Opinion of the -.Court, .by
Freak, J.The question is whether W. H. Aldrich is entitled to be adjudged a bankrupt upon his own petition. It appears that he owes debts, due at the time of his petition, aggregating a little more than .three thousand dollars.; and that his property, aside from articles of household furniture of little-value, consists of a bequest during his life of a portion of the. income of a part of the residue of the estate of his deceased father, who by will, after making certain specific devises and bequests, gave .the residue of his estate to .trustees upon various trusts, the-third of-which is:
“To appropriate and pay out of the net rents, income, issues and profits derived from or yielded by the equal one-fourth (|) part of such residue of - my estate, and from the successive investments.thereof, hereinbefore provided .for, so much .thereof as may be required .to be expended for the proper education of the children of my said son -William Holt Aldrich, and to pay and deliver the remainder of such net -..rents, income, issues and profits -to my. said son, William *238Holt Áldricli, for and during- tlio period of his- natural life;, and in quarterly; semi-annual or- annual installments, as- he may elect, ; 'pnmdedl always, and- it is a positive and specific-condition, of.' this-. Bequest, that said portion of said rents, income, issues and'profits, shall be paid’to Kim personally, and only upon his. individual receipt therefor; also, that he shall have- no- power to. anticipate said rents, income,, issues and) profits;, or any part thereof, nor to alienate, transfer;, convey,, or dispose of the same, or of any interest therein, or part, thereof’;, nor- shall the same be involuntarily alienated. by him-,» or be subject, to-- attachment or execution, or to. be leviedugomoi-taken upon any process, for any debt or debts, which he- may contract, o>r in satisfaction, of any .demand's, or ■obligations which he may incur.”’
There are- certain limitations over upon- the death of this • son;. The amount of the income in- question- is wholly uncertain,. but it seems to be admitted' to be sufficient to pay the debts, in. the course of time,, or even, at present,. if available-by way of. anticipation..
The-- statute,, in-- Section 2, which provides- for voluntary bankruptcy; authorizes “ auy person owing- debts to- the amount of five hundred dollars” which have not been contracted in- a fiduciary capacity, to petition to be adjudg-ed a bankrupt.' There-is-no express qualification-in the statute,, as. to. whether the-debts--must be due or-not, or whether there must have-been- a failure to pay them when due, or whether-die- debtor must fee- insolvent or not. Considering the-general purpose of the statute-, however; it' is plain that- the legislature could not have intended to- allow- “ any persom Ijw-hether solvent- ®r not] owing debts [ whether duo or not]; to the amount of five hundred- dollar»” to- become a bank--im.pt» There must-therefore be some implied qualification»or-restriction, there- must be some- implied- circumstance or circumstances,, in addition to the-mere fact of owing debts to-the prescribed amount; But-what? Counsel for the alleged Bankrupt contends that it- is sufficient if the debtor in. addition, to- owing-, debts, bas- committed- any of the. acts-*239enumerated in Section 1 of the statute, which provides for the involuntary bankruptcy, upon the petition of his creditors, of “every person owing debts to the amount of five hundred dollars who shall refuse or fail to make payment _ of any of his just demands for ten days after the same shall mature, or who shall depart the kingdom with the intent to hinder, delay or defraud his creditors, or who shall secrete himself, or keep his house to hinder, delay, defraud or avoid his creditors, or to hinder or delay the service of legal process for the collection of any debts or who shall make any fraudulent or secret conveyance of his property to any person or persons, or make any secret removal or other disposition of his property for the purpose of hindering, delaying or defrauding his creditors.” This contention is unsound. It would allow the debtor to take advantage of his own wrong to the injury of his creditors. The statute is designed for the benefit of the creditors as well as of the debtor. So far as it provides for involuntary bankruptcy, it is designed chiefly for the benefit of the creditors, enabling them to protect themselves, so far as possible, from loss, which might otherwise result from either the wrongful acts or the misfortune of the debtor. So far as it provides for voluntary bankruptcy, it is designed chiefly for the benefit of the debtor, enabling him to protect himself from attacks from his creditors when through misfortune or circumstances which the law does not regard as wrongful acts or omissions on his part, he is unable to meet his engagements. The only circumstance mentioned in Section 1 which, coupled with the owing of debts to the amount prescribed in Section 2, might enable a debtor to become a voluntary bankrupt without taking advantage of his own wrong, is, the “ failure to make payment of any of his just demands for ten days after the same shall mature,” and even such failure must, of course, by implication, not be the result of what the law would recognize as the wrongful act or omission of the debtor. This would practically require the debtor to be insolvent, to enable him to become a voluntary bankrupt. And this is the contention *240of counsel for the creditors — that the debtor must be insolvent. This"' also seems reasonable, and is supported by the fact that the old law (Civil Code, Section 962) provided that the debtor could become a bankrupt upon his own petition, only “ upon finding himself insolvent,” in addition to owing debts to a certain amount. The omission of this clause in the new Bankrupt Act of 1884 does not appear to have been made with the intention of altering the law in this respect. It was probably an oversight.
