A court of equity will not lend its aid to enforce a sale of
property under execution where the disproportion between the value
of the property sold and the sum paid for it is so great as to
shock the conscience.
Where a debtor, having large and scattered properties and being
much embarrassed, transfers his property for the benefit of his
creditors equally, equity requires that any creditor who is not
satisfied with the provisions of such transfer should act promptly
in challenge thereof, or else be adjudged to have waived any right
of challenge.
When the highest courts of two states arrive at different
conclusions respecting the validity of an assignment by an
insolvent debtor of all his property for the benefit of creditors,
this Court is inclined in matters of doubt to give the preference
to the ruling of the court of the state in which the insolvent
resided, where the conveyance was executed, and where the bulls of
the property is situated.
S., a citizen of Rhode Island engaged in business there, with
large properties in that state and with property in Connecticut,
being embarrassed, made an assignment in 1873 of all his property
for the benefit of his creditors, which assignment, being assailed
in the courts of each state, was upheld by the Supreme Court of
Rhode Island as to the property there, and invalidated by the
Supreme Court of Connecticut as to the property there. Meanwhile,
in the execution of its provisions, large transactions took place
and extensive rights were created. In 1875 a creditor commenced
suit against S., and in 1882, attached in that action property of
the value of $500,000 which had belonged to S. before the
assignment, and having obtained execution, levied upon it and sold
it under execution for the sum of $275. The purchaser filed a bill
in equity to enforce the purchase.
Held:
(1) That the disproportion between the sum paid and the value of
the property purchased was too great to warrant a court of equity
in enforcing the purchase.
(2) That the long delay in attacking a transfer under which
great rights had been acquired by other creditors, justified a
court of equity in refusing to lend its aid to the attack.
(3) That if it were necessary (which it was not) to decide
whether the assignment was or was not valid beyond challenge, the
Court would incline to give preference in matter of doubt to the
ruling of the Supreme Court of Rhode Island, where S. resided when
the conveyance was executed and where the bulk of the property was
situated.
Page 135 U. S. 458
In equity. Decree dismissing the bill. The plaintiff appealed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE BREWER delivered the opinion of the Court.
On August 2, 1883, Evan Randolph, the testator of complainants,
filed his bill in equity in the Circuit Court of the United States
for the District of Rhode Island for the purpose of establishing
his title to 4,022 shares of the capital stock of the Quidnick
Company, claiming to have purchased these shares on execution sales
in March, 1883, for $275. The Quidnick Company was a corporation
organized under the laws of Rhode Island in May, 1862, with a
capital stock of $500,000, divided into 5,000 shares. Prior to
December 1, 1873, the corporation had purchased some of its own
stock, so that there was then outstanding only 4,349 shares, of
which 327 were held by the estate of Edward Hoyt, deceased, and the
remainder, being the 4,022 shares in controversy, by Amasa,
William, Fanny, and Mary Sprague, and the A. & W. Sprague
Manufacturing Company. At this time, the Spragues, who were largely
engaged in manufacturing and other business, became embarrassed and
executed the transfers hereinafter referred to, and which have
become the source of much litigation. Notwithstanding the
embarrassments of the Spragues, the Quidnick Company was entirely
solvent, out of debt, and the owner of large properties. Its stock
was valued by a committee of the creditors of the Spragues at that
time at $374 a share, and the dividends which, in the winter after
the filing of this bill, the stock was entitled to, as the proceeds
of the sale of property and otherwise, amounted to over half a
million of dollars. In other words, these complainants are asking
the
Page 135 U. S. 459
interposition of a court of equity to establish their title to
property worth over half a million of dollars obtained by purchase
at execution sales for $275. The immense disproportion between the
value and the cost shocks the conscience of a chancellor, and
forbids the supporting action of a court of equity. Some rights
must have suffered, and some wrong must have been done, by such a
transaction, and a court of equity properly says that it will not
lend its aid to further such an unconscionable speculation. The
case of
Mississippi & Missouri Railroad v. Cromwell,
91 U. S. 643,
forcibly illustrates this rule. In that case, Harrison recovered a
judgment in the Circuit Court of the United States for the District
of Iowa against Muscatine County for $6,500. Under an execution on
that judgment, the marshal assumed to levy on 1,714 shares of the
capital stock of the Mississippi and Missouri Railroad Company,
belonging to Muscatine County, and sold the same at public auction
to Cromwell for the sum of $50. The latter filed his bill against
the railroad company and the county to compel a transfer of this
stock. The case was presented to this Court in two aspects: by one,
the stock in the company was worthless, and in reference to that
the court observed:
"The property of the company was gone; its franchises were gone;
the amount which the stockholders had arranged to realize was gone,
and consequently the stock could have been nothing but an empty
name, and the attempt to keep it afloat for speculative purposes is
not such as should recommend it to a court of equity. The parties
to such a transaction ought at least to be left to their remedies
at law. A court of equity should have no sympathy with any such
contrivances to gain a contingent or speculative advantage, if any
such is to be gained."
