United States v. Langton

26 F. Cas. 862, 5 Mason C.C. 280
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts
DecidedMay 15, 1829
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 26 F. Cas. 862 (United States v. Langton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Langton, 26 F. Cas. 862, 5 Mason C.C. 280 (circtdma 1829).

Opinion

STORX, Circuit Justice.

This case comes before the court under the trustee process of Massachusetts (Act 1794, c. 65), the main object being to charge the trustees as garnishees of the principal debtor [Samuel Lang-ton], by attaching his funds in their hands. The case turns wholly upon the answers of the trustees. They have come into court and have declared, that they had not in their hands or possession at the time the writ was served on them, any goods, effects, or credits of the principal, and they have submitted themselves to an examination on oath touching the premises. They are therefore entitled by the very terms of the statute to a discharge with costs, “if. upon such an examination, the said declaration shall appear to the court to be true.” I cannot agree to the suggestion at the bar in the broad and unqualified manner in which it is made, that persons, sued as trustees, are in all eases to be charged by the court, unless they clearly discharge themselves. Where they expressly swear that they have no goods, effects, or credits in their hands or possession of the debtor, that declaration must be taken for true, unless the court can clearly see, from the subsequent examination, that it is untrue.' Where they neither expressly admit nor deny their liability, but put all the facts before the court, and leave the latter to decide the matter j! law arising thereon, there must be sufficient upon the face of those facts to justify the court itself in pronouncing a judgment, which shall charge them as trustees. If those facts, fully and sincerely disclosed, leave the matter in doubt, for myself I cannot perceive how a judgment, charging them, can be pronounced, upon any acknowledged principles of law. I agree, that doubtful expressions may be construed most strongly against the trustees, if they admit of two interpretations; but they are not to be tortured into an adverse meaning or admission. The answers are not to be more rigidly, or differently construed, from what they would be in a bill in chancery. If the answers are not full, the plaintiff is at liberty to propound closer interrogatories; but he is not to charge parties upon a mere slip or mistake of certainty, or because they do not positively answer,what in conscience they do not positively know. The law would otherwise be a snare, which might entrap them to their ruin, and involve them in a double responsibility and payment. And such, I conceive, is the real doctrine in the state court, notwithstanding some general expressions, which have been quoted, and are applicable to special cases. Sebor v. Armstrong, 4 Mass. 206; Cleveland v. Clap, 5 Mass. 201; Whitman v. Hunt, 4 Mass. 272; Hatch v. Smith, 5 Mass. 42, 49; Gordon v. Webb, 13 Mass. 215.

By the answers of the trustees it appears, that Langton (the principal debtor) being in failing circumstances, on the 5th of January, 1828, executed an assignment, by indenture, tripartite, of certain property to the trustees, upon certain trusts stated in the deed of assignment. It begins by reciting. that Langton is indebted in large sums of money to the parties of the second part-(the trustees), and third part (general creditors), and that W. Monroe (one of the trustees) is liable, as indorser and surety of Langton, to pay large sums of money, and also has lent and accommodated him with money, a schedule of which sums, debts, and liabilities, is annexed, marked A. It then farther recites, that Langton is possessed of certain goods, wares, merchandises, choses in action, credits, and demands, and other property, schedules whereof are annexed, marked C. D. It then recites the desire of Langton to secure to Monroe a full indemnity for all his liabilities as indorser and surety, and payment also of monies loaned, and an equal distribution of the property which shall remain among the other parties of the second and thi -d parts, so far as it will extend, and they are ready to accept and release Langton. as far as the same will go. Afterward there follows an assignment [864]*864to the trustees of all the goods and other property, in the Schedules O and D, with a moiety of the brig Dido, a policy on her cargo, and the household furniture of Langton, at No. 1, Temple Street. The trusts are declared to be, to collect the debts, &c. and sell the property, &c. and to apply the proceeds as follows: “In the first place, to apply the said trust monies to the payment and discharge of $8,400. due for customhouse bonds and liabilities, as mentioned in said Schedule A; and also to the payment and discharge of the three sums of money mentioned in the said Schedule A as being lent and accommodated to said Langton, amounting in the whole to the sum of $9,-784.69, monies so lent, &c. as stated in said Schedule A, and which said three sums of money, together with the said amount of custom-house bonds, amounts in all, as near as can be ascertained, to the full sum of $1S,184.69, which amount is to be paid and satisfied in full.” This is the material clause on which one of the questions made at the bar turns; the other clauses require no particular consideration. The Schedule A begins as follows: “Schedule of claims and demands due to Washington Monroe from Samuel Langton, custom-house bonds and notes by him indorsed for said Langton, as monies borrowed to be paid in full. Amount of custom-house bonds upon which Washington Monroe is surety, $8,400. Notes payable to Washington Monroe and by him indorsed for said Langton as follows.” Then follows a special enumeration of them; and then a memorandum of monies borrowed, and other notes, &e. in the whole amounting with the custom-house bonds to $32,084.-96. Schedule B contains the debts due to other creditors. The custom-house bonds owing by Langton amounted in fact to the sum of $8,257.43; and Monroe was surety upon all of them, excepting one for $1,752, which is now in suit. None ‘of them were due at the time of the assignment; but all those upon which Langton is surety, amounting to $6,505.43, have since been paid. The whole amount of the property assigned to the trustees by the assignment, has produced less by $10,000, than the debts and liabilities of Monroe provided for in the assignment.

The trustees, upon their disclosures, are certainly entitled to be discharged from the suit, unless some one of the grounds contended for in argument, on behalf of the United States, can be maintained in point of fact and law. They explicitly deny, that they have any goods, effects, or credits of Lang-ton in their hands or possession; and as no evidence aliunde is admissible by law,' to control or contradict their answers, the onus proba ndi is on the United States, to extract an opposite conclusion from the facts stated in them.

Two grounds are contended for by the United States. In the first place, that the assignment is an assignment of all the property of Langton; and if so, the priority provided for by the act of 1799, c. 128, § 65 [1 Story’s Laws, 630; 1 Stat 676, c. 22], attaches in favour of the United States. I agree at once to the reasoning at the bar, that if the assignment be in fact of all the debtor's property, although it does not so appear upon the face of the instrument, the priority of the United States attaches. The same rule applies if a small part be left out for the purpose of fraudulent evasion of that priority. This doctrine is fully supported by the cases of U. S. v. Clarke [Case No. 14,807]; U. S. v. Hooe, 3 Cranch [7 U. S.] 73, 91; U. S. v. Howland, 4 Wheat. [17 U. S.] 108, 115; and Conard v. Atlantic Ins. Co., 1 Pet [26 U. S.] 439. But the difficulty is, that the present assignment purports on its face to be an assignment, not of all the debtor’s property, but of all the goods, &c.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 F. Cas. 862, 5 Mason C.C. 280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-langton-circtdma-1829.