Court Opinion

ID: 6409306
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-25 11:51:24.997031+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:51:19.169340
License: Public Domain

Metcalf, J.
By the Rev. Sts. c. 90, §§ 57, 61, the proceeds of personal property which is attached, and is sold before judgment is recovered against the owner, “shall be held by the officer, subject to the attachment or attachments, and shall be disposed of in like manner as the said property would have been held and disposed of, if it had remained unsold.” Now, if the goods, which the defendant attached, had remained unsold, and had not been seized in execution *395Before the first publication of notice, they must have been given up to the plaintiff; because the attachment would have been dissolved by the assignment of Friend’s estate to him. And for the like reason, the money, which the defendant received on the sale of the goods, must be given up, “in like manner,” unless the defendant is excused by want of actual notice of the proceedings in insolvency, before he paid over the money to the attaching creditor. Wheelock v. Hastings, 4 Met. 504. And we are of opinion that he is not so excused. By the insolvent law, (St. 1838, c. 163, § 5,) the assignment vests in the assignee all the debtor’s property, which he could, by any way or means, have lawfully sold, assigned or conveyed, or which might have been taken in execution on any judgment against him, at the time of the first publication of the notice of issuing the warrant to the messenger, although the same may then be attached as the property of the debtor; and such assignment is effectual to pass all said property, and dissolve any such attachment, and to vest in the assignee all debts due to the debtor, or to any person for his use, and all his rights of action for any goods or estate. By the assignment in this case, therefore, the attachment of Friend’s property was dissolved, and the right to the money in the defendant’s hands was vested in the plaintiff, from the 7th of January, 1847, when the first publication of notice was made. And the defendant did not receive the execution, on which he applied the money, in discharge of the attaching creditor’s judgment, till six days afterwards.
It is by the legal operation of the assignment, and not by actual notice to creditors or officers, that the debtor’s property is vested in the assignee, and that attachments thereof are dissolved. Publication of notice is the decisive fact in this matter, and is notice, actual or constructive, by which all parties are bound. Even actual notice, before publication, will not affect an attaching creditor’s rights. Clarke v. Minot, 4 Met. 346. In that case, the chief justice said, “ We are now seeking to ascertain and fix the point of time intended by the statute as the time at which all the property of the *396debtor is changed, and his power over it suspended; that point, in other words, prior to which all payments, made by him or to him, all conveyances (not fraudulent) made by him, all seizures, levies and extents of execution upon his property, shall be held valid, and all those made after void. The time of publication was fixed, obviously, because that act would, in most cases, afford actual notice to those immediately interested; and it was intended as constructive notice to all.”
Suppose that Friend had died insolvent on the day before he petitioned for the benefit of the insolvent law. The attachment "would have been dissolved, provided administration had been taken on his estate, within a year; and the money in the defendant’s hands would have been payable to the administrator, for the benefit of all the creditors. Rev. Sts. c. 90, § 105. Could it be pretended that the defendant, in such case, if he had paid over the money to the attaching creditor, could resist the claim of the administrator, on the mere ground of want of notice of Friend’s death ?
There is no more hardship in the present case than in any other in which an officer, for want of notice, takes the property of one person, on a writ or execution against another. He may, in all cases, take an indemnity beforehand; and in this case he is entitled to recover back the money from the creditor to whom he paid it. Judgment on the verdict