By the other, it appeared that through certain arrangements
between this railroad company and another, there was a possibility
of realizing sixteen percent on the par value of the stock, which,
with interest to the time of the bringing of the suit, amounted to
over $32,000, and with reference to that the court said:
"He comes into court with a very bad grace when he asks to use
its extraordinary powers to put him in possession
Page 135 U. S. 460
of thirty thousand dollars' worth of stock for which he paid
only fifty dollars. The court is not bound to shut its eyes to the
evident character of the transaction. It will never lend its aid to
carry out an unconscionable bargain, but will leave the party to
his remedy at law."
No language could be more appropriate to the case before us.
Either this stock had been so appropriated by prior transfers and
transactions as to be absolutely worthless in the hands of the
Spragues or else it represented more than a half million of
dollars.
It is doubtless true that property of large value, both real and
personal, may be encumbered with mortgages or other liens to an
amount something like its value, so that there remains in the owner
but an equity of redemption of trifling value, and a creditor may
at execution sale, or otherwise, buy at a small price such equity,
with a view to redemption from the liens, and a court of equity
will then lend its aid to put him in a position where he may safely
redeem. But, as will appear from facts to be narrated subsequently,
this is not such a case. The purchase was purely speculative. If
the transfers theretofore made by the Spragues for the benefit of
their creditors are sustained, the purchaser takes nothing. If they
are not to be sustained, they fail
in toto, and the entire
value of the property belongs to this purchaser. So his purchase is
one simply to speculate upon the chances of successfully attacking
transfers of large property made for the benefit of creditors, and
with the view of depriving them of the benefits of such transfers.
It is a case where equity, true to its ideas of substantial
justice, refuses to be bound by the letter of legal procedure, or
to lend its aid to a mere speculative purchase which threatens
injury and ruin to a large body of honest creditors, who have
trusted for the payment of their debts to the legal validity of
proceedings theretofore taken.
Again, beyond the question of amount is the matter of time. The
transfers by the Spragues were in 1873. These execution purchases
were in 1883. The transfers in 1873 were not made hastily, upon the
judgment of the debtors alone, or without consultation with
creditors. On the contrary, all creditors were invited, committees
were appointed by them,
Page 135 U. S. 461
conferences had, and after weeks of examination and
deliberation, the substantial features of the arrangements were
agreed upon between the creditors and debtors. The interests
involved were immense. The committee of creditors appointed to
examine into the assets and liabilities reported the former at
$19,495,247, and the latter at $11,475,443. These assets were
various in character -- manufacturing stocks, real estate, stock in
banks and other corporations, bonds, etc. They were widely
scattered -- in Rhode Island, Maine, Connecticut, and other states
and territories. These various properties were placed in the hands
of a trustee to be managed and disposed of for the benefit of
creditors, and the provisions of the arrangements were accepted by
nearly all the creditors. By these arrangements it was provided
that the trustee might continue the manufacturing business, and, in
pursuance of the authority thus conferred, he did continue it, and
before August, 1881, the amount of manufacturing business done by
him was $29,802,286.10.
