Claflin v. Beach

Dewey, J.

By the provisions of St. 1838, c. 163, § 18, his court has a general superintendence and jurisdiction, as a court of chancery, of all cases arising under that statute, and the power is conferred on it, upon the filing of a bill, petition, or other proper process, by any party aggrieved by any proceedings under the statute, to hear and determine the same, and to make such order or decree therein as law and justice shall require.

The petitioners, as creditors of Roswell Canfield, and claiming to have acquired a lien upon his estate by attachment on mesne process, now ask the court to set aside and stay all further proceedings in a matter arising under § 19 of the aforesaid statute, and by" virtue of which a warrant has been issued by a master in chancery, directing a messenger to take possession of said Canfield’s estate, and such further proceedings'have been had, that assignees of his estate have been appointed, and the estate is in progress of settlement and distribution, as an insolvent estate.

The objection, taken to the validity of the proceedings before the master in chancery, is a want of jurisdiction. This want of jurisdiction is supposed to be shown by the facts appearing in the case slated by the parties ; to wit, that said Canfield, prior to the institution of the proceedings before the master, had left the Commonwealth, abandoning his domicil here, and taking with him his family and all his estate, except that which was attached by the petitioners. The authority to take such jurisdiction over the property of a debtor, operating to dispossess *395him of all control over his estate, as well as to dissolve all liens of creditors by attachment of his estate, must be supported by some clear statute enactment, before we can give effect to it. It is contended that sufficient authority therefor is found in St. 1838, c. 163, § 19 ; and it is conceded that if the proceedings were unauthorized by this statute, they have no legal validity.

We cannot adopt the construction contended for by the re- • spondents, merely because we may suppose the legislature would have thus provided, if the precise case now before the court had been presented distinctly to their consideration. Our adjudication must necessarily be made with reference to the provisions of law, as they now exist; and if these shall not be found adequate to secure the general purposes of the statute, it will be for ihe legislature to supply, by further enactments, any defect which may be found in the existing laws upon this subject.

The question is, whether the provisions of § 19 of St. 1838, c. 163, can be enforced against any other person than an actual resident within the Commonwealth at the time of the making of the application to the master in chancery. Section 1st, which authorizes proceedings in insolvency upon the voluntary application of the insolvent, expressly limits the application to cases of debtors residing in this Commonwealth.” The 19th section, which authorizes proceedings against an insolvent debtor, upon the application of a creditor, although using more general words in the introductory part of the section, yet taken together is equally restrictive, as it provides that the proceedings shall be instituted by an application of a creditor “ to the judge of probate, or to any master in chancery, for the county in which the said debtor resides.” All the subsequent proceedings and acts to be done on the part of the debtor, and the power of the master in chancery to require his attendance, and to compel a dis closure, with the further power of commitment, upon the debt- or’s refusal to" appear before him, clearly indicate that in all cases arising under the statute, the debtor is supposed to be within the Commonwealth, and amenable to its process.

The position assumed by the respondents is, that after an attachment of property, the debtor cannot, by a removal from *396the Commonwealth, avoid the effect of the statute, if a proper case arises for its future application by reason of his neglecting to dissolve an attachment of his estate, made while he was a resident. It is said that a different rule of construction would enable the debtor, by means of such removal, to secure preferences to the attaching creditors, and thus virtually to defeat the objects of the statute. It may be so ; but this would not authoi ize us to extend the provisions of the statute beyond the cases fairly embraced within it.

It is also urged, that the statute contemplates two distinct objects, viz. the distribution of the estate of the insolvent debt- or, and his discharge ; and that although the latter may not be effected by means of such proceedings against a non-resident, who fails to comply with the various requisitions of the statute on his part, yet it may well have its full force and effect in effectuating a pro rata distribution of his property which remains here among his creditors. It is undoubtedly true that cases may occur, where the latter object may be accomplished, although the debtor has removed without our jurisdiction. Such would be the effect of a removal of the debtor out of the Commonwealth, after the actual filing of a petition and the institution of proceedings under the statute, accompanied with a neglect of the debtor to attend the meetings of the creditors, when ordered so to do, or his omission to perform any other acts legally required of him. We by no means suppose that such removal, under the circumstances last stated, would oust the master in chancery of his jurisdiction, or prevent the distribution of the debtor’s effects among his creditors. In the case last supposed, the jurisdiction would have attached while the debtor resided in the Commonwealth. But in a case like that now before the court, the object of compulsory proceedings in insolvency in a great measure fails. The jurisdiction, at most, extends only to the property held under the attachment of the creditors, who are the complainants before us. The debtor had removed, carrying with him all his other property, which might embrace a large proportion of his estate ; so that instead of a distribution of the whole of his property, as in the case of a resident debtor, the distribution will be only of his attached property.

*397Upon a careful consideration of the provisions of the statute on this subject, we do not think that its language will bear a construction which will include the cases of persons resident here at the time an attachment of their property is made, but who have changed their domicil, removing to another State, taking with them all their property not under attachment, before the entry of the action in which such attachment was made. It is not the attachment-of the goods and estate of a defendant in an action, that subjects him to this proceeding in insolvency; but it is his not dissolving the attachment on or before the last day of the term of the court to which the process is returnable, which authorizes an application by his creditors for this compulsory proceeding. When such event has occurred, his creditors may apply to a “ master in chancery for the county in which the said debtor resides.” But in the case before us, the debtor did not reside in the county of Berkshire, at the time of making the application to the master in chancery. The master in chancery, therefore, had no jurisdiction of the case, and the proceedings before him were unauthorized, and cannot have the effect tc discharge the lien acquired by the petitioners under their attach ment.

The court will therefore order that all further proceedings before the master in chancery be stayed, and that the assignees be enjoined from interfering with the property attached by tht petitioners.