Cronan v. Cotting

Wells, J.

The provision of the bankrupt act of 1867, upon which the plaintiff relies, is “ that no debt created by the fraud or embezzlement of the bankrupt, or by his defalcation as a public officer, or while acting in any fiduciary character, shall be discharged,” &c. It is argued that the deposit of the securities made the defendant a trustee for the owner; first, to apply the proceeds, so far as required, to the payment of the debt due to the estate of which she was the administratrix; second, to return the balance, if any, to the depositor; and that this trust constituted a fiduciary relation, such as the statute contemplates. This would require an interpretation so broad that almost all pecuniary obligations, especially those implied by law, would be included in the exemption.

We are inclined to the opinion that the phrase implies a fiduciary relation existing previously to or independently of the particular transaction from which the debt arises. The collocation tends to favor this interpretation. If the phrase while acting,” &e., be referred to that which immediately precedes, it implies something in the nature of defalcation. If it be referred to the first branch of the provision, its association with fraud and embezzlement carries the implication of a debt growing out of some fraudulent misappropriation, or, at least, breach of trust.

The debt, in this case, arose exclusively out of a single transaction between the parties. Its creation involved no element other than that of contract. The existence of the liability did not spring from any breach of trust. The only default consisted in the nonpayment of the balance due to the plaintiff, after satisfying the purpose of the pledge. The debt did not result from, but preceded that default.

It is due from the defendant personally, and not as administratrix,, Towards the plaintiff she sustained no “ fiduciary char*248acter,” while acting in which this debt was created by her. It is simply a debt by contract, like any other which results from the rightful possession of money that belongs to another. We are of opinion, therefore, that this debt does not come within the meaning of the clause of the bankrupt act above quoted.

It is a question of construction of an act of congress, which can be finally settled only by the supreme court of the United States. That court have given a construction to the phrase “ while acting -in any fiduciary capacity,” as it occurs in the bankrupt act of 1841, which would exclude the debt now in controversy from the class of fiduciary debts. Chapman v. Forsyth, 2 How. 202, 208. It is true that in the act of 1841 the phrase followed an enumeration of certain trusts of a marked character; and the association was regarded as an indication of the intent of congress in the use of that phrase. But, that intent having been ascertained and declared by a judicial construction of the act, the language thenceforth bore a legal significance, in accordance with that construction. When the same, or substantially the same language was subsequently used, for a similar purpose, in the bankrupt act of 1867, it is to be presumed that it was so used in view of the construction and legal import which had become attached to it by the interpretation of the proper constitutional tribunal.

The argument that the omission, in the act of 1867, of the specific trusts named in the act of 1841, by removing the reason, or one of the reasons for the construction given to the earlier act, indicates that “fiduciary character” was used in a different sense in the later act, does not strike us as entitled to much weight; notwithstanding the reasoning, and the consideration due to'the judgment of so highly respectable a court as the district court of the United States for the southern district of New York, supported, as we understand it to be, by the affirmance of the circuit court for that circuit. On the contrary-, it appears to us that the inference is quite as legitimate that congress omitted the enumeration of specific trusts for the very reason that the term “fiduciary capacity” had, by judicial construction., received a fixed definition; and with intent that the phrase *249should carry that definition into the new act. The specific enumeration was omitted because all were included in the general expression, “ fiduciary.” The association of those specific trusts originally was held to be an indication of intent in the general purpose. That intent, having been ascertained, has been affixed to the general term, and become legal construction. Commonwealth v. Hartnett, 3 Gray, 450. Tucker v. Oxley, 5 Cranch, 34, 42. If congress had intended to adopt a different test of fiduciary debts, we may presume that the intent to change the previous judicial construction would have been indicated by some distinct provision to that end, rather than left to inference from the mere omission of associate words, which had ceased to be of any importance as affecting the scope of the provision. Such omission could be expected to have no effect other than, at most, to render this whole branch of the provision undefined, and without means of definition otherwise than by a new judicial construction. We cannot suppose that congress directed its legislation so vaguely.

Our conclusion is, that this provision of the bankrupt act of 1867 was framed in view of, and with the intent to adopt, the construction which the supreme court of the United States had put upon the similar clause in the bankrupt act of 1841. We adhere to that construction as applicable to the act of 1867 until the same court shall declare otherwise. The result is, that the judgment of the superior court in favor of the defendant must be Affirmed.