Bay State Iron Co. v. Goodall

Bell, C. J.

It was formerly held to be within the jurisdiction of the court of chancery in England to entertain a bill for discovery in aid of an execution at law. The authorities which support this position are found collected in Bayard v. Hoffman, 4 Johns. Ch. 453; Brinkerhoff v. Brown, 4 Johns. Ch. 677; Hadden v. Spador, 20 Johns. 562. Since these decisions the law has been considered settled in this country in favor of this equitable jurisdiction, though the current of authority in England, since 1790, is said to be adverse to this proceeding*. Gordon v. Lowell, 21 Me. 251; Bigelow v. Society, 11 Vt. 283; Waterman v. Cochran, 12 Vt. 699; and see numerous cases collected in 1 U. S. Eq. Dig., Debtor and Creditor, III.

In the ease of Tappan v. Evans, 11 N. H. 311, the subject was ably considered by Chief Justice Barker, and the question must be considered as settled here. “ The general principle deducible from the authorities,” says the learned chief justice, “ is, that where property is subject to execution, and a creditor seeks to have a fraudulent conveyance or obstruction to a levy or sale removed, he may file a bill as soon as he has obtained a specific lien on the property, whether the lien be obtained by attachment, judgment, or the issuing of an execution. But if the property is not subject to levy or sale, or if the creditor has obtained no lien, he must show his remedy at law exhausted by an actual return upon his execution, that no goods or estate can be found (which is pursuing his remedy at law to every available extent), before he can file a bill to reach the equitable property.”

*229The remedy in equity in the first of these classes of cases is distinctly recognized in Dodge v. Griswold, 8 N. H. 425, as well as the principle that relief .will be afforded only where a specific lien has been obtained; and in Stone v. Anderson, 26 N. H. 506, where it is held that an attachment alone is a sufficient lien.

Where the property has not been levied on by execution, or where it is of such a nature that it could not be levied upon, or reached by an execution at law, the return of the execution unsatisfied will not, of itself, give the creditor a specific lien upon the trust property or choses in action of the debtor. He must follow up his execution by the commencement of a suit in equity, or do some decisive act showing an intention to pursue the fund, to gain a specific lien. Ward v. Pierce, 7 Cow. 728; Tappan v. Evans, 11 N. H. 328.

In this proceeding the complainant is entitled to a discovery of all the real estate on which he had acquired a lien by his proceedings at law, and of the nature and character of the incumbrances upon it, and of the conveyances of it; that, if fraudulent, they may be removed by a decree, and the plaintiff may be enabled to reach it by an execution at law. He is also entitled to a discovery of all the property, both real and personal, now owned by the defendant, wherever it may be situated; that if within the State it may be reached by an execution, and if elsewhere, or if such that it cannot be taken on execution, as trust funds, choses in action, stocks, &c., the defendant may be compelled, by an order of the court, to transfer the property by a proper conveyance to a receiver, to be sold and applied to the payment of the complainant’s deht. He has a right to a full discovery from the defendant of every trust created for his benefit, that the court may see whether it is one on which his creditors have any equitable claim for the satisfaction of their debts. Leroy v. Rogers, 3 Paige 234.

*230If it was possible to entertain a doubt of the authority of the court, as a court of equity, under its broad general powers, in all cases of fraud and trust, to require a full discovery of all a man’s estate, legal and equitable, and to make all proper decrees to subject the same to the execution of his creditors, that doubt is effectually removed by the statute of July 2,1845; Laws of 1845, ch. 234 ; Compiled Statutes 436. It enacts that, “ whenever an execution against the property of a defendant shall have been issued on a judgment at law, and shall have been returned unsatisfied, in whole or in part, the party suing out such execution may file a bill in the Superior Court of Judicature, against such defendant and any other person, to compel the discovery of any property or thing in action belonging to the defendant, or any property, money or thing in action due to him, or held in trust for him, and to prevent the transfer of any such property, money or thing in action, or the payment or delivery thereof to the defendant; except when such trust has been created by, or the fund so held in trust has proceeded from some person other than the defendant himself. The court shall have power to compel such discovery, and to prevent such transfer, payment or delivery, and to decree satisfaction of the sum remaining due on such judgment out of any property, money, or things in action belonging to the defendant, or held in trust for him, with the exception before stated, and of property specially exempted from attachment and execution, which shall be discovered by the proceedings in chancery, whether the same were originally liable to be taken in execution at law or not.”

We are unable to perceive that this statute enlarges in any way the remedies of parties, or the powers of the court as they existed before, upon the well defined principles of equity jurisdiction ; but the existence of such a statute removes all doubt upon two of the causes of demurrer to the relief asked by the bill: namely, because *231no equity is shown in the-bill such as to entitle the plaintiff to relief, and because the subject is not within the jurisdiction of a court of equity.