The executions under which the stock was purchased, as alleged,
were issued upon two judgments -- one in favor of Evan Randolph and
the other in favor of Horatio N. Waterman, each a creditor at the
time of the transfers in 1873. Randolph commenced his action in
October, 1875, as a personal action against the Spragues. After
service of summons, nothing seems to have been done until the 14th
of August, 1882 at which time an attachment was issued and an
attempted levy made upon the stock. Judgment was rendered March 7,
1883. Waterman commenced his action in October, 1882, and
immediately thereafter placed an attachment on the stock. It will
thus be perceived that these creditors made no attack upon the
validity of the transfers until 1882, nearly nine years after they
had been executed, when nearly all of the creditors had accepted
the provisions of the transfers, and the trustee, in consequence of
the duties imposed upon him by the transfers, had done nearly
$30,000,000 of manufacturing business, besides managing and
disposing of other properties transferred. The transfers
contemplated no preference between creditors, and were for the
benefit of all alike who
Page 135 U. S. 462
assented to its provisions. Indeed, if preferences had been
contemplated, the bankrupt law of the United States was then in
force, and might have been invoked to prevent any inequality
between creditors. In fact, in the spring of 1874, bankrupt
proceedings were commenced, but were withdrawn on the execution by
the Spragues of additional conveyances, deemed necessary to perfect
full title in the trustee. Under the circumstances, the long delay
is sufficient to justify a court of equity in refusing any
assistance to this attack upon the validity or sufficiency of the
transfers. True, Randolph and Waterman did not become parties to
the proceedings by which the property of the Spragues was placed in
the hands of the trustee, and therefore are not estopped by any
affirmative action in support thereof, but their inaction for such
a length of time equitably forbids their present attack. They knew
of the transfers at the time they were made; that they contemplated
equality between the creditors; that nearly all the creditors
assented thereto; that the trustee, relying thereon, was carrying
on a vast and extensive business; that the doors of the bankrupt
court were open, and that if they were dissatisfied with the
arrangements, they could invoke the aid of that court, whose
rulings and proceedings would assure absolute equality between all
creditors and the appropriation of all the property of the Spragues
for the equal benefit of such creditors. Yet they did nothing. They
waited until the bankrupt law was repealed, until the result of the
arrangements between the Spragues and their creditors, voluntarily
entered into, was fully developed, and then at the end of nine
years, attempt to place a legal levy on a part of the transferred
property, and say that the arrangements were illegal and wrong, and
now invoke the aid of a court of equity to give them, for a
trifling amount, a valuable portion of the property. If they were
not satisfied with the legality and equity of the proceedings, they
should have antagonized them sooner. Equity loves equality, and if
they did not believe that these proceedings were legal and
equitable, they should promptly have invoked the aid of the
bankrupt court or made other assertion of legal rights. They might
not equitably wait the outcome of the proceedings, expecting to
Page 135 U. S. 463
approve if they worked out full payment of all creditors, and
ready to attack if the scheme proved a failure. Good faith to other
creditors required that they act promptly. We do not rest this upon
any mere statute of limitations. Equity, administering its remedies
in accordance with its own rules, affirms that the best of rights
may be lost by unreasonable delay in their assertion, and when
coupled with long delay is a scheme for great personal gain at the
expense of equally deserving creditors, it refuses to lend its aid
to the accomplishment thereof.
But we need not rest upon these considerations alone. The
circuit court dismissed the bill on the ground that the Supreme
Court of the State of Rhode Island had decided that the first and
principal conveyance by the Spragues to their trustee was valid
under the state statute.
Austin v. Sprague Manufacturing
Co., 14 R.I. 464. This ruling it had followed in an earlier
case.
Moulton v. Chafee, 22 F. 26. Unquestionably, if that
conveyance, and the transfers immediately following, were valid,
the complainants' testator took nothing by his purchase.
It is unnecessary to place our judgment solely upon the decision
of the Supreme Court of Rhode Island in the case cited, and yet it
is worthy of most respectful consideration, both because it is a
decision of the highest court of the state in which the
transactions took place and also because it reviews all the
objections made to the conveyance with clearness and ability. As to
the construction of a state statute, we generally follow the
rulings of the highest court of the state,
Bacon v.
Northwestern Life Insurance Co., 131 U.
S. 258, and cases cited in opinion, and, as to other
matters, we lean toward an agreement of views with the state
courts,
Burgess v. Seligman, 107 U. S.
20,
107 U. S. 34. So
when the highest court of a state affirms that a conveyance made by
a debtor to a trustee for the benefit of creditors is valid under
the statutes of that state, we should ordinarily, in any case
involving the validity of such conveyance, follow that ruling, even
though that statute was common to many states, and in others a
different ruling had obtained.
Page 135 U. S. 464
Now in 1873, as heretofore stated, the Spragues became
embarrassed. All creditors were invited to a consultation. A
committee was appointed by them. Frequent consultations were had.
