Torrens v. Hammond

10 F. 900, 4 Hughes 596, 1882 U.S. App. LEXIS 2022
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maryland
DecidedMarch 9, 1882
StatusPublished

This text of 10 F. 900 (Torrens v. Hammond) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Torrens v. Hammond, 10 F. 900, 4 Hughes 596, 1882 U.S. App. LEXIS 2022 (circtdmd 1882).

Opinion

Morris, D. J.

The plaintiff, Torrens, a citizen of New York, sued Gallagher, a citizen of Maryland, in the United States circuit court for Maryland, on a promissory note, dated the seventeenth of January, 1877, and recovered judgment at the November term, 1881.

On July 1, 1881, Gallagher had filed his voluntary petition in the proper state court, making application for the benefit of the insolvent laws of Maryland. On that same day, July 1, 1881, the garnishees in this case, Hammond and Weil, were appointed trustees, and the insolvent, under his own hand and seal, and in the form prescribed by the insolvent laws, conveyed to the trustees, for the benefit of his creditors, all his property, except such as was by law exempted. The trustees took possession of a stock of goods belonging to the insolvent, located in Maryland.

The plaintiff, Torrens, procured an attachment on his judgment [901]*901and caused it to be laid in the hands of the trustees on the nineteenth of December, 1881.

When the attachment mis laid in their hands, the trustees had, from the proceeds of the sale of the insolvent’s stock of goods, an amount sufficient to pay the plaintiff’s judgment, but sufficient to pay only a small dividend to the creditors v,rho had filed their claims. The trustees having pleaded nulla bona, and shown the above facts in support of their plea, the only question is whether the funds in the hands of an insolvent trustee, under the Maryland insolvent laws, are subject to attachment by a non-resident creditor of the insolvent under the circumstances stated. This question has been several times before the court of appeals of Maryland, and in that court it has been held that under the provisions of the constitution of the United States the state insolvent laws are, as to non-resident creditors, to be treated as nullities, and that when attached by a non-resident creditor the funds in the hands of the insolvent as-signee are to be considered as still the money of the insolvent and liable to the attachment. Evans v. Sprigg, 2 Md. 457; Poe v. Duck, 5 Md. 1; Glenn v. Glass Co. 7 Md. 287. This has been so long acquiesced in as settled law in Maryland, that I should not have regarded the question as ojien for discussion but for tlio decision of the supreme court in the case of Kelly v. Crapo, 16 Wall. 610. This decision is subsequent to the decisions in the court of appeals of Maryland, and they cannot, it seems to me, be reconciled with it.

In the rulings made by the Maryland state courts denying the efficacy of assignments under the state insolvent laws to defeat lions subsequently sought to be acquired by non-resident creditors, their decisions were controlled by the clause in the constitution of the United States prohibiting any state from passing a law impairing the obligation of contracts, and by the construction put upon that clause by the supreme court as then understood. It is not, therefore, a question of the construction of the state statute, but a federal question, which it is the province of the supreme court to conclusively determine.

Until the case of Crapo v. Kelly, 16 Wall. 610, there is no decision in the supreme court (except, perhaps, Bank of Tennessee v. Horn, 17 How. 157) in which the court was required to pass upon the validity of an assignment in insolvency as against a non-resident creditor subsequently attaching within the state in which the insolvent proceedings were had. Mr. Justice Woodbury, in 1846, in [902]*902Manuf'g Co. v. Brown, 2 Woodl. & M. 449, held, at circuit, that even the title of an officer of the insolvent court of Massachusetts, conferred by an order to take possession, where no actual possession had been taken, was sufficient to preserve the property of the insolvent within the state from attachment, after the commencement of the insolvent proceedings by a non-resident creditor.

In Maryland weight has been' given to the supposed assent of Chief Justice Taney to a contrary doctrine in his opinion in White v. Winn, a report of which is printed in 8 Gill. 499. It is obvious, however, that what is there said by the chief justice on that point is said rather by way of argument and illustration than as statement of the law, and that no such ruling was necessary in the case as he disposed of it. In the case before him the non-resident creditor, having obtained judgment in the United States circuit court, had laid an attachment in the hands of insolvent trustees, who had also previously been trustees under a voluntary conventional deed of trust from the insolvents for the benefit of creditors. The voluntary deed of trust was valid except as forbidden by the insolvent law. The chief justice says, in substance: “Granting that the non-resident creditors may deny the validity of the proceedings under the insolvent law, the voluntary deed of trust will afford a sufficient protection against them. If they insist that the deed is avoided by the provisions of the insolvent law, they must claim under the permanent trustees' such interest only as by that law is awarded to them.” He gave judgment against the claim of the attaching creditors.

That Chief Justice Taney had no disposition to extend the scope of the decisions which had been arrived at, after so much conflict of opinion, in the supreme court with regard to state insolvent laws, so as to further restrict the effect .and operation of such laws, is to be plainly seen in his dissenting opinion in Cook v. Moffat, 5 How. 310, in which he states his individual opinion to be that the discharge of the- individual should be held valid as to all debts, foreign as well as domestic, in every court within the state in which the discharge is granted.

The supreme court, in Ogden v. Saunders, 12 Vt. 358, had decided—

“(1) That the power given to the United States to pass bankrupt laws is not exclusive. (2) That the fair and ordinary exercise of that power by the states does not necessarily involve a violation of the obligation of contracts, multo fortiori of posterior contracts. (3) But when in the exercise of that power the states pass beyond their own limits and the rights of their own eit-[903]*903Izens, and act upon the rights of citizens of other states, there arises a conflict of sovereign power, and a collision with the judicial powers granted to the United States, which renders the exercise of such a power incompatible with the rights of other states, and with the constitution of the United States.”

The chief justice gives his assent to the first two propositions, but with regard to the third he says:

“ When the two clauses in the constitution referred to in the first two propositions are held to be no restriction, express or implied, upon the power of the state to pass, bankrupt laws, I cannot see how such laws can bo regarded as a violation of the constitution of the United States, upon the grounds stated in the third proposition. For bankrupt laws, in the nature of things can have no force or operation beyond the limits of the state or nation by which they are passed, except by the comity of other states or nations; and it is difficult, therefore, to perceive how the bankrupt law of a state can be incompatible with the rights of other states, or come into collision with the judicial powers granted to the general government.

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Related

President of the Bank of Tennessee v. Horn
58 U.S. 157 (Supreme Court, 1855)
Booth v. Clark
58 U.S. 322 (Supreme Court, 1855)
Baldwin v. Hale
68 U.S. 223 (Supreme Court, 1864)
Crapo v. Kelly
83 U.S. 610 (Supreme Court, 1873)
Kelly v. . Crapo
45 N.Y. 86 (New York Court of Appeals, 1871)
Hodges v. Eastman
12 Vt. 358 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1839)
Owens v. Bowie
2 Md. 457 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1852)
Poe v. Duck
5 Md. 1 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1853)
Glenn v. Boston & Sandwich Glass Co.
7 Md. 287 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1854)
Dashiell v. Mayor of Baltimore
45 Md. 615 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1877)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 F. 900, 4 Hughes 596, 1882 U.S. App. LEXIS 2022, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/torrens-v-hammond-circtdmd-1882.