Owing to the practical importance and widely extended application of the principles involved in this and two other records returned to the sainé term of this court, to the mercantile and commercial affairs of the community, We have postponed their determination, that we might have
1. The first section of the act of the general assembly, .approved September 28, 1SS1, requires that, in voluntary assignments by insolvent debtors for the benefit of creditors, the assignor shall, in all cases, prepare and attach to the deed, or instrument by which the assignment is made, “ a full and complete inventory and schedule of all the assets of every kind, held, claimed or owned by such insolvent person, firm or corporation at the time of the execution of such deed, or other instrument of assignment, which inventory or schedule shall be sworn to by the person making the assignment, and in case of assignments by firms, the oath may be made by any member of such firm, or in cases of assignments by corporations, by the chief officer of the corporation;” and it is thereby further enacted (§2) that the affidavit therein previously provided for may be made before the officer in whose presence the deed of assignment is executed, and that the person or persons making such affidavit shall, upon indictment and conviction for filing a false, deceptive or incomplete schedule of assets, be liable, to the pains and penalties prescribed by law for persons convicted of perjury, and that no deed or other instrument of assignment by insolvent persons, firms or corporations shall be valid, unless accompanied by the sworn schedule required by the first section of the act. Acts 1880 and 1881, p. 174; Code, Add., p. x., §1.953 (d), (e).
In addition to the protection afforded to creditors against partial assignments by insolvent debtors, and to prevent them from suppressing or misrepresenting the extent and character of their liabilities,, the legislature, by an act approved the 17th of October, 1885 (Acts, p. 100), declared, §1, that, “ in all cases of voluntary, assignments,” made after the passage of the act, “ by failing or insolvent debtors for the benefit of creditors, it shall be the duty of the person, firm or corporation making such assignment to
We.have held that the act of 1881 is a remedial statute,
2. For the first time, we are asked to lay down a rule as to what may be safely omitted from such schedules, either by oversight or inadvertence, and without any intention to do so on the part of the assignor, or purpose to mislead creditors by filing a false, deceptive or incomplete schedule.
From the very nature of the subject, it is impracticable, if not impossible, to lay down any rule upon that subject. Generally speaking, the requirements of the law and the conditions it prescribes should be closely followed; at least an honest effort should be made to carry it fully into effect according to its purport and intent. While the omission of some slight and unimportant article of little or no value from the schedule of effects, or some one or more creditors
3. We cannot agree with the ingenious view, so urgently pressed and plausibly maintained by the eminent and able counsel for the defendants, that unless these omissions of assets and creditors were intentional, and designed for the purpose of making the schedules false, deceptive or incomplete, they would not avoid the assignment. It is true that such design, purpose or intention is a pre-requisite, by the act of 1881, to‘the indictment-of the person or persons making the affidavit to the schedule of assets, in order to subject him or them, oh conviction, to the pams and penalties of perjury. Usually in proceedings against a person for violating a criminal or public law, it is essential, in order to sustain the indictment, to prove both the act .and guilty intent of the- accused; for a crime or misdemeanor consists in a willful violation of the public law. in which there'must be a union or joint operation of act and intention, or criminal negligence. This is the rule for determining the affiant’s liability on a criminal prosecution. Not so, however, where the question in issue'is the validity of the assignment.- This criminal-clause is not in the act of 1885, which provides for the schedule of creditors, but both acts declare, in unmistakable language, that, unless these schedules are “full” and “complete,” the assignment shall not be valid. No provision is made by either of them for perfecting a schedule which is not ‘Tull” or “complete," and by that means upholding the assignment.
That this course has been pursued in some of our sister states, notably in New. York, Indiana, and perhaps others, under their peculiar statutes, we are well aware. In those states insufficient assignments may be completed at'the instance of the assignor, of the assignee, or the court to which , they, are returned, and in some of them on the application of
.4. The general clause in the assignment, conveying to the assignee such property of the .assignor as was left out of the schedule of assets, so far from sustaining the position of counsel for which it was invoked, is rather adverse to it; at all events, it contravenes the policy of the legislature in enacting the laws in question, as was clearly indicated by this court in its judgment rendered in the case of Crittenden Bros, et al. vs. Coleman <& Co., tit supra. The law looks with distrust upon such’ sweeping clauses in deeds, especially where particularity of detail is requiréd. Ever since Twyne’s case, it has been, if not a recognized axiom, at least a well-settled principle thatfraud lurks in generalities.”
5. In concluding what we have to say on the law of this case, it may be well to remind the profession and the commercial community that, while preferences in assignments are allowed, they are tolerated rather than encouraged, as is manifest from the drift of our legislation from 1881 down to the present day. The principle here announced is emphasized by the acts above cited, and this provision of the act of 1885, to-wit, “ No assignment shall be set aside, except upon a direct proceeding filed for the purpose, and no creditor of the assignor shall obtain any priority or preference of payment out of the assets assigned on any judgment rendered after the filing of the bill, in case the deed of assignment is set aside and decreed to be void.” The
Each of the positions taken in this case will be amply sustained by the authorities cited in the able and exhaustive briefs of counsel, found at the end of the reporter’s statement. As there must be a reversal of the decretal order excepted to in this case, it is certainly unnecessary, and might be improper, to pass upon the other questions made, at least so far as they affect the rights of contesting creditors to the property assigned, and the equities which may exist between themselves and others. The deed of assignment must be set aside for the reasons already given; and that the fund may be preserved for future adjudication and distribution among those who shall appear entitled to it on the final hearing of the bill, the injunction must be ordered and the receiver appointed, as prayed, and upon such other terms as may appear equitable and in accordance with law.
Judgment reversed.