The question-does not appear lo be presented in this case, whether the assignment made under and *294in pursuance of the 16th and 17th sections of the act to abolish imprisonment for debt and to punish fraudulent debtors, creates a trust for the exclusive benefit of the particular creditors upon whose application the warrant against the debtor has been issued. But as the whole claim of the complainants is based upon the supposition that after they had taken out a warrant, if they should succeed in obtaining an order for commitment, their judgment debtors must pay or secure the. debt due to the plaintiffs in such proceeding, or make an assignment for their exclusive benefit, or at least an assignment which would give them a preference, it may be necessary to examine the provisions of the act of 1831 in reference to this question.
In the case of The People v. Abell, (3 Hill’s Rep. 109,) Mr. Justice Bronson intimated an opinion that the discharge of the debtor under the 17th section of the act of 1831, only exonerated him from being proceeded against, for fraud, by those creditors who had previously commenced suits; and that only those who were entitled to apply for a warrant were entitled to dividends of the assigned property. But as that question was. not involved in the case, he said it needed not be settled at that time. The various provisions of the act of 1831, and of the title of the revised statutes referred to therein, do not appear to have been examined by him. This intimation of his opinion, therefore, is not entitled to the ordinary weight of an obiter dictum of that distinguished judge; although, if right, it is still in conflict with the claim of exclusive priority set up by the complainants in this case.
In Berthelon v. Betts, (4 Hill’s Rep. 577,) which came before the late Justice Cowen, six or seven months afterwards, the question as to the class of creditors for whose benefit the assignment was made, was not presented to his consideration; although it would probably have been involved in the application, if the assignee under the act of 1831 had thought proper to appear and oppose the application upon the ground that other creditors had presented claims to him against the fund in his hands. The only questions considered by the judge in that case, therefore, were whet er the act of 1831 was an insolvent *295act which was abrogated or suspended by the general bankrupt law; and whether a subsequent decree in bankruptcy overreached an assignment previously made, under the first mentioned act. Both of these questions he decided against the assignee in bankruptcy; who claimed that the previous assignment under the act of 1831 was void as against the subsequent decree in bankruptcy, upon the ground that the petition in bankruptcy had been presented, under the voluntary provisions of the bankrupt law, a few days previous to the coerced assignment of the debtor under the act of April, 1831. The right of priority claimed by the complainants is therefore wholly unaffected by any of the j udicial decisions cited by their counsel upon the argument. For in relation to the case of Wood v. Bolard Pickard, (8 Paige's Rep. 556,) it was an ordinary creditor’s bill, founded upon the return of an execution unsatisfied. And all that this court meant to decide in that case, was that an assignment made for the purpose of defrauding the complainants in the proceedings which they had instituted under the act of April, 1831, could not be set up, by the fraudulent assignee, to protect the property against the creditor’s bill, filed by the defrauded parties to reach such property in this court. But there is no intimation in that case that the complainants, by the institution of the proceedings under the act of 1831, obtained any right of priority over other creditors, of their judgment debtor, who had equal claims to be paid out of his property. The decision was based entirely upon the principle that the act had deprived a fraudulent debtor, who was proceeded against, under the provisions of that act, for the fraud which he had already committed, or was about to commit, of the right or power to make an assignment giving to other creditors a preference over those who had already instituted proceedings against him.
There are three distinct cases in which an assignment of the debtor’s property may be obtained under the provisions of the act of 1831. First, where the debtor has been proceeded against adversely, by one or more of his creditors: Second, when he has been sued for a debt for which he is not liable to be arrested, or imprisoned, except by proceedings under that act, *296and where no such proceedings have: been instituted against him ; and Third, where he has been, indicted and convicted of a misdemeanor for fraudulently removing, secreting, or otherwise disposing of any of his property,. for. the purpose of defrauding his creditors. ..In the ¡two ¡first .cases,, the .assignment can only; he-obtained . upon the voluntary application of the debtor for leave, to make such. assignment. ¡But ins the last case, the assignment of!his property:.is obtained.upon an ..adverse proce.eding-.against --him, by. his creditors, as.in. the. case, of. debtors impris.oned'in the state prisons,, or.in. county jails .or penitentiaries, .upon.-convictions,for crimes. (Laws of 1831, p. 402, § 27. 2 R. S. 14, § 1.) In the two.first,.cases,Itlie,proceedings.qn,tbe part of the debtor are. precisely the .same; except ¡that where he-applies immediately, after th.e judge Ras decided that , he is liable to commitment for. the.fraud of which he has-been guilty no notice.