■and made them particularly valuable, was to enter judgment, issue execution, and levy upon the property of the debtor, and sell the same to satisfy the-debt. The debtor could not defeat it by revoking the warrant of attorney. The notes .and warrants of attorney were potentially judgments upon •which an execution could be speedily issued and levied. “They were substantially preferences legally and properly .acquired by the plaintiff over all other creditors of the defendant. The time within which they might be questioned ¡by the assignee of the maker, under his voluntary assignment for the benefit of his creditors, had expired, and the ■preferences had become absolute, before the act of 1897 became operative. The effect of the statute upon these con[261]*261tracts, according to its terms, was to enable the debtor (assignor) to revoke, the remedy thus given, and to render these securities as a means of reaching and selling his property to satisfy the judgments thereon of no value whatever. It authorized and empowered the debtor,

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Bluebook (online)
39 L.R.A. 569, 73 N.W. 31, 97 Wis. 250, 1897 Wisc. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/second-ward-savings-bank-v-schranck-wis-1897.