Stewart v. Union Bank

2 Md. Ch. 58
CourtHigh Court of Chancery of Maryland
DecidedJuly 15, 1847
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Md. Ch. 58 (Stewart v. Union Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering High Court of Chancery of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stewart v. Union Bank, 2 Md. Ch. 58 (Md. Ct. App. 1847).

Opinion

The Chancellor:

The bill in this case seeks to compel the defendants, or one of them, to pay to the complainant, as the permanent trustee of the Hammonds, the sum of $5000, which it alleges was paid to the bank in fraud of the insolvent laws.

It appears that the Hammonds, as partners in trade, became indebted to the bank, for money borrowed, in the sum of $5000, for which, on 21st of February, 1832, they gave their note, signed in the partnership name, payable to the bank, by its corporate name, sixty days after date; that this note not being paid, and the partnership being dissolved, a new note, signed by the partners in their individual names, was given at its maturity, the 24th of April following, payable to the cashier of the bank in twenty-eight days. That when the first note was [60]*60given, its payment was secured by the pledge of sixty-four shares of the stock of the bank, owned by and standing in the name of James McCormick, the intestate of the defendant, John E. McCormick. The last note became due on the 25th of May ensuing its date, but remained unpaid until the 25th of June following, when it was paid to the bank by McCormick, to whom the stock pledged for its security was released, and the note surrendered. The original bill, which was filed on 7th July, 1834, charged that the Hammonds, being embarrassed in their circumstances, and insolvent at the maturity of the first of the notes, were unable to pay it, and that their condition of insolvency continuing until the note given in renewal matured, they paid it with a view, and under an expectation, of being or becoming insolvent debtors, and with intent to give to the bank an undue and improper preference over their other creditors. When the answer of the bank came in, on the 3d of November, 1834, disclosing the connection of McCormick with the transaction, an amended bill was filed, with the leave of the court, in which, among other things, it was charged, that if he, McCormick, did make the payment, he was furnished with the means for that purpose, by the Hammonds, at a period when they had a view or were under an expectation of being, or becoming, insolvent debtors, and with intent thereby to give to said McCormick an undue and improper preference. The answer of McCormick, the intestate, which was filed 14th July, 1835, admitted that the money with which he paid the bank, and relieved his stock, which had been hypothecated as security, was placed in his hands by the Hammonds, for that purpose, two days before he made the payment, and .that he had no knowledge of the business or engagements of the Hammonds, or who were their creditors at the time of their application for the benefit of the insolvent laws.

It appeared by an agreement signed by counsel, that John L. Hammond petitioned for the benefit of the insolvent laws, on the 15th of September, 1832, and was finally discharged on the 2d of February, 1833; and that William L. Hammond petitioned on the 15th of October, 1832, and was discharged on [61]*61the 2d of February, 1833; and that they filed lists of debts, due by them as partners, to an amount exceeding $40,000, and debts due to them, to the amount of $14,161 56. That John L. Hammond returned a list of household furniture, mortgaged three years before to a Mrs. Robinson, and also to McCormick on the 21st of February, 1832, for money borrowed. It also appeared, that William L. Hammond died in the year 1838. McCormick, the intestate, having died in the year 1841, a bill of revivor was filed against his administrator, one of the present defendants, on the 5th February, 1846, which was answered by him on the 18th of July, 1846.

The only witness examined under the commission was John L. Hammond, sworn on the part of the plaintiff, who proved that the partnership was dissolved in the winter or spring of 1832, at which period he is unable to speak of its solvency. That the firm did not expect to stop payment at the time of its dissolution; but that being disappointed in not receiving $20,000 which McCormick, the father-in-law of William L. Hammond, had promised to loan them, their notes laid over, he thinks, on the 21st of May, 1832; that they had not available means to pay their debts, but that they had bills receivable, out of which, he understood, a provision was made to pay to the Union Bank the note in question. This arrangement was made by the deponent and brother, (William L. Hammond,) their clerk, and the said McCormick. That deponent objected to the arrangement so made, because they expected to compound with their creditors, and he did not wish to give a preference to one over another; but to make an equal distribution of their assets among their creditors.

The Hammonds are not made parties, and we are without the benefit of the light which their answers would shed upon the question, of the view and expectation with which the act complained of was done; and in the examination of John L. Hammond, the plaintiff’s witness, no interrogatory was put to him, calculated to draw information from him upon that point.

It is not contended, in this case, that the transaction by which the debt to the bank was paid, can be impeached upon [62]*62any other ground than as being condemned by our insolvent system; because, independently of that system, and according to the common law, there can be no doubt of the power of a debtor to secure one creditor to the exclusion of others, either by a payment, or bona fide transfer of his property.

The question, then, and the only question to be considered, is, so far as this view of the subject is concerned, was the act done by the Hammonds “with a view or under an expectation of being or becoming insolvent debtors, and with an intent thereby to give an undue and improper preference,” or, in other words, as those terms have been expounded by the Court of Appeals, was the act done with a view or under an expectation of taking the benefit of the insolvent laws ?

The question does not appear to me to be free from difficulty; but after a very attentive consideration of the pleadings and proofs, I do not think the plaintiff has succeeded in making out such a case as to justify this court in granting him the relief he asks for.

The transaction, if void at all, must be shown to be within the act of 1812, ch. 77, sec. 1, or 1816, ch. 221, sec. 6; the previous laws, passed in 1805 and 1807, do not apply to it, because they leave untouched the validity of a deed or transfer given bona fide by a debtor to a favored creditor, though they visit upon the debtor giving such a preference, the penalty of withholding from him the benefit of the law. Nor does the act of 1834, ch. 293, comprehend this case, because that act was passed subsequently to- the application of. these parties, to be discharged under the insolvent laws. We are, therefore, confined to the acts of 1812 and 1816, and are to see whether the facts of this case bring it within the provisions of those laws, as they have been construed by the courts.

Debtors in failing circumstances having an unquestionable right at the common law, to prefer one creditor to another, it is incumbent on a party who attempts to disturb such a preference, to show by evidence that it is prohibited by our insolvent system. The onusprobandiis upon him; and although the vitiating intent with which the preference is charged to have been [63]

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Bluebook (online)
2 Md. Ch. 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-v-union-bank-mdch-1847.