On the first reading of the bill we were inclined to doubt whether a bill so general, inquiring as to all a man’s property, both at the present time and at the time the judgment was recovered, and as to all his dealings and transactions with it since the judgment, could be sustained. It seemed as if the attention of the court should be drawn to some specific property, or interest, as to which some fraud, or trust,, or liability to the payment of the plaintiff’s debt, should be specially alleged. And such seems to be the more usual form of bills of this kind, so far as we have been able to gather the form of the bill from the cases reported. In many of these cases it would seem that in addition to the special averments as to the particular property, there are general averments that the defendant has estate, real and personal, choses in action, &c. Leroy v. Rogers, before cited; Edmiston v. Lyde, 1 Paige 637; Clarkson v. Depeyster, 3 Paige 320.

Our doubts on this point have been removed by the decision of the court in Leroy v. Rogers, before cited, where a demurrer to so much of a bill, charging in general terms the possession of real and personal estate, money, bank stock, insurance stock, and choses in action, though accompanied by special allegations as to certain property, as related to the discovery of any or all of the property and effects which the defendant had at the time of making the covenant on which the plaintiff’s action was founded, was overruled on the ground that a decision sustaining it would operate to exonerate the defendant from discovering any of that property which he still held, or others held in trust for him ; and the court held, as before stated, that the plaintiff’ was entitled to a discovery of all property held in trust for him, of all real estate and personal property subject to execution, or which could be reached by an order of court.

*232In Bilghtley’s Eq. Jur. 392, in discussing bills of this class, it is laid down that the bill should set forth that there is reason to believe that the defendant has real and personal estate, wherewith the judgment may be satisfied ; that such real estate has been conveyed, transferred, or incumbered, and said personal estate has been removed, transferred, or concealed, &c. At page 678 a form of a hill of this kind is given, where the allegations are as' broad as in the present bill; that the defendant has real and personal estate wherewith the said judgment may be satisfied ; that such real estate has been fraudulently conveyed and transferred, and such personal property has been removed, transferred and concealed, with intent to prevent the same being made liable for his debts.

Two cases are cited in the IJ. S. Eq. Dig., Dr. and Cr., DX, to the point that a judgment creditor may demand from his debtor a disclosure of his assets and of the names of his debtors, in general terms. Myers v. Turnpike Co., 11 Ohio 273: Cadwallader v. Granville Soc., 11 Ohio 292.

A form of creditor’s bill, as general as that in this case, was commonly used in New-York before the new code of practice. As we find no decision prescribing any limitation to the form of the inquiries, as the statute is in terms very general, and the case must be frequent where none other than general inquiries can be made, we are satisfied there is no just foundation for this objection.

The other grounds of demurrer to the relief sought are, first, the want of jurisdiction of the court in the second judicial district, the defendant residing in the fifth.

"We have no statute prescribing the county in which equitable proceedings shall be commenced. The jurisdiction in such cases is given to the Supreme Judicial Court, without reference to the county or district in which it may be sitting. By analogy to the course in actions at law, we may properly hold that bills in equity should be filed in *233tbe county where one of the parties resides, if both reside within the State ; but if the plaintiff does not reside in the State, the bill may be brought in any county, at his election. The plaintiff here being a corporation organized under the laws of Massachusetts, and having its place of business in Boston, cannot be regarded as residing here.

The second ground of demurrer is, because the bill is filed against the defendant alone. This objection is founded on the language of the statute of July, 1845 — “ may file a bill against the defendant, and any other person, to compel a discovery,” &c. The argument is, that as the statute speaks of the defendant and any other person, the bill must be brought against two persons at least, and cannot be maintained against the debtor alone.

This bill, though authoi’ized by statute, is founded on established principles of equity, and by the general rules governing equity proceedings it might be filed against the defendant in the execution alone, or against him and others. It can hardly be assumed that the legislature could have intended to narrow the jurisdiction of the court by merely affirmative words. If not, the bill would still be well sustained under the general equity powers of the court. The statute is very briefly expressed, and must be construed with reference to its object, rather than according to its strict grammatical construction. In terms, th.e statute authorizes the filing of a bill against such defendant and any other person, to compel, &c. This is not to be understood literally. It is not meant that such a bill may be filed against any one. It must be construed, any other person legally liable, and thus understood it will be seen that it is incapable of the restrictive meaning claimed for it. “ May file a bill against the defendant and any other person legally liable,” does not in the least imply that it may not be brought against the defendant alone. It would be consistent, too, with the received *234principles of interpretation, that and should be construed or as well as and, and thus to authorize a proceeding against both, or either of the parties, as the case might require; especially as there must be many cases within the apparent scope and design of the statute, which would otherwise be excluded from its operation. Such would be all that class of cases where the defendant might have money, dioses in action, &c., in his own hands, with which no other person had interfered.

In the plaintiff’s argument it is insisted that whenever a demurrer is put in for want of proper parties, it must show who are the proper parties, from the facts stated in the bill; not indeed by name, for that might be impossible, but in such a manner as to point out to the plaintiff the objection to his bill, and to enable him to amend by making proper parties. So is the rule laid down in Story’s Eq. Pl., sec. 503; Dan. Ch. Pr. 619, note; Dias v. Blanchard, 10 Paige 454; Robinson v. Smith, 3 Paige 230.

