Vaughan v. Evans

10 S.C. Eq. 414
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedJanuary 15, 1834
StatusPublished

This text of 10 S.C. Eq. 414 (Vaughan v. Evans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vaughan v. Evans, 10 S.C. Eq. 414 (S.C. Ct. App. 1834).

Opinions

Johnston, Chancellor.

The object of this bill is, 1st, to set aside the judgment confessed by Evans to the sureties to the second bond, and the assignment in trust, executed by him to John M. De Saussure; 2d. To charge certain of the claims *against Evans, as Commissioner, to his sureties for his first term of office, instead of his sureties for his second term.

I. If the assignment stands, the judgment by confession must, for the last is less assailable than the first. I shall therefore confine myself to the assignment. 1 Kent Com. 420.

It is not denied that a debtor, in failing circumstances, may, by assigning his estate in trust, prefer one creditor over another, if the assignment be executed in good faith, and if it destroy no existing lien, unless there exists, in the country, a bankrupt, or other law, prohibiting a preference. Seaving v. Brinkerhoff, 5 J. C. R. 332.

We have no law prohibiting a bona fide preference of one creditor over another. Undue” preferences are prohibited: which word “ undue” has been construed-to mean only fraudulent preferences. P. L. 457; 2 Brev. 137; 2 M’C. R. 366.

That liens did exist at the term of the assignment, the assignment itself recites. But I do not perceive evidence that any of the claimants before the Court held liens at that time. Some of them, the Insurance [285]*285Company, for instance, had obtained orders that Evans should pay over to them moneys in his hands as Commissioner; but this formed no lien on his property. The only effect of such orders, was to subject him for failure to obey them, to process in personam. Although, upon the foot of the orders, proceedings might have been instituted against him, which would have eventuated in judgments which would have bound his property, the orders themselves formed no liens.

The claimants here, having no liens at the assignment, cannot take advantage of liens held by persons not before the Court, to set the assignment aside — throw the assigned property into assefs, and thus entitle themselves to a share of it.

The assignment not being affected by existing liens, is it affected by any other circumstance ?

The first objection to it is, that it was fraudulent, inasmuch as it was intended to indemnify his sureties, at the expense of the very persons whom, by the spirit of their undertaking, the sureties were bound to protect.

The arguments of counsel on this point could not fail to produce a powerful effect on the Court. But however strong may be the appearance of policy and justice, by which they *are supported, it must never be forgotten that to the judicial tribunals the people have not delegated a particle of legislative power. The question for the Court is, what is the law ? Whatever the law is, that is what the sovereign authority has decided as its rule of policy and justice. Whenever that authority ceases to consider its rule as either politic or just, it can and will change it. The power of repeal or amendment is with it, to be exercised through the Legislature, and not with the judiciary.

Whether it is fraud for the surety of an insolvent officer to take an assignment of his property, for. indemnity, is the precise questioned negatived in Hooe’s case, 3 Cranch, 73, a case of great interest, and decided upon full consideration.

But the assignment from Evans is attacked on its terms. The provisions objected to are — 1st. The power given to the trustee to sell upon such credit as he may deem fit. 2d. The declaration that after paying off the existing liens, and' indemnifying the sureties, such creditors as would, within a year accept, should be paid rateably.

It is said that these provisions tend to delay and hinder Evans’ creditors in their remedies.

1. The power given to the trustee to sell upon such credits as he may deem best, is not to be construed as necessarily intended to delay the creditors. It maybe and ought rather to be considered as one of the means of advancing their interests, by procuring the best price for the property. To say that the trustee might abuse this power, is no argument against the trust itself. If he had attempted to act captiously or fraudulently under his power; if he had shown, in any way, that he was not governed by a sound discretion, or that he was disposed to defraud the creditors, who are his cestui que trusts, they could have enforced an honest execution of his duties. This was a sufficient safeguard to the creditors against fraud.

“It may be said,” with truth, American Jurist, No. 16, p. 295, “that every conveyance, in trust for creditors, interposes a delay, and necessarily retards them in the prosecution of their remedies.” But “if any [286]*286creditor complains of this, tbe ground of bis complaint must be, that be *s ^ePr^ve^ opportunities of securing *his whole debt, at the expense of other creditors equally meritorious. He is prevented from making use of an advantage against other creditors, not from enforcing his rights against the debtor himself. ”

2. The declaration that the residue after paying off liens and indemnifying the sureties, should be distributed rateably among such creditors as would accept within a year, does not, in my opinion, vitiate the assignment.

The argument is, that it was an attempt to drive the creditors into terms : and decisions are referred to in support of this position. I think the decisions do not support it.

In Lord v. The Watchman, American Jurist, No. 16, p. 284, “there was a condition in the assignment, that 'all creditors who became parties to it, thereby released the assignor from all further claim of the demand.” There was an attempt to drive the creditors into terms. The terms to which they were attempted to be driven was a release of their claims, and if they did not accept on that condition, they were to be excluded.

The case turned upon the attempt to coerce the creditors to release. Ib. 292-4-5.

In Hyslop v. Clark, 14 Johns. R. 458, 463, the assignment contained a similar condition ; and the judgment turned on it.

Seaving v. Brinkerhoof, 5 Johns. C. R. 329, was on a conveyance containing a condition that creditors should not take unless they released. There existed liens, and the decision partly turned on them : but that has no application here. The condition compelling a release was the principal, and only other ground of setting the conveyance aside, or enjoining, which is the same thing.

Mr. Justice WARE, who decided Lord v. The Watchman, says, the assignor “ had a right to lock up his property against any one creditor, for the benefit of all, and he had a right to determine the order in which his creditors should be paid out of the trust fund.” He says, “Lord transferred the whole of his property to Watts and Pray, in trust for the purpose, first, of paying such creditors as should become parties to the deed, in the order of preference established by the assignment. Thus far, it is admitted, he had a right to go.

In another part of his opinion, the same learned judge shows most distinctly the ground upon which he set the assignment,* in that case, aside.

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Related

United States v. Hooe Et Al.
7 U.S. 73 (Supreme Court, 1805)
Seaving v. Brinkerhoff
5 Johns. Ch. 329 (New York Court of Chancery, 1821)

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Bluebook (online)
10 S.C. Eq. 414, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vaughan-v-evans-scctapp-1834.