-of.Ms application meed be given .to. other creditors. But.the¡form-of the.inventory and.the. effect of. the assignment is the same.in both, cases. • As. to the form, of the inventory,.the person who.drew the.act of April, 1831, probably by inadvertence,-substituted, the sixth-for. the fifth article of the title of the-revised, statutes relative, to the assignment, of the estates ¡.of nonrrasident, absconding, insolvent, or imprisoned debtors. Fqi the 13th section of the acfpf:1831.provides; that the debtor, upon presenting, his.petition,. shall deliver an account of his creditors, and an inventory of.his. estate,. similar .in. all respects to the account. and .inventory .required of :the,debtorby,the sixth article of.title.first and. chapter .five, of. the second. part, of the revised statutes. .But hy referring ¡to. the sixth article, ■ which relates :to the discharge of a, debtor who is imprisoned,upon an execution for debt, it-will be,seen that up .account .of-his creditors -is required to be annexed to.his petition. ' That article, of the revised statutes requires an.account and .inventory of.the. debtor’s-property and.effects, .not.only as they exist, at the .time, of .preparing his-petition,-but also as they existed.at the.time qf :his imprisonment ; which last provisiones wholly inapplicable to the.case of a debtor who has ¡never ’been imprisoned, either because ,nq -warrant had been taken out against him, or-because.he.applied *297immediately upon the decision of, the judge against him, or because he had given a bond to apply-for an assignment,, as authorized by the 4th subdivision of the 10th section of the act. Or, the. person who drew this 13th section of the act- of 1831 inay have intended to adapt it to the. case of an actual commitment of the debtor, and a subsequent petition by him -for leave to make an assignment of his property for.the.purpose of obtaining,a discharge from such- imprisonment; dn order to obtain a statement of his, property as it existed when he. w-asoriginally committed, as well.as ¡at the time of his discharge; ¡without seeing that • this thirteenth - section, as drawn, -would not meet the different cases-intended to be ¡provided ¡for. -But, whatever may have .been the intention -.of the-framer of ■ this section, as-to the form of- the inventory, I do. not see that it has any practical. bearing ■ upon the question as - to who, is to take the beneficial interest in the assigned property under the assignment-provided for-in the 16th section, The sixth article of the title of the revised statutes, referred to in the 13th-section of-the act of 1831, -vests the assigned-propertydn the assignee for the benefit of the creditors by whom the assignor was imprisoned, and for their benefit only. (2 R. S. 30, § 9. Idem, 47, § 33, sub. 4.) And the surplus, if any, is to be paid to the assignor or his .legal representatives. {Idem, 48, § 43.) But-the 16th section-of the act of 1831 does -not refer to this sixth article of the revised statutes, to determine the effect of an assignment made under the provisions of that section. It refers to the fifth article. The assignment provided for under that fifth article .is a general assignment, which vests in the assignee all the interest which the assignor-had, at the time of executing the same, in any estate-or property, real or-personal, at law-or in equity, and any contingent interest which may become vested in.the assignor within three years thereafter. (2 R. S. 30, § 9. Idem, 21, § 28.) And a subsequent provision of .the .revised statutes directs the assignees, in whom the property .is vested under Üús fifth article, to distribute.the proceeds thereof rateably among ¡those who were creditors of the assignor at the time, of the execution of the assignment by him. (Idem, 47, § 33, sub. 2.)
*298The 17th section of the act of 1831, if taken by itself, would seem to favor the construction which Mr. Justice Bronson was inclined to put upon it, in the case of The People v. Abell, before referred to; so as to confine the dividends to be made by the assignee, to a class of creditors who, at the time of the making of the assignment, were in a situation to apply for a warrant against the assignor, for some fraud which he had then committed or was about to commit. But that section refers to subsequent provisions of the act for the class of creditors who are entitled to dividends under the assignment; and no provision for dividends is made in that section. Nor is there any thing in the subsequent parts of the act providing for the making of dividends, by the assignee, except in the next section; which section refers to the eighth article of the title of the revised statutes before mentioned, (2 R. S. 40,) for the powers and duties of the assignee, and the making of dividends. We must, therefore, look to the provisions of that article of the revised statutes, in connection with the fifth, for the purpose of seeing for whose benefit the assigned property is vested in the assignee, and who are entitled to dividends of the proceeds thereof, under an assignment made by the debtor himself, according to the directions of the 17th section of the act of April, 1831. The first section of that eighth article declares that the assignees appointed under any of the preceding articles of that title, in the several cases therein contemplated shall be trustees of the debtor, for the benefit of his creditors; without specifying any class. And that such trustees shall be vested with the powers and authority, and shall be subject to the control, obligations, and responsibilities thereinafter declared in respect to trustees. And the 6th section merely specifies the time to which the assignment under the provisions of the different articles shall relate.
