Woodbury v. Bowman

After advisement, the opinion of the Court was drawn up by

Weston C. J.

Winter, although an insolvent man, had a legal right to give a preference to one creditor over another. In pursuance of th'is right, he indorsed certain negotiable instruments to the defendant. These, together with a bank check and certain bank notes which, being payable to bearer pass by delivery, he enclosed in a package, upon which there was fastened a letter directed to *159the defendant, advising him, that they were intended for security against certain liabilities, which he had assumed on his account.

Thus far the transaction, if consummated, could not have been impeached by other creditors. But there was another direction to pay over the surplus, if there was any, to his children, which his creditors may defeat. The defendant however was in no degree privy to this unlawful appropriation, and he expressly disclaims and repudiates this part of the arrangement. If the part, which was for his benefit, can surmount other objections, which have been interposed, wo are of opinion, that he ought not to be prejudiced by the attempt of the deceased to create a trust for the benefit of his children.

It is contended, that Winter had a power of revocation, up to the period of his decease. No such power was reserved by him in the written evidence of the transaction, nor is there reason to infer that a revocation was at all within his contemplation. Before the desperate purpose, which he meditated, was carried into effect, it might fairly have been insisted, that it was possible he might have been diverted from it, either by the sounder suggestions of his own mind, or from adventitious causes; and that if this liad been the result, he had the power, and would probably have exorcised it, to have withdrawn the appropriation he had made for the defendant. Whether this can now be said to have been possible, is a metaphysical question, which we do not consider ourselves called upon to decide. The firmness of his resolve has been so folly demonstrated, that we regard it as a just inference, that the transaction was not only absolute and unqualified in form, but was intended to be so in fact, no possible or contingent revocation being contemplated.

A question of a graver character is, whether the arrangement was not arrested and defeated by the death of Winter. And it cannot but be admitted, that it is one of no small difficulty. It must however be decided ; although the preponderance in favor of the prevailing party may be less strongly marked, than could have been desired. The determination of Winter to give a preference warranted by law to the defendant, has been clearly manifested. When he left Miss Robb’s house, ho intentionally parted with the actual possession of the bundle he had made up, never to be resumed. Had he called her up, and confided it expressly to her *160care, she would have found that it contained a package, which she was to receive in trust for the defendant. Did he not do the same thing by acts, not to be misunderstood ? He left the bundle in Miss Robb’s house, in her possession, on her sofa. What was to be done with the package, was not communicated to her orally, but it was by the written direction upon it. Is it too much to say, that it was left with Miss Robb in trust, to be delivered according to its destination ? It was not the less confided to her care, because she remained for some time ignorant of the deposit, or of its contents.

To give effect to a transaction lawful in itself, and free from any fraud imputable to the defendant, we do not regard it as too much to hold, that when Winter left the house, he parted with the possession of the contents of the package, in regard to which he had made a written declaration of trust, for a lawful purpose, in favor of the defendant, and that Miss Robb became thereupon actually or at least constructively, the trustee and depositary, through whose intervention the trust was to take effect; as we think the postmaster at Bath would have been, if Winter had put the package into his letter box; although it might not have come to his knowledge until life had been extinguished in Winter. M'Kenney v. Rhodes, 5 Watts, 343.

Much of the argument has turned upon tire peculiar doctrine of donations, inter vivos, and causa mortis, to which, in our judgment, the case bears no just resemblance.

The counsel for the defendant places his claim to the property, sought to be recovered in this action, upon the ground of a contract or transfer, and that there was a delivery to Miss Robb, or to some one in her house, which would enure to the defendant’s benefit. And cases have been cited, where deeds delivered as escrows, or upon condition, where tire condition has been performed after the death of the grantor, have been held to take effect from the first delivery, to uphold and sustain what had been done. In these and other similar cases, although the concurrence of both parties may have been essential to their validity, the requisite act or concurrence of the grantee, even after the decease of the grantor, has been deemed sufficient. In Bowers v. Hurd, Adm’r, 10 Mass. R. 427, the plaintiff had a strong moral, although not strictly legal, claim *161upon the defendant’s intestate, to satisfy which the latter made a note of hand to the plaintiff, but without her privity or knowledge, until after the decease of the intestate, and deposited it with a third person. This was held to be good, upon the subsequent assent of the plaintiff.

