United States v. President of the Bank of the United States

8 Rob. 262
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 15, 1844
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 8 Rob. 262 (United States v. President of the Bank of the United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. President of the Bank of the United States, 8 Rob. 262 (La. 1844).

Opinion

Garland, J«

In this court the case has not only been fully and ably argued by the counsel for the United States, and the assignees, but we have been furnished with a very ingenious and well considered argument in writing, from a gentleman under[402]*402stood to represent a number of other attaching creditors, not now before us, but whose interests are the same with the United States, except in the question of priority or preference claimed. Our attention has been directed not only to the law and decisions of the.courts in England and in the various States of the Union, but to our own jurisprudence in relation to assignments or transfers of property in trust for the payment of debts, and conveyances made to defraud, delay, or hinder creditors in collecting debts. The decisions in different courts have been various and sometimes apparently contradictory, and the attempt to reconcile them, together with the extent of the ground covered by the discussion, and the points actually necessary to be decided, has made the investigation of the case tedious and protracted. To state all the decisions in detail, and to point out their coincidences, and their occasional apparent contradictions, the consequence generally, of a change in circumstances, would be a task more laborious and tedious than useful or necessary, in coming to a proper conclusion in this case; and the work of condensing and adapting the proper principles on which to place it, would be hut little less so.

In every civilized nation, and particularly in those of a commercial character, the laws and the decisions of the judicial tribunals have uniformly been directed against every act of a debtor, fraudulent in itself, or calculated to injure or improperly delay a creditor in collecting his just demands. In England previous to the enactment of 13 Eliz. chap. 5, commonly called the statute of frauds, the courts, acting upon the principles of the common law, always went as far as they could in extending their jurisdiction, and the remedies they were authorized to apply, for the-suppression of all frauds and conveyances, by which creditors would be injured, and the property of debtors protected. Since that statute has been made, the courts in England, with the same view, have always given it a liberal construction. In all the States of the Union, in which the common law forms the basis of their jurisprudence, and in those in which statutes nearly similar have been adopted, the same liberal construction has been given. Before, and ever since the well known case of Twyne, (3 Coke’s Rep. 87,) this principle has been well understood. Cadogan v. Kennett, Cowper’s Rep. 434. But it was not the object of the statute of [403]*40313th Eliz. to invalidate a fair and bona fide transaction, (1 Bin-ney’s Rep. 514;) and it is not every conveyance that has the effect of delaying or hindering creditors, that is in itself fraudulent. In some degree, it is the effect of every assignment of a debtor’s property for the benefit of creditors, to produce hinderance and delay; but the Supreme Court of the United States, in the case of Sexton v. Wheaton, (8 Wheat. Rep. 229,) said, that the assignment must be devised of “ malice, fraud, covin, collusion, or guile” to bring it within the statute; and, in England, the same doctrine is established. 4 East, 13,

In this State, where our legislation and courts are particularly vigilant in guarding against all manner of devices by which creditors are to be defrauded or seriously injured, and the debtor benefited at their expense, or his property protected, the doctrine is well settled, that fraud is not to be presumed ; that the law has established certain indicia or marks, by which it shall be known ; and that every case must depend upon its own circumstances. 10 Mart. 436. 2 La. 309. 14 La. 184.

Roberts in his Treatise on Frauds, says, with respect to such conveyances or assignments as are taken by a creditor or creditors from a debtor, by way of security or satisfaction, that there can be no doubt, that they are prima facie good within the statute of 13th Eliz. (pp. 189,436 ;) and Chancellor Kent says, a conveyance to pay debts is valid; and that that purpose forms a good consideration. 2 Johns. Oh. Rep. 182.

In England, the instances of assignments by debtors, for the benefit of creditors, of a part or the whole of their property, are comparatively rare, as in so commercial a country it might be supposed they would frequently be made; but as there is a bankrupt law in force, these assignments are not regarded with much favor when they establish a mode of payment different from it, or give preferences in violation of the general law. The courts consider such acts more as a fraud upon the law than upon individual creditors, and frequently disregard them ; but when the assignments are general of all the property, for the benefit of all the creditors, and possession is taken by the trustees or assignees, the courts manifest a strong disposition to support them. In the case of Pichstock v. Lyster, (3 Maule & Selwyn, 371,) the object [404]*404of the conveyance was to prevent a creditor about to obtain a judgment, from satisfying it on execution. The debtor was insolvent, and pending the suit, executed an assignment to trustees of all his effects, for the benefit of all his creditors, and they took possession. Lord Ellenborough said, that the assignment was more an act of duty than of fraud, and that it arose out of the moral duties of the debtor, to make the fund available for all the creditors. Justice Bailey said, he assented fully to the doctrine, and that the conveyance, so far from being fraudulent was the most honest act the party could perform; and there was nothing new in this doctrine. 5 Term Rep. 235,420. 8 Term Rep. 528. 4 East, 1. Opinion of Judge Story, in 4 Mason's Rep. 206. In this State, our citizens and tribunals, acting upon the broad principle laid down in that article of the Code which declares all the property of the debtor the common pledge of his creditors, have always been jealous of every conveyance or transaction calculated to defraud creditors, or give an unjust preference to one class over another; yet there are oases in which our Legislature seems to regard a particular kind of obligation, or engagements of a chirographic nature, as entitled to some favor, such as endorsements, for the security of which, both present and future, a mortgage may be given, although no actual obligation has been incurred; and also, payments made on the eve of insolvency in the ordinary course of business. Our laws in relation to the cession of property, afford to debtors such facilities in giving up their property for the benefit of creditors, that there is little or no inducement to make assignments; and it is not probable that we-shall often be called on to act on any but those made in other States.

The general power to assign property to trustees for the benefit of creditors, has, in various States of the confederacy, been recognized and approved in the fullest manner, by both State and Federal tribunals. The Supreme Court of the United States.in the case of Brashear v. West, 7 Peters’ Rep. 608, declared that an assignment of all the property of a debtor, is not, per se, fraudulent, and that the right to make it results from the absolute ownership which every man claims over that to which he has a title, and of which he has possession. Cfioses in notion can be [405]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Security Sales Co. of La., Inc. v. Blackwell
120 So. 250 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1928)
H. T. Cottam & Co. v. Comision Reguladora del Mercado de Henequen
90 So. 392 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1921)
Metropolitan Life Ins. v. Board of Assessors
39 So. 846 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1905)
Gottlieb v. Miller
39 N.E. 992 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1894)
Cook v. Rogers
31 Mich. 391 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1875)
Merchants Bank v. Bank of the United States
2 La. Ann. 659 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1847)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 Rob. 262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-president-of-the-bank-of-the-united-states-la-1844.