This committee reported the assets and liabilities, and a plan to
meet the emergency was devised and agreed upon. This contemplated a
conveyance by the Spragues to three trustees selected. The
creditors were to grant an extension, taking notes due in three
years, and the debtors were to convey to the trustees all their
property except shares of capital stock in corporations. These the
trustees were unwilling to accept, for fear of personal liability
consequent upon such acceptance, but a provision was inserted by
which these shares were to be transferred to the trustees, upon a
request by them, by way of pledge or collateral security. After all
this had been arranged, and the conveyance signed and executed, the
trustees named, before delivery of the instrument, declined to act,
and Zechariah Chafee was, without consultation with the creditors,
named as trustee, and the instrument delivered. The committee
representing the creditors, however, subsequently approved his
selection. Chafee assumed the trust, and thereafter extension notes
were issued to the various creditors and accepted by 449, these
being all except the holders of about $114,000 of direct
indebtedness. A question is made here as to whether this conveyance
was reexecuted by the grantors after the substitution of Chafee as
trustee in place of the three selected by the creditors. Upon this
question the testimony is contradictory. The disinterested
testimony, and therefore the most reliable, is in favor of the
reexecution, and this testimony is strongly supported by the issue
and acceptance of the notes and by the fact that many years passed
without challenge by debtor or creditor of the validity of the
conveyance or the rights and powers of the trustee. If the case
turned upon this question of fact, we should have little hesitation
in finding that there was a due reexecution of the conveyance. A
due execution being established, another question is as to the
validity of the conveyance under the statute of frauds. Here we
turn to the decision of the Supreme Court of Rhode Island, cited
supra, and that
Page 135 U. S. 465
decision is very persuasive. It would be unfortunate, to say the
least, to have this conveyance sustained as to home creditors and
avoided as to foreign. So that, if this case stood alone upon the
question of the validity of that conveyance under the laws of the
State of Rhode Island, we should be reluctant to depart from the
rulings of the Supreme Court of that state, and should do so only
upon a clear conviction that the decision of that court was wrong,
and that thereby the rights of foreign creditors were sacrificed.
While this conveyance has received a different construction, and
its invalidity been declared, by the Supreme Court of the State of
Connecticut,
De Wolf v. Sprague Manufacturing Company, 49
Conn. 282, so that it must be conceded that its validity is a
matter of doubt, yet preference should be given, in matter of
doubt, to the ruling of the supreme court of the state in which the
parties resided, where the conveyance was executed, and in which
was the bulk of the property. We do not feel called upon to decide
as a question of absolute law whether the conveyance was or was not
valid and beyond challenge. It is enough for the purposes of this
case that it was with the general acquiescence of the creditors;
that its purpose was equality between them; that it was not
challenged for many years; that the trustee, on the faith of its
validity, carried on business to an enormous extent, and assumed
large liabilities, and that the creditors accepted payments made
out of the proceeds of that business, and the trust created by this
conveyance. Equity will not reach out its hand to disturb that
which all parties have considered settled for so many years.
Another matter requires notice. The conveyance excepted shares
of stock belonging to the grantors, but gave to the trustee a right
to insist upon the transfer thereof by way of pledge and collateral
security. This exception was introduced into the instrument for
fear that the trustees, by accepting the stock, would assume
personal liability for the debts of the various corporations.
Immediately after accepting this trust, the trustee demanded a
transfer of the stock in the Quidnick Company, and on December 2,
1873, the various grantors in this conveyance transferred on the
stock transfer book of the
Page 135 U. S. 466
Quidnick Company, to the trustee, their shares of stock. These
transfers, as expressed, were "by way of pledge and collateral
security to secure the performance of the conditions of the trust
mortgage." Some question is made as to the meaning of these
transfers, but obviously they were all collateral security for the
payment of the debts of the transferors, as provided for in the
trust deed. Such was the conclusion reached by the Supreme Court of
Rhode Island in the case cited, for they say: "With reference to
the stock in question, it was transferred to be applied to
creditors, according to the terms of the mortgage." So that we have
the validity of the original conveyance by the Spragues, and the
immediately subsequent transfers of the stock in question, affirmed
by the supreme court of the state in which the grantors and
transferors resided, and where the corporation was situate whose
stock was thus transferred. This affirmance of the legal validity
stands behind, and gives large support to, the views which we have
hitherto expressed. The law as declared by that court harmonizes
with and endorses the equitable considerations which in this case
impress us.
We deem it unnecessary to proceed further or to consider the
effect of the equitable suit instituted by the trustee in the state
courts prior to these attachments and the possession taken by those
courts of the property of the Quidnick corporations, or the sales
of that property in pursuance of proceedings had therein. Indeed,
we have referred to all these proceedings in the state courts as in
support of the equitable considerations upon which we affirm the
ruling of the circuit court. In conclusion, it may be said that
generally where a debtor, having large and scattered properties and
being much embarrassed, transfers his property for the benefit to
his creditors equally, equity requires that any creditor who is not
satisfied with the provisions of such transfer shall act promptly
in challenge thereof, or else be adjudged to have waived any right
of challenge.
The decree of the circuit court is
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE BLATCHFORD did not take any part in the decision of
this case.