The question then is, was W. H. Aldrich insolvent ? What constitutes insolvency V It is inability to pay one’s debts, but how and when? All the authorities agree that it is a present inability. It is immaterial what the prospects for the future are. “Insolvency means inability to pay debts as they mature and become due and payable, * * without reference to the possibility or probability, or even certainty, that at a future time, on the settlement or winding tip of all his [the debtor's] affairs, his debts will be paid in full out of his property. * * * To hold that the probability that if the estate could be judiciously managed, it would, after the lapse of some indefinite time, at prices corresponding with its then estimated value, produce enough to pay the creditors, if they also would wait and not force sales by judgments and executions, is to constitute proof of solvency within the meaning of the law, would be neither sensible nor just. * * A man who is unable to pay his debts out of his own means, or whose debts cannot be collected out of such means by legal process, is insolvent; and although it may be morally certain that with indulgence of his creditors, in point of time, he may be ultimately able to satisfy his engagements in full. The term insolvency imports a present inability to pay. The probable or improbable future condition of the party in this respect does not affect the question. If a man’s debts cannot be paid in full out of his property by levy and sale on execution, he is insolvent within the primary and ordinary meaning of the word, and particularly- in the sense in which the word is used *241m tbe bankruptcy act.” Bump on Bankruptcy, 412; Cunningham vs. Norton, 125 U. S., 77; Dutcher vs. Wright, 94 U. S., 557; Wager vs. Hill, 16 Wall., 599; Thompson vs. Thompson, 4 Cush., 127. It is clear, therefore, that if W. H. Aldrich could meet his engagements only by waiting until his income under his father’s will should accumulate to an amount equal to his indebtedness, he was not solvent. To hold otherwise would be to hold, contrary to both reason and authority, that insolvency is a present status evidenced by future contingencies. That would be to hold that one is not insolvent who, though deep in debts and without any property whatever, is in receipt of a salary or other income, or even is capable of earning, sufficient in time to pay off his indebtedness, — which ■would be untenable.
Was, then, W. H. Aldrich able to meet his engagements at the time of his petition ? This raises tbe other question, Juno must one be able to meet his engagements in order to be solvent? The authorities seem agreed that, at least when traders are referred to, and when used in the sense of the bankruptcy acts, “ insolvency ” means inability to pay debts in legal tender. “ Insolvency means an inability to pay debts -x- «• * iD that which is made * * * lawful money and a legal tender to be used in the payment of debts. * * Property is not a lawful tender in payment of debts, and a debtor has no right to pay a debt with property of any kind. Therefore, the amount of a trader’s property is of no consequence, if such inability to pay matured debts in lawful money exists.” Bump, ubi supra: Anderson, Law Dict.; Cent. Diet.; Am. & Eng. Encyc.; Title insolvency. Gauged by this standard W. H, Aldrich certainly was insolvent.
