Court Opinion

ID: 3622459
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 00:03:58.512886+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:41:55.980205
License: Public Domain

It is entirely apparent that the objection relied on by the plaintiffs to invalidate the assignment of David Welch  Son, as fraudulent, was the fact of the infancy of William Welch one of the assignors at the time of its execution, and this appears to have been the sole ground upon which the Supreme Court sustained the judgment in favor of the plaintiffs. The course of reasoning by which this result was reached seems to have been, that as the deed of an infant is in general either void or voidable at his election, the assignment did not devote the property of the debtors absolutely to the benefit of the creditors of the assignors, under a very familiar rule, when properly applied, that the debtor can make no reservation which shall enure to his benefit until at least the claims of all his creditors are satisfied. We have no difficulty in approving the rule stated but do not agree to its application to a case like the one at bar. It applies more especially to cases where the obnoxious reservation appears upon the face of the assignment. In this case the assignment did not disclose the infancy of William Welch, and the fact is made to appear aliunde, and when the assignment is assailed as invalid by reason of the infancy, it also appears that William Welch had reached his majority and *Page 346 
had not repudiated but confirmed his deed. It seems therefore improper to hold that the assignment was fraudulent in fact by reason of the infancy of William Welch at the date of its execution. We are, however, prepared to say that the assignment was not fraudulent and void in law, because one of the assignors was at the time an infant. He had been, with his father, during a part of his minority a member of a mercantile firm, which had reached insolvency. It cannot be doubted but that the law would devote the assets of this firm to the discharge of the partnership obligations, whenever any court, should be appealed to for that purpose, and I do not see that the supposed equity of an infant partner should in such a case prevail against that of the creditors of the firm. It is entirely well settled that as to joint debtors, the creditor may bring suit against all, and service upon any one will entitle him to judgment and execution against the joint property of all whether the party not served is an infant or an adult. (Mason v. Denison, 15 Wend., 64; S.C., 11 id., 612.) We see no substantial difference whether, in such a case, the property of the firm is subjected to the payment of the proper debts of the firm by the process of the law, or by the voluntary act of the insolvent debtors. In either case the result is precisely the same, and the infant is bound if he simply says nothing. If in any such case the defence of infancy is to be made, it must be made very distinctly by the infant himself, and it is not for any court, in such a case, to make it for him. It is not too much to say that if an infant goes into a mercantile adventure which proves unsuccessful he ought, at least, to be held so far that the assets acquired by the firm should be applied to the payment of the debts of the concern. If he has been cajoled into any waste of his capital it hardly seems equitable that the creditor of the firm should, either directly or indirectly, be called upon for reimbursement. The utmost exemption that he ought to claim in such a case is, that he should not be made personally liable for debts beyond what the assets of the firm are able to pay; and even then the infant himself should claim the exemption. *Page 347 
If the assignment was merely voidable it is entirely clear that it could be avoided only at the election of the infant, and that election could not be made until he came to be of full age, and at that period he fully ratified and confirmed it. And it appears to be the law that an infant may make over property, upon trust, by any act of assurance, and it is not void but voidable only; and the estate of the trustee will remain good until the assurance be avoided. (Hill on Trustees, 45; Hearle v.Greenbank, 1 Vesey, Sen., 304; Co. Litt, 248 a; 2 Kent Com., 234; Eagle Fire Ins. Co. v. Lent, 1 Edw. Ch., 301, etc.; S.C., 6 Paige, 635.)
It is claimed, however, that the assignment was fraudulent and void as to creditors for other reasons than the infancy of William Welch, although it is entirely obvious that the case was disposed of in the Supreme Court upon the ground of infancy alone. I have been unable to discover any ground for this claim unless it rests upon the finding of the referee that a debt of sixty-nine dollars and thirty-nine cents was provided to be paid to David Welch out of the proceeds of the assigned property, which debt had no existence in fact, as the assignors knew. I have examined the evidence with considerable care, and discover nothing to authorize any such finding; and the motion for a nonsuit raises the question whether, in law, the finding is supported by the evidence, and we are of the opinion that it is not.
These views lead to a reversal of the judgment of the Supreme Court, and the ordering of a new trial, with costs to abide the event.
All concur in result, on ground that assignment was not fraudulent and void on account of the infancy of one of the assignors, and that there was no other evidence of fraud.
Judgment reversed. *Page 348