Townsend v. Coxe

37 N.E. 689, 151 Ill. 62
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 16, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 37 N.E. 689 (Townsend v. Coxe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Townsend v. Coxe, 37 N.E. 689, 151 Ill. 62 (Ill. 1894).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wilkin

delivered the opinion of the Court:

On the 16th of December, 1891, appellees, residents of Pennsylvania and New York, sued out of the Circuit Court of Lake county a writ of attachment against “The Had-field Company,” a Wisconsin corporation, doing business at Waukesha, in that State, and caused the same to be levied upon a ten-acre tract of land situated in Lake county. Subsequently appellant filed an intervening petition, setting up that “The Hadfield Company,” on the 15th of December, 1891, had, in Wisconsin, “made and delivered to him a deed of assignment to all its property, real and personal, in trust, to pay creditors, who should prove their claims, as provided in chapter 80 of the Revised Statutes of Wisconsin of 1878,” and claiming title to the attached premises by virtue thereof. The Circuit Court having denied his petition, and rendered judgment in favor of appellees on their attachment, he brings this appeal.

The question for decision here is, whether the deed of assignment, set up in the interpleader, passed the title to the land levied upon, as against the attachment of appellees.

There is no controversy as to the facts. The deed of assignment was not recorded in Lake county. On the date of its execution, the assignor conveyed this land to appellant by quit-claim deed, but that conveyance was not filed for record until the 22d of that month, nor was possession of the land taken prior to that time. Appellees had notice of the assignment before commencing their attachment proceeding, but not of the quit-claim deed.

The deed of assignment was executed in conformity with our statute providing for the conveyance of real estate.

The intervening petition alleges that it was executed in conformity to the laws of Wisconsin relating to voluntary assignments for the benefit of creditors, and a complete copy of those laws was introduced in evidence upon the trial.

That a deed of voluntary assignment for the benefit of creditors, executed in another State in conformity with our statute in respect to conveyances, will effectually pass the title to real estate situated in Illinois to the assignee, as against foreign attaching creditors of the insolvent, with actual knowledge of the assignment before the commencement of their attachments, when the assignment is not in contravention of our laws or public policy, was expressly held in May v. First National Bank, 122 Ill. 551, followed by Juilliard & Co. v. May, 130 id. 87.

A contrary rule prevails as to creditors of the insolvent residing in our own State. Heyer v. Alexander, 108 Ill. 385.

And if the assignment is not voluntary on the part of the debtor, but statutory, the conveyance will be treated as made by operation of law, and inoperative in this State as against either foreign or domestic creditors. Rhawn et al. v. Pearce et al., 110 Ill. 350. If, then, the assignment by “The Hadfield Company” was voluntary, as distinguished from a statutory assignment, and not in conflict with the laws of this State, the case of May v. First National Bank, supra, is decisive against the judgment below.

The voluntary assignment law of Wisconsin declares, that “Any person who shall have made a voluntary assignment for the benefit of his creditors, under or in pursuance of the laws of this State, may be discharged from his debts as a part of the proceedings under such assignment, upon compliance with the provisions of this act.” The proceeding by which such discharge may be obtained by a hearing or trial is then prescribed, and it is provided: “If it shall appear, upon such hearing or trial, that such insolvent debtor has, in good faith, made a voluntary assignment for the benefit of his creditors, and has, in all respects, complied with the laws of this State in regard to voluntary assignments, and, with this act, such court or judge shall grant such insolvent debtor a discharge from his debts, which shall have the effect declared in this act.”

The effect of the discharge is declared to be to release the insolvent debtor “from all personal liability in favor of such of his creditors as shall reside in this State, and such of his creditors as reside out of this State, who have proved their claims against such insolvent debtor in the proceedings on such assignment, or who have received any dividend from the assignee of such insolvent, or out of the estate of such insolvent debtor, or in any way participated in the proceedings under such assignment, or who have appeared in said proceedings for such discharge.”

It is manifest from these provisions that a creditor of an insolvent debtor in Wisconsin, who makes a voluntary assignment, valid under the laws of that State, can only avoid a final discharge of the debtor from all liability on his debt, by declining to participate in any way in the assignment proceedings.

He is, therefore, compelled to consent to a discharge, as to so much of his debt as is not paid by dividends in the insolvent proceeding, or take the hopeless chance of recovering out of assets of the assigned estate remaining after all claims allowed have been fully paid. For this reason the Court of Appeals of New York, in the recent case of Barth v. Backus, 140 N. Y. 230, expressly held this Wisconsin statute to be in the nature of a bankrupt law, and a voluntary assignment made under it ineffectual to transfer title to property of the insolvent situated in the State of New York, as against attaching creditors.

It was there said, “The assignment was voluntary in the sense that the Wilkin Manufacturing Company was not coerced into executing it, and the title to the property was vested in the assignee by its own act. But whether it is to be treated as voluntary in another jurisdiction, when the claims of creditors there are in question, is the point. The assignment purports to have been made under and in pursuance of the law of Wisconsin. The assignor, by proceeding under that law, presumably designed to avail itself of the provision for the discharge. This could only be accomplished by force of the law. The right of an insolvent, or bankrupt, to initiate voluntary proceedings in bankruptcy, is a common feature in bankrupt laws, but that fact does not make the assignment voluntary, so as to give extra-territorial operation to the proceedings. This point was adverted to in the case of Upton v. Hubbard, 28 Conn. 274, where the court said: ‘In our view there is essentially no difference whether, in consequence of an act of bankruptcy, as in England, the bankrupt’s estate is forced from him, or he, himself, sets the law in motion by a conveyance in bankruptcy in the first instance.’ Under the Wisconsin statute the transfer is voluntary, but the law then steps in and regulates the distribution of the assigned estate in accordance with conditions which the sovereign alone can impose. It would, we think, be disregarding the substance to hold that the voluntary feature of the law distinguishes it from the class of bankrupt or insolvent statutes, which, by general consent in this country, are held to be ineffectual to transfer the title of the insolvent to property in another State, as against attaching creditors there.”

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Bluebook (online)
37 N.E. 689, 151 Ill. 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/townsend-v-coxe-ill-1894.