Whether or not, upon the authority and analogies, deducible from the cases cited for the defendant, he is entitled to hold the property upon the ground of a contract; he may be so entitled, upon the trust expressly declared in his favor. It is a well settled doctrine in equity, that where a trust is created for the benefit of a third person, without his knowledge at the time, he may afterwards affirm it, and enforce its performance. Neilson v. Blight, 1 Johns. Cases, 205; Moses v. Murgatroyd, 1 Johns. Ch. R. 119; Duke of Cumberland v. Codrington, 3 Johns. Ch. R. 261; Shepherd v. McEvers, 4 Johns. Ch. R. 136. How then does the case stand ? Winter in his lifetime, by writing under his hand, sets apart the property in question, and declares it appropriated for the indemnity of the defendant. He deposits it with Miss Robb, that it may be disposed of as directed, and then takes his own life. As soon as the fact comes to the knowledge of the defendant, he affirms the trust, and receives the property to be held for his indemnity, with the assent of the trustee and depositary.

We are not aware, that the circumstance of the business having been done by Winter in the near, or even certain approach of death, calls for a different construction. It has never been decided, that a man may not prefer one creditor to another, so long as he is competent to transact business, or that an act done for this purpose, by one who is conscious that his end is near, may be avoided as a fraud upon the laws for the distribution and settlement of insolvent estates. No case has come to our knowledge, in which the payment or security of an honest debt, has been attempted to be defeated upon this ground. If a preference under such circumstances is lawful, the intervention of death as a matter of certainty, or even of calculation, can make no difference. If an insolvent man, apparently in full health, and in the reasonable expectation of the continuance of life, deposits with a third person a sum in bank notes, or in bills of exchange or notes of hand indorsed by him, with written directions, that they be delivered as security to a cred*162itor, to whom he owes about an equal amount, and then happens to die, either from accident or disease, and the preferred creditor subsequently claims the deposit, we are aware of no legal reason why he may not receive it, for the purpose for which it was appropriated. It is not necessary in such case, as we have seen, that the act of the one, and the assent and concurrence of the other should be simultaneous. A deed of mortgage to secure a creditor, thus delivered, although accepted after the death of the mortgagor, it is clear from the authorities, would take effect.

The -counsel for the plaintiffs has cited a class of cases, where an assignment is made by a debtor to third persons, for the benefit of his creditors, upon certain terms prescribed. This has been held not to be effectual against the attachment of creditors, so as to bind the property, except in favor of those who have assented; and this principally upon the ground, that a debtor shall not be permitted by conveying to others, to put his property out of the immediate reach of his creditors, without their consent. A conveyance or mortgage directly to a creditor as payment or security, is not liable to this objection. Even in an assignment to third persons, it has been strongly intimated by more tiran one Judge, that the consent of preferred creditors may be presumed, although the law is not so understood in this State or in Massachusetts. In the conveyance of real estate, the consent of the grantee is presumed, until he expresses - his dissent or refusal. And it would seem, if there ever was a case, where tire consent of a creditor might be presumed, it is where his debtor deposits a sum of money and available notes of hand, indorsed to him, and intended directly for his security.

If a man unable to pay all his debts, upon the eve of dissolution, and conscious of the fact, but yet capable of transacting business, delivers a deed, conveying land to one of his creditors in payment of his debt, to some one about his bed, it is good, although accepted after his decease. If he delivers his watch to a third person to be handed to a creditor for the same purpose, shall it not be equally effectual 1 Is there less difficulty in the transfer of real, than of personal estate ? But it is contended that death prevented the transit, that the insolvent laws operated as an appropriation of all the property of the deceased for the use of all ,his creditors, and *163that the transfer in this case was not consummated. The argument, sustained as it is by the equitable policy of the insolvent laws, is certainly entitled to great consideration, and we have felt its force. But it must be remembered, that the insolvent laws take effect, upon the death of the insolvent. While living, to the last moment, he has a right to dispose of his property, to pay or secure his debts. The deceased made a specific appropriation of a portion of his property, to secure the defendant, declaring in writing, that it was to be for this purpose, and left it with a third person for his use ; and upon the whole, we are of opinion, if the assent of the defendant is not to be presumed, that his subsequent affirmance docs, by relation, give effect to the appropriation, in the lifetime of the deceased, so that the defendant may lawfully hold against the plaintiffs so much of the property, as is necessary for his indemnity.