Court Opinion

ID: 5549076
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-10 21:28:58.492055+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:35:00.893632
License: Public Domain

The Vice-Chancellor:
Upon the argument of this motion, the question occurred to me: whether a bill like this, by simple contract creditors, could be sustained, even though fraud might appear from the pleadings. I am inclined to think I must test this motion by the bill itself; for, if the complainants have no right to file the bill, then the injunction ought not to be retained until the hearing. It is true, the parties have answered; yet, although defendants do this in cases where a demurrer will hold, they may raise the objection at the hearing.
The great difficulty is, in the bill being filed by creditors at large, before judgment. No doubt a bill may be filed by such creditors either by simple contract or specialty against the trustees in a deed of assignment for the benefit of creditors, in order to compel a performance of the trust: but, the present is a proceeding to set aside such a deed to a certain extent. The court has been referred to the cases of Russell v. Hammond, 1. Atk. 13. and Taylor v. Jones, 2. Ib. 600. in sup*200port of such a bill by simple contract creditors. In Russell v. Hammond, the bill was filed by the general creditors of a decease¿ debtor against his representatives for discovery and payment and to set aside a settlement made on the widow after marriage. Now, this I take to be not a case in point: for, there is no doubt of the right of general creditors to file a bill against personal representatives for payment out of the estate of their deceased debtor. With regard to Taylor v. Jones: it would appear from the report of the case that the bill was filed by simple contract creditors; and the question in the cause was, whether a settlement made for the benefit of the defendant, his wife and children, was fraudulent ? But the note to the case, by Mr. Saunders, shows that the defendants had given warrants of attorney to the creditors to confess judgments against him and they had given him a letter of license, but it was agreed that the letter of license was not to prevent them from proceeding against his effects, although it was to protect his person. The fact that the creditors had authority to enter up a judgment may have been deemed sufficient to obviate any objection to the filing of the bill, as simple contract creditors, and hence the objection may not have been taken. The Master of the Rolls observes in giving judgment, that “ the great question is if the deed be fraudulent ? for, if it is, whether the creditors have any specific lien is not material; for as soon as the judgment was entered it would have been a specific lien”—plainly shewing that it was treated as a judgment creditor’s bill. It is a principle of the courts that a creditor must first get judgment and exhaust his legal remedy. In Colman v. Croker, 1. Ves. Jr. 160; Lord Thurlow said, “as to the fraud” (in making a voluntary settlement) "there must be some creditor to complain of that; and he must put himself into a situation to complain, by getting judgment for his debt, and stating that by the settlement he is defrauded.” This rule has been repeatedly recognized in our own court as well as in the English chancery and is too well established to allow of my breaking in upon it: Wiggins v. Armstrong, 2. John. Ch. R. 144.; Brinckerhoff v. Brown, 4. John. Ch. R. 671; Williams v. Brown, Ib. 682.; McDermott v. Strong, Ib. 687.
We have cases in our own books where voluntary settle*201ments have been impeached by creditors. Thus, in Reade v. Livingston, 3. J. C. R. 481. a creditor, but still a judgment creditor, filed a bill for such a purpose. The circumstances in Bayard v. Hoffman, 4. Ib. 450. were somewhat peculiar, The bill was filed by general assignees of the husband and his partner for themselves and other creditors against the defendants who were assignees for the benefit of'the wife and children. The case of Hendricks v. Robinson, although not a case of settlement, shows that a creditor desirous of setting aside a trust deed must first have obtained a judgment and proceeded to the extent of an execution.
Nevertheless, there may be cases in which a bill can be sustained by simple contract creditors at large against their debtors. Thus, I am inclined to say, if parties concerned in a partnership have dissolved and made a disposition of the property which was illegal and fraudulent as to creditors of the partnership, the court would sustain a bill filed by the latter, ■even though they might be only simple contract creditors, and cause the partnership property to be applied to partnership purposes according to law and equity. The present bill alleges a partnership and an assignment made of partnership effects : also, that the money, said to be embraced by the settlement, was invested in the partnership business ; and it goes on to insist upon the propriety of applying it to partnership uses. But, there is no distinct allegation of a dissolution of partnership nor of a direct misapplication or diversion of partnership property. When I take the charges in the bill, in connection with its prayer, I do not think I should be justified in a decree on the ground of any apparent danger of misapplication of personal property. The scope of the prayer is, that the assignment may be declared void and the complainants be paid out of the assigned property and for further relief. The prayer for further relief is here in the conjunctive ; and it has been decided that, in such a case, no relief inconsistent with the specific relief prayed for, can be had: in order to have the benefit of it, this general prayer must be in the disjunctive.
It appears to me impossible that the complainants can have the relief they want under the present pleading. It only goes upon the ground of fraud in the assignment; and *202doing so, these parties ought to come as judgment creditors who have exhausted their legal remedies. There are suspicions of fraud; but I must, according to the present eharacter of the bill, dissolve the injunction. I shall do it, however,, without costs.
The complainants may find it necessary to dismiss their present bill and file another.