Warner v. . Jaffray

96 N.Y. 248, 1884 N.Y. LEXIS 488
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 3, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by75 cases

This text of 96 N.Y. 248 (Warner v. . Jaffray) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Warner v. . Jaffray, 96 N.Y. 248, 1884 N.Y. LEXIS 488 (N.Y. 1884).

Opinion

Earl, J.

On the 1st day of Afoffl881, at Jamestown in this State, DeForest Weld, a resident of that place, made an *252 assignment to the plaintiff for the benefit of his creditors. The assignment was acknowledged, and delivered to and accepted by the assignee at two o’clock in the afternoon of that day, but it was not recorded in the clerk’s office of Chautauqua county until eight o’clock, A. m., of the next day. At the time of the execution of the assignment the assignor owned a large amount of personal property, situated at the place of his residence, and also in Crawford and Warren counties in the State of Pennsylvania. The assignment was recorded in Craw-, ford county March 18, and in Warren county March 19, 1881. The defendants were residents of the city of Hew York, and creditors to a large amount of the assignor. On the 1st day of March, after the execution and delivery of the assignment, they commenced actions against the assignor in Crawford and Warren counties, and in each of those counties process of foreign attachment was issued, and by virtue thereof in the afternoon of the 1st day of March, between three and four o’clock, the property of the assignor in each of those two counties was attached, the defendants at the time of the service of the attachments having no actual notice of the assignment made by Weld. The plaintiff having first demanded possession of the property attached of the sheriffs who served the attachments, commenced this action against these defendants I to restrain them from further proceeding under the attach-n ments, and thus far he has been unsuccessful. The sole ques-g | tion for our determination is whether the assignment made in j | this State was effectual to transfer the assignor's property situ-1 I ated in Pennsylvania so that it could not afterward be attached j > there as his property by creditors going there from this State. | The assignment took effect from the time of its delivery. Section 2 of chapter 466 of the Laws of 1877 (the General Assignment Act) provides how a general assignment for the benefit of creditors shall be executed. It must be in writing and acknowledged, and the assignee must assent thereto in writ-in<r„ and when it has thus been executed and delivered, it takes effect, and the title to the property passes to the assignee. All else required by the statute may be done afterward, and if any *253 of the other requirements are omitted the assignment is not thereby rendered void. Section 3 of the act provided that unless the required inventory should be filed within thirty days the assignment should be void. But that section was amended and re-enacted in 1878 (Chap. 318), and that provision was omitted; and hence there is now no provision making the assignment void for the omission to take any of the steps subsequent to the execution and delivery of the assignment. The statute requires the assignment to be recorded, the assignee to give a bond and an inventory to be filed. If the assignee fails to make and file an inventory he may be removed. So, too, if he fails to record the assignment or to give the bond, he may, under section 6 of the act of 1877, as amended by the act of 1878, be removed by the county judge. All the other requirements subsequent to the execution.and delivery of the assignment are merely directory, and there is ample power in the county judge to enforce their observance. There is no occasion or reason to avoid the assignment for the omission of any of such requirements. If the assignment were to be held inoperative until recorded, then it would be in the power of the assignee, by simply retaining it in his possession, to defeat its operation. The Assignment Act of 1860 (Oliap. 348) provided that the assignment should be in writing, acknowledged and recorded; and yet it was held under that act that it took effect from the time of its delivery. (S. B. & N. Y. R. R. Co. v. Collins, 57 N. Y. 641; S. C., 1 Abb. N. C. 47; Bremian v. Willson, 71 N. Y. 502.) In that act the provision requiring the assignment to be recorded was in the sixth section, while the provision requiring it to be in writing and acknowledged was in the first section. It cannot be supposed that the legislature, by putting all the language of the two sections into one in the act of 1877, meant to give a different effect to the same language, and to inaugurate a new policy. The presumption is, that legislating upon the same subject and using substantially the same language, after the language had received judicial construction, it meant to accomplish the same purpose and to continue the same system. It is the general *254 rule that all instruments take effect from their execution and delivery, and if the legislature had intended a different rule in reference to these assignments it is to be presumed that its intention would have been plainly expressed. Hence we must hold that this assignment took effect on the 1st day of March, ’ 1881, at the time of its execution and delivery, and if it operated upon the property consisting of merchandise situated in the State of Pennsylvania, then the plaintiff became entitled J thereto and can maintain this action.

The assignment was a mere voluntary conveyance, and can have no greater effect, so far as passing title to the property assigned, than any other conveyance. It did not operate upon the creditors of the assignor, nor place them under any obligations. It left them entirely free to act. They could utterly refuse to have any thing to do with it, and retain their claims and enforce them in their own time, as best they could, against their debtor. The assignee became a trustee for such creditors of the assignor only as chose to accept him as such, and without their assent the assignment did not bring the creditors into any relation with the assignee, or with each

(other. The law did not take this insolvent’s property for distribution among his creditors, but its distribution was his own act. Any one of his creditors could, notwithstanding the assignment, enforce his claim against any property of the assignor not conveyed by the assignment, without violating any rights or equities of the other creditors. Equity does not condemn the efforts of one creditor to secure the payment of his claim, even if, in consequence of such efforts, nothing should be left for the other creditors. On the contrary, the vigilant creditor has always been rewarded for his vigilance. Therefore, the sole right of this plaintiff to maintain this action must rest upon the fact that the title to the property situated in Pennsylvania passed to him by the assignment before it was attached by the defendants.

It is clear, upon authority, that the title did not pass. It is j a general rule that the voluntary transfer of personal property ' is to be governed, everywhere, by the law of the owner’s domi *255 cile, and this rule proceeds on the fiction of law that the domicile draws to it the personal estate of the owner, wherever it may happen to be. But this fiction is by no means of universal application, and yields whenever it is necessary for the purposes | of justice that the actual situs

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Bluebook (online)
96 N.Y. 248, 1884 N.Y. LEXIS 488, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warner-v-jaffray-ny-1884.