Court Opinion

ID: 8748365
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-26 11:16:09.052358+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:00:48.031091
License: Public Domain

LOCHREN, District Judge,
after stating the case as above, delivered the opinion of the court.
The first assignment of error assails the confirmation by the court of that part of the report of the special master which in effect sustains the validity of the deed of assignment, as executed; holding *599that whatever is questionable in the clause providing that the assignee shall sell all the property at public auction within 120 days after the execution of his bond is cured by the next clause, which requires that the assignee “shall, in executing this trust, be governed in all things by the laws regulating assignments for the benefit of creditors now in force in the Indian Territory.” Chapter 8 of Mansfield’s Digest of the Statutes of Arkansas, in force in the Indian Territory (26 Stat. c. 182, § 31), contains the law of that territory on the subject of assignments. Section 309 of that chapter empowers the assignee “to sell all the property assigned to him for the payment of debts, at public auction, within one hundred and twenty days after the execution of the bond required by this act,” while section 307 of the same chapter—a later enactment—contemplates that the assignee shall not sell choses in action, but shall collect them. Appellants’ counsel claim that the clause in this deed of assignment providing that the assignee shall sell all the property assigned, at public auction, within 120 days, etc., authorizes and directs him to sell the choses in action assigned, contrary to the purport of section 307, above referred to, and that thereby the deed of assignment is invalidated. Churchill v. Hill, 59 Ark. 54, 26 S. W. 378. But in the deed of assignment before the court in the case just cited, the assignee was, in terms, required to sell all the property assigned, within 120 days after executing his bond. The court said:
“The words 'all property assigned to him’ necessarily included the choses in action. The assignee was required to sell them. The language of the deed to that effect is clear and unambiguous, and there is nothing in it to indicate a contrary intention.”
That deed contained no provision like that found in the deed in the present case, requiring the assignee in the execution of the trust to be governed in all things by the laws regulating assignments for the benefit of creditors.
So in Pace v. Drug Co., 48 S. W. 1061, the court of appeals of the Indian Territory held that a deed of assignment in which the only clause respecting the disposition of the assigned property was as follows: “After filing said inventory and description of said property, and executing and filing said bond as required by law and complying with the requirements of the law in such cases, T. T. Pace is hereby authorized and empowered to take possession of said property and to sell the same as required by law, and to receive the proceeds thereof,”—was invalid, because the power and direction to sell, by the terms made use of, included choses in action with the other property, in contravention of section 307 of the statute referred to.
But in Noyes v. Guy, 48 S. W. 1056, decided on the same day with the case last cited, by the same court of appeals of the Indian Territory, the deed of assignment had the following provision:
“And hereby empowers his said assignee to carry out this trust by conforming to the laws of the United States in said territory, provided as follows: My said assignee, after executing a good and sufficient bond and filing an inventory, shall within one hundred and twenty days sell all the property herein conveyed at public auction, and pay the proceeds to my creditors, as herein provided.”
*600The court sustained the deed of assignment, holding that the clause empowering the assignee to carry out the trust by conforming to the laws of the United States in said territory was proper, and by itself was sufficient, and that, if this clause was rendered ambiguous by the proviso, such construction should be given to the whole as would support the deed and render it legal and operative, rather than a construction which would invalidate it. This case of Noyes v. Guy was brought to this court by writ of error and the judgment of the court of appeals of the Indian Territory was affirmed. Noyes v. Neel, 100 Fed. 555, 40 C. C. A. 539. The decision just referred to is conclusive against the argument of appellants that the deed of assignment in the present case was void upon its face.
Other assignments of error based on the contention that the assignment of Hodges to McBride was fraudulent because there was an intentional withholding by the assignor of unexempt property, with the knowledge and assent of the assignee, are not sustained by the evidence in the record. One of the items so claimed to have been withheld was a claim of the assignor, D. W. Hodges, against the Choctaw Nation for $15,000 for services as delegate or agent of that nation in respect to its claim against the United States for what was called the “Leased District Money.” The evidence shows that the services of Hodges as delegate or agent in that matter were not cpmpleted when he executed the deed of assignment. As the services to be performed were the personal services of Hodges, he could not transfer the unperformed contract to his assignee, nor authorize the latter to act in his stead; and as the compensation was entire, indivisible, and only payable upon full performance, Hodges at the time of his assignment had no claim against the Choctaw Nation which he could transfer to his assignee or to any one. . The services were after-wards completed, whereupon Hodges became entitled to compensation; but this was an after-acquired right, to which the assignment did not attach.
The only other property claimed to have been improperly withheld from the assignee was an alleged interest of Hodges in a coal-mining claim in the town of Lehigh, known as “Coal Claim No. 6.” The evidence in respect to this shows that, at the time the deed of assignment was executed, Hodges had no interest in this mine; that the title to the mine was then in litigation between other parties, and that Hodges was to be a witness for one of these parties to prove the location of the mine; and that in compensation for the testimony of Hodges, so to be given, such party agreed that, in case of success in the litigation, Hodges should be given a small designated interest in the mine. It is needless to say that under this unexecuted agreement, so manifestly illegal and immoral that no court would ever enforce it, even after Hodges should have given his testimony, he had no shadow of interest in that mine which he could transfer to his assignee. That the litigation was settled subsequently, and Hodges in some unexplained way got some interest in the mine, which he sold for $400, is another case of after-acquired property. Some evidence was received respecting an interest of Hodges in coal claim No. 7. But this claim was not mentioned in the bill, and the evidence *601showed that whatever interest in that mine stood in the name of Hodges belonged in fact to his bookkeeper, Martin, who obtained whatever it was afterwards sold for.
The only other matter urged against the assignment is that the assignee, before giving his bond and filing the inventory, took possession of the assigned property. The finding of the special master against this contention is well supported by the evidence. The only-claim in respect to this was that the assignee, before qualifying, had employed one Pate, an attorney, to collect some outstanding claims. The testimony of the assignee was direct and positive that he did not so employ him until after he had fully qualified. The only other testimony on the subject was that of Pate, which was so vague, uncertain, and in some respects contradictory, that it did not tend to prove anything.
This disposes of all the questions presented by this appeal, and the decree appealed from is affirmed.