Taylor v. Columbian Insurance

96 Mass. 353
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 96 Mass. 353 (Taylor v. Columbian Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor v. Columbian Insurance, 96 Mass. 353 (Mass. 1867).

Opinion

Gray, J.

The plaintiff in this process of foreign attachment is a citizen of Massachusetts. The principal defendant is a corporation established by law in the state of New York, which has been duly served with process in this commonwealth, and against which it is agreed that the plaintiff is entitled to judgment. The claim of the corporation against the person summoned as its trustee is upon promissory notes made to the corporation in this state by a citizen of this state, which were overdue at the time of the service, and upon which therefore, if due to the principal defendant, the trustee may be charged. Gen. Sts. c. 142, § 31. The adverse claimants have been appointed receivers of the property and debts of the corporation by order of the proper court in New York, upon application of a creditor of the corporation, under the Revised Statutes of New York (5th ed.) pt. 3, c. 8, tit. 4, §§ 47, 48, 49, 51, 77. There is nothing in those orders of court, or in the statutes under which they were made, dissolving the corporation; and therefore the corporation continued in existence, so far as to be capable of being sued. Coburn v. Boston Papier Mache Manuf. Co. 10 Gray, 243. The receivers brought an action in New York on the notes in question, in which service was made upon the alleged trustee before service of this trustee process. But the bringing of that action cannot affect the rights of this plaintiff if the receivers had no title to the notes which would be valid as against his attachment in the courts of this state. The real question therefore is whether the assignment of the property of the corporation to receivers under judicial proceedings in New York can prevail against this attachment.

This question is conclusively settled by authority. The effect of toreign laws beyond their own jurisdiction depends wholly upon the comity of the state in which their application is in yoked. The general rule is everywhere admitted that the transfer [355]*355of personal property, wherever situated, is to be governed by the law of the domicil of the owner. But the exception is equally well established in this country that when, upon the insolvency of a debtor, the law of the state in which he resides assumes to take his property out of his control, and to assign it, by judicial proceedings, without his assent, to trastees for distribution among his creditors, such an assignment will not be allowed by the courts of another state to prevail against any remedy which the laws of the latter afford to its own citizens against property within its jurisdiction. 2 Kent Com. (6th ed.) 406-408. Booth v. Clark, 17 How. 336-338. Blake v. Williams, 6 Pick. 286. May v. Breed, 7 Cush. 41, 42. It can make no difference whether the persons to whom the involuntary assignment is made are called assignees, trustees or receivers, or whether the debtor is an individual or a corporation, provided either remains in existence and liable to be sued. An assignment under the laws of another state of the Union stands upon the same ground as one made under the laws of a foreign country; for the states are in this respect independent of one another, and subject to no common control so long as there is no national bankrupt law.

E. Bangs, for the claimants. G. F. Homer & F. Goodwin, for the plaintiff.

An assignment like that on which these claimants rely would, if made in another state, be allowed no effect in the courts of New York against proceedings under the laws of that state by its own citizens. The decisions in that state are collected in Willitts v. Waite, 25 N. Y. 577, which cannot be distinguished from this case, and in which an assignment to receivers under the statutes of Ohio of all the property of a corporation established in Ohio was held to give the receivers no title to funds due to the corporation from a bank in New York, as against subsequent attachments in New York by citizens of that state.

Trustee changed,

The claimants, before the entry of final judgment in accordance with the above opinion, moved for a rehearing, in order [356]*356that they might be permitted to prove that on the 2d of February 1866 the Columbian Insurance Company, the principal defendant in this case, was dissolved by a decree of the supreme court of the State of New York, which was not made part of the agreed statement of facts upon which the opinion of this court was given.

In support of this motion, the claimants produced the affidavit of Edward Bangs, Esquire, their counsel here, that he was not furnished with a copy of that decree until after the argument before this court upon the agreed statement; and the affidavit of Dudley Field, Esquire, a member of the bar in New York, who testified that he had been the attorney and counsel in New York of the receivers of this corporation since January 1866, and was familiar with their affairs, and had exclusive charge of all their legal business; that that decree had not been appealed from or questioned in any manner and still remained in full force and effect, and in his opinion was an entire dissolution of the corporation; that many suits were pending in various places relating to their affairs, in which certified and exemplified copies of the various judgments and decrees in New York had been sent to their counsel; that he retained Mr. Bangs here, and supposed he was aware of the decree of dissolution and had all the papers necessary to present every point in this case, until he read the opinion of this court in which it was assumed that the corporation had not been dissolved.

The claimants also now produced an authenticated copy of the judgment roll of the supreme court of the State of New York for the county of New York in a suit brought by William H. Harbeck against this corporation, consisting of the complaint, supported by the plaintiff’s affidavit, dated January 22d 1866, stating that he was a stockholder, and that the corporation had decreed and paid a dividend, not out of its surplus profits, but out of its capital stock, and praying for a dissolution of the corporation, the appointment of receivers, and an injunction; a summons of the same date; an answer of the corporation, verified by the affidavit of its secretary ; an order of the court on the 1st of February 1866, on motion of Mr. Field, as counsel for the [357]*357plaintiff, no one appearing to oppose, that the plaintiff have judgment, in accordance with the prayer of the complaint, for the frivolousness ot the answer, “ that the receivers heretofore appointed,” (naming them,) “ be appointed under such judgment; ” and a final' decree on the 2d of February, on motion of Mr. Field, as counsel for the plaintiff, adjudging that the corporation “ be and it is hereby dissolved,” and that the same receivers as before be appointed “ with the usual powers of such receivers.”

The other material facts proved at the hearing on this motion, which was argued by Bangs, for the claimants, and by B. R. Curtis Homer, (Goodwin with them,) for the plaintiff, are stated in the following opinion:

This motion is now made by the claimants in order to enable them to prove that the corporation which is the principal defendant in this case was dissolved on the 2d of February 1866, by a decree of the supreme court of New York, in a suit brought against it by William H. Harbeck.

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Bluebook (online)
96 Mass. 353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-columbian-insurance-mass-1867.