But ■“insolvency” has another, a popular meaning. “It is sometimes used to denote the insufficiency of the entire property and assets of an individual to pay his debts,” (Bump, Bankruptcy, 812) whether by direct distribution of his property among his creditors or by sale under legal process. No case has come to our knowledge in which the *242word lias been construed in this sense when used in connection with bankruptcy acts, although it has been said that “the term may, perhaps, have a less restricted meaning” ivhen applied to other persons than when applied to traders, (Toof vs. Martin, 13 Wall. 47, in which it was held that “if the bankrupts [traders] could not pay their debts in the ordinary course of business,, that is, in money, as they fell due, they are bankrupt.”) The word seems however to- have this broader meaning when used as a test of the validity of voluntary assignments for the benefit of creditors (Burrill on Assignments, 38-40), but even then, a person is considered insolvent if the “ present inadequacy of the debtor’s means-to satisfy his engagements * * even in connection, with the probable fact, of ultimate solvency * * is itself a matter of uncertainty, being dependent upon contingencies of various kinds which cannot be foreseen oi estimated,” or “where the property of the debtor is of a doubtful character, and may or may not, according to the-circumstances, be sufficient to discharge his debts in full.” Ib. 41. Taking, then, this broad definition, which is the most favorable to- the creditors, and supposing for the sake of argument that this is the kind of insolvency contemplated by the statute, was W. H. Aldrich insolvent at the date-of his petition? His interest in his father’s estate could not be divided directly among his creditors, at- that time. The estate was in course of administration in the probate court. His interest was only an equitable life-interest of uncertain amount. It was not subject to execution. Or could it even have been sold for sufficient to-pay the debts? Being only a life interest (which itself is of uncertain duration) in the net income (after paying the-uncertain expenses of the management of the estate and of the education of the children) of one-fourth of the residue (after certain specific devises and bequests) of an estate of uncertain amount, in course of administration, and with numerous conditions annexed to his interest, the effect of which would' be, to say the least, uncertain until adjudicated *243upon, who would be willing to purchase it, and for how much? No attempt has been made on the part of the creditors to-show that W. H. Aldrich could by any possibility, not to-say probability, have met his engagements either in money or property,, or in any ether way at the time he petitioned to beadjadged a bankrupt, and yet it is well settled that insolvency means, only a present, inability to pay.
No attexnpt has been made to show that the alleged, bankrupt’s inability to pay has - been the result of his own-wrong.. On the contrary, the creditors knew that, he was. without means, and'they gave him credit upon his expectations-of what he was- to receive under his father’s will,, the time to-receive- which had not, without any wrong on his part,, then-arrived. It is- not claimed, and it certainly has not been, proved, that in obtaining, credit upon these expectations, the debtor acted fraudulently. If that can be shown,: it will be good ground for refusing the debtor his discharge. Nor does It appear, that the debtor, in seeking bankruptcy, had any wrongful motive,- other than, that, if any, which may be-inferred from- the fact,, if fact it be, that his creditors would thereby be placed in a worse condition than they otherwise would be in. The debtor claims to have taken the bankruptcy proceedings, in order to protect himself from the-attacks of his creditors, his household.furniture having been, levied upon in execution at. the instance of one of them. This-was reason enough to justify his course of action, feud no-other reason or- motive,, if any existed, lias been shown either-directly or inferentially. It does not even appear that, as a result of his action, whether right or wrongful, he will reap-any other advantage- than that to which he is lawfully entitled under the bankruptcy act, or that his creditors will suffer any injury. If the conditions annexed to-his interest by the-terms of the will are in the nature of limitations, his interest, would be determined either by his bankruptcy, or by an attachment by a judgment creditor. In either ease neither he nor his creditors- could reap any benefit from it. On the other hand,, il the- conditions are void, as being, merely *244conditions repugnant to the estate devised, Ms interest may be reached either by his .assignee in bankruptcy, or by judgment -creditors. In either case 'the creditors receive the benefit of it. See Graves vs. Dolphin, 1 Sim., 66; Brandon vs. Robinson, 18 Ves., 429; Rockford vs. Hackman, 9 Hare, 475; Nichols vs. Eaton, 91 U. S., 716; Tillinghast vs. Bradford, 5 R. I., 205; 2 Jarm. Wills, 23-37; Perry, Trusts, Secs. 386, 555. Nor does it appear that .a. ’judgment creditor would be in .any better position than an -assignee by reason of the property being in another jurisdiction (California]. If ■the property can be reached at all, it -eau be reached, at least so far as it may be personal .property, by bhe assignee, who acts in this respect not by virtue of his authority as an •officer of -the court, but -because he has the title to the •bankrupt’s property, which has been transferred to him from •the bankrupt by operation of -law. (See '3 Parsons, Contr., Ch. IB, Section-3), and-so far as -the property may be real estate, if any further conveyance should be required, the •bankrupt must give it or he refused his discharge, in which case the creditors may proceed as they think best. In this particular case, it would seem that the assignee -might act to better advantage than the individual creditors, inasmuch as the several debts are so small that it could scarcely pay the creditors severally to .proceed in a foreign .jurisdiction. But whether for the advantage of the creditors or not, they cannot prevent the debtor from becoming a bankrupt, unless ■they can show either that he is solvent or that he is acting in a manner -which .the law deems wrongful. This they have .not .shown.
F. M. Hatch, for the creditors. A. F. Peterson, for the -bankrupt.The order appealed from revoking, on the petition of the ■creditors, the order adjudicating W. H. Aldrich a bankrupt •should, therefore, be reversed and the original order should •stand.