Where it is not apparent from the bill itself that necessary parties are omitted, it can be taken advantage of only by a plea or answer, showing who are the necessary parties. 3 Paige 230 ; 2 Paige 280. It is hei’e apparent that though it may be held that other parties are required, yet nothing can be learned from the bill of the names of suck parties, or of any description by whick the plaintiff may correct his bill.

The case, too, falls within an exception stated in Mitford’s Pleading 146, and which is recommended by its good sense. “ If the bill seeks a discovery of the parties interested, a demurrer for want of necessary parties will not hold.” 1 Dan. Ch. Pr. 619.

The third and fourth causes of demurrer have been fully discussed.

The fifth cause is that the execution on the judgment has not been delivered to any sheriff in this judicial district. The language of the statute is, “whenever an execution *235shall have been issued, &c., and shall have been returned unsatisfied, in whole or in part.” There is nothing defining the county into which the execution must have issued ; and if we resold; to the decisions founded on the general principles of equity, Ave shall find they go no further than to require that the execution should have issued into the county in which the defendant resides. Child v. Brace, 4 Paige 309; Thayer v. Smith, Harring. Ch. 439. The execution in this case was issued into the county of Grafton, in which the defendant resided, and no suggestion is made that there was any thing fraudulent or collusive in the return.

The demurrer to the discovery sought by the bill rests on the ground that the answer to the parts of the bill covered by the demurrer might subject the defendant to criminal accusations, and to pains and penalties. This ground of demurrer is set up separately to two classes of inquiries. First, to the parts of the bill which seek a discovery as to the nature and amount of the property which the defendant has, either legal or equitable, how it is situated, how incumbered, its value, and the like.

We are aware of no law by which the owner of property is subjected to any penalties, whatever may be its nature, situation, description, or character; and the same is true as to his debts and dioses in action, and property held in trust for him. We can hardly imagine any pertinent and proper answer to any one of this class of inquiries, by which a party could be exposed to any penalty, and the demurrer, as to these, cannot be sustained.

The second class of inquiries to which this ground of demurrer applies, relates to the disposition of the property which the defendant had at the commencement of the plaintiff’s action at law and since; what conveyances he has since made; how and when they were made, andón what considerations, and what transfers and arrangements of his property he has made, &c.

*236It is not alleged, or suggested in the bill, that any of these conveyances have heen so made as to subject the party to a criminal prosecution, or forfeiture. On the face of the bill nothing of that kind appears, and the court, upon a demurrer, cannot assume that any other facts exist than those alleged. The object of the demurrer is to obtain a decision, whether, upon the facts as they are stated, the plaintiff shows a good cause of action ; and the demurrer will not be sustained unless it appears clearly that the bill must be dismissed upon a hearing. Now it is evident that all the interrogatories may be answered by the defendant, if his dealings with his property have been correct, without raising any questions in the criminal law. He may have had a great estate, legal and equitable, real and personal, in possession and in action, and he may now be wholly destitute, or have conveyed away the whole of it. It may all have been applied to the payment of debts, or lost by fire, or casualty, or speculation; or it may have been fairly and honorably disposed of otherwise, and be now existing in other and perhaps more eligible forms, without the least imputation of illegality or dishonesty. The court cannot presume that all a man’s dealings with his estate have been illegal, and such as the law will punish, even if he suggests it himself.

So far as the demurrer is to be regarded as setting up and alleging that the defendant’s transactions with his property have been all or any of them illegal, and punishable, it is a speaking demurrer, which, for that reason, cannot be sustained. Dan. Ch. Pr. 656, and notes.

But if it were true, that the answers to some of the inquiries in either of these classes must be such as to subject the defendant to penalties, the demurrer cannot be sustained, if it appears that any inquiries, material to the case, may be answered without such hazard, because it is a familiar principle that a demurrer cannot be good as to a part of what it covers, and bad as to the rest. Dan. Ch. Pr. 651, notes.

*237As to this question, the case of Burns v. Hobbs, 29 Me. 273, is much in point. It was a bill for discovery, and to set aside a mortgage alleged to be fraudulent, against a levy of the plaintiff. It was held that the defendant could not, by demurrer, avoid answering and discovering the date of the execution of his mortgage, and whether- he claimed to hold the premises by virtue of it, or from discovering and producing the note, if within his power, or from stating when, where, in whose presence, and for what such note was given, &c. All this, it is said, may serve to enable the court to come at and adjust the rights of the parties, and it may all be consistent with the plaintiffs’ claim under the mortgage. We cannot presume that an answer to such portions of the bill as call for this discovery, will impeach or impair the defendant’s title. See Leroy v. Rogers, before cited.

We should hesitate in arriving at this result — that the demurrer must be overruled — if we did not regard the rule as well settled, that where the defendant cannot, make a discovery of the facts upon which relief is asked, without subjecting himself to a criminal prosecution or forfeiture, he may, in his answer, insist that he is not bound to make any discovery that may subject him to a forfeiture; this being an exception to the general rule, that the defendant cannot by answer object to answer as to any particular matter of which a discovery is sought in the bill. Lube’s Eq. Pl. 324; Welsby’s Eq. Pl. 359; 4 Johns. Ch. 432; Livingston v. Harris, 3 Paige 537.

Demurrer overruled.