The importance of the question in this case is so great, and the amount involved so large, that it is of little consequence what my decision may be, except as it may transfer to one or the other of the parties, the burthen of an appeal ; for no decision of any court but the court of appeals will probably satisfy the unsuccessful party. Voluntary assignments for the benefit of creditors have been in discredit with the courts for several years, and.they have been so frequently before them that nearly all the questions which can arise, affecting the validity of these instruments, have been discussed and decided. Indeed, it is claimed by the counsel for the defendants that the question in this case has been decided by the court of appeals, in Nichols v. McEwen, (17 N. Y. R. 27.) The assignment in that case provided for the payment to the assignee of a “reasonable counsel fee,” in addition to the reasonable costs, expenses, charges and commissions of executing and carrying into effect the assignment. The court held that this provision for. “counsel fee” was illegal, and rendered the assignment void. The provision in the assignment under consideration reads thus : “ To pay all expenses *427which may necessarily be incurred by my said assignees in the execution of the trusts hereby created, including the charges of drawing the assignment, together with a just and reasonable compensation for labor, time, services and attention of the said James "0. Campbell, Francis E. Chapman and Justus Yale by them actually done, spent, performed, given or applied in and about the trusts and the business thereof hereby committed to them.” It will be at once observed, that there is this marked difference between the two provisions. The first gives a reasonable counsel fee in addition to commissions, &c. The second speaks only of a reasonable compensation, and says not one word of commissions as such.
The case in hand differs also from the provision in the assignment under consideration in Barney v. Griffin, (2 Comst. 372,) in which Justice Bronson held that the assignment was void. In that case “a commission of six per cent on the gross amount of moneys received and paid out,” was allowed to the assignee, in addition to the costs, charges, disbursements and expenses in executing the trust.
A voluntary assignment, to be valid, must be an absolute and unconditional surrender of all the property of the insolvent for the benefit of all his creditors ; and hence, when in addition to such compensation as the law has fixed for the services of the assignee, a further sum is given as a “counsel fee,” or in the shape of a certain “per cent,” so much is abstracted from the fund which should go to creditors; and in this way the creditors may be defrauded of their just dues. And therefore the court held in the cases cited that the assignments were void, because in both cases property, which should have been given to creditors, went to the assignees.
Is the provision in this assignment obnoxious to this objection ? I think it is not. The provision, as worded, is but a periphrasis for the shorter phrase, “ The usual commissions allowed by law.” It might have been still shorter by simply saying nothing about compensation ; when the court upon *428an accounting, if one had been necessary, would have allowed what is given to executors, &c. The assignees will be obliged to account according to the provisions of ¿the assignment, when the court can determine what sum the assignees may retain as compensation. So there can be no danger that creditors may be defrauded; whereas, when a sum is fixed by the assignment for their compensation, even if it be more than is allowed by law, the court, on an accounting, has no power to alter the sum—their only duty being to see that the provisions of the, assignment are executed.
[Monroe Special Term, June 25, 1860.Knox, Justice.
Affirmed on appeal to the General Term,
March 4,1861.Smith, Johnson and Knox, Justices.]
It is sometimes said that these preferential assignments are not to be encouraged. The courts certainly have of late years manifested a hostile disposition in construing them. If I were in the legislature, I would cut them up, root and branch; but in my judgment it does not belong to the courts to encourage or discourage them. It is their duty to declare the law, not give it; and inasmuch as an insolvent debtor has the right to assign his property for the benefit of his creditors, and he is told by the courts that he has this right, I do not think we should be astute to find reasons for invalidating an assignment which, as this one does, devotes the whole of the insolvent’s property (except so much, as the law says, is properly applicable to the payment of the expenses of the trust,) to the payment of all his debts.
I think a new trial should be denied.