The only section of that article which directs the trustees as to the class of creditors among whom the proceeds of the assigned property shall be distributed is the thirty-third. (2 R. S. 47.) That section directs different modes of distribution in the case of proceedings under the different articles of that title. So that we must still refer to the 16th section of the act of 183] *299for the purpose of ascertaining to which of the five articles of the revised statutes the assignment made by the debtor, under that act, assimilates itself. That section declares that the assignment shall be executed with the like effect as is declared in the fifth article of the revised statutes. And the actual effect of an assignment under the provisions of the fifth article, is to vest the property of the debtor in the assignee, for the benefit of all who were his creditors at the time of the execution of the assignment, in proportion to the amount of their respective demands ; without giving a preference to any, except such as have obtained liens upon the assigned property, or those who are entitled to priority under the laws of the United States. (2 R. S. 42, § 7, sub. 7. Idem, 46, §§ 32, 33.) No other sensible construction, therefore, can be given to the imperfect provisions of the 16th, 17th and 18th sections of the act of April, 1831, than to hold that the assignee takes the property of the debtor as a trustee for the benefit of all the creditors of the assignor rateably; and not for the benefit of the particular creditor who has sued out a warrant against the assignor; nor even for the particular class of creditors who were in a situation to sue out warrants against him. In other words, the act appears to be based upon the principle that equality among creditors, in the case of an insolvent debtor, is equity. The fraudulent debtor, therefore, pending the proceedings against him by one or more creditors, for an actual or intended fraud, is not permitted to assign or dispose of his property, or any part of it, for the purpose or with a view to give a preference to other creditors. But he is to be discharged from imprisonment upon paying, or securing the payment of the creditors who have proceeded against him; or retaining his property in its then situation until they shall have had a reasonable time to exhaust their remedies at law and file a creditor’s bill to reach his property, or upon making an assignment of his property to such assignee as may be appointed for that purpose, by the judge before whom the proceedings are had, for the benefit of all his creditors rateably.
I am also inclined to think it is not a fraud upon the act, for the debtor, pending the proceedings against him, to make a *300general assignment of. all'his property, with proper inventories showing the particulars- of his. property, and the names of his creditors with the amount due to them respectively, to a proper and responsible assignee fonthe benefit of all-his creditors rate-ably, giving to such assignee the same authority 'to convert-the property, into money, and apply-it to the payment of his debts, and-for the same compensation, which an assignee ■ appointed under the act.-wauld-be entitled to. But any other disposition of his-property would be a fraud upon' the act; and would render the assignment void as.against the prosecuting creditors. And. the debtor who has been guilty of such a fraud, ought'not to be discharged from imprisonment upon making -a mere formal assignment of his property, after having-committed- such a fraud upon the rights of the prosecuting creditor.
In the case under consideration, the judgewas probably, right in granting the warrant in the first instance. . For the debtors had no right to. insist upon waiting until they could - endeavor to persuade their creditors to discharge'them from their debts, before they would consent to make a general assignment for the benefit of all their creditors rateably, or.give to these complainants, upon ¡their-demand of the same, a rateable .proportion of.the property of the insolvent-firm.
But I do not see that there is any thing in the bill of the complainants to.show that the assignment'made by■ the defendants C. tfc C. E. Wardell, pending the .proceedings against them, was mot perfectly .just and-equitable, in reference to the rights of all their creditors .to an equal participation in the proceeds of the assigned fund. Nor .is there anything to show that the assignee was not a-perfectly responsible and-proper person -to be entrusted with the winding up-of-this -insolvent concern, and the distribution of the fund among all the creditors of the-assignors, according to their equitable-rights as such creditors. If the coinplainants, thetefore, had-issued an-execution and’had it returned unsatisfied before they commenced this suit, I do not think-they would have been -entitled to set this assignment-aside, upon the-ground.of fraud; even-if-their bill had been filed ibefore the subsequent assignment -to the trustee *301•appointed ¡under. the- act.. It is.-nofe necessary, however, to decide that question here; for, as creditors by . judgment- merely, the complainants were not in a situation to file a bill to set aside; an assignment by the judgment debtors, even if it was in fact .fraudulent as against-them.. If. the. assignment embraced any real estate upon which their judgment was a lien, it did not prevent them from selling the property under execution upon their judgment; which judgment upon its face overreached the assignment. And as respects the personal property liable-to execution,, the- complainants were not ¡in a situation to file a bill until they had sued out an execution. (Beck v. Burdett, 1 Paige’s Rep. 305.) And if. the property passed ’ to- the subsequent assignee, under the assignment made by order of the circuit judge,.in consequence of any fraud in the previous assignment, such subsequent, assignee,-who represented the-rights of all the creditors for.whose benefit the-last assignment was made, was the only"-person who had a right :to filen bill to set aside the previous, assignment upon the: ground -that it was fraudulent as against-, the creditors of the assignor..
For these-reasons the. injunction: in this case-was improperly allowed,.and it must be.dissolved.- And the motion on the part of-the complainants .for the. appointment of. a.receiver must be dénied with costs.