Ashby v. Steere

2 F. Cas. 15, 2 Woodb. & M. 347
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Rhode Island
DecidedNovember 15, 1846
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2 F. Cas. 15 (Ashby v. Steere) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ashby v. Steere, 2 F. Cas. 15, 2 Woodb. & M. 347 (circtdri 1846).

Opinion

WOODBURY, Circuit Justice..

A copy of the motion in this case for a new trial has not been brought to my attention tul the present term; nor has any argument been presented till now. The facts and the law, as they appeared at the trial, are not so fresh in my recollection, therefore, nor are they so full in my minutes as could be wished. The bankrupt law, under the provisions of which this dispute arises, having long since been dead, it is not of so much public importance how its leading enactments are to be construed. But these particular parties have their rights under it; and hence it is necessary to dispose of them in conformity to that law. Consequently I shall proceed to do It in a manner as true to its spirit and design as the time allowed for investigation will permit, and without longer and injurious delay.

Some of the difficulty here and in previous cases under the bankrupt act has arisen by not discriminating well between the different objects of different parts of the act, in regard to subject matters, as well as persons. Some clauses are severe if not penal against the bankrupt in certain events, but do not impair the rights of third persons, such as purchasers, unless they co-operated in his misconduct. Thus the objects of the first and second sections of the bankrupt law, under which the questions arise here, were threefold. One was to define, to some extent, what conduct of the bankrupt himself should constitute an act of bankruptcy, so as to justify his creditors to have him proceeded against under the law, and his property divided equally among them. The other was to define some of the misbehavior, which should prevent a trader, when becoming a bankrupt, from getting his discharge, and this as a penalty for such misbehavior. And another, and the only one material in the present case, was to declare what conveyances by a person becoming bankrupt should be void, or annulled as to third persons, no less than himself, so as to require, under the policy of the bankrupt law, that the property be restored to the general assets of the bankrupt, and to be apportioned equally among his creditors. Thus for instance, it may be an act of bankruptcy, so as to justify proceedings in bankruptcy against the debtor, if he secrete himself, or abscond, or make any fraudulent conveyance. And it may prevent him from getting a discharge, if he does that or makes any preferences among his creditors, considered by that act unlawful, or any material concealment of his estate.

But what, as a matter of public policy, [17]*17shall justify the avoidance of sales to third persons, or sales and payments to creditors, and after what length of time, or under what defects and misbehavior, such sales should he disturbed, or overturned, is entirely a different question, depends in part on the conduct of the creditor as well as the debtor, and in some degree rests on different principles and provisions in the law. No titles would be safe where a bankrupt system prevails, if, after one or two years, some of the parties to them should choose to go into bankruptcy, and those titles are all then to be destroyed, on account of some secret, unrecorded taint, though the purchaser acted bona fide, gave a full and valuable consideration, and had no notice of any prior act of bankruptcy, or intent of the vendor to go into bankruptcy. Hence the second section does not avoid any sales of that character, if made more than “two months before the petition filed against him or by him;” viz. the vendor and debtor.

, The present case exhibits a sale made more than a year previous, so that the only remaining considerations are, whether it was bona fide and without any “notice of a prior act of bankruptcy, or of the intention of the bankrupt to take the benefit of this act.” Now the jury have found that it was bona fide and for a valuable consideration; and there was, in truth, little controversy on that point at the trial. Next, there was no evidence except inferential, that the bankrupt then, at the sale, contemplated taking the benefit of the act, or-if he did, that his intention was known to the defendant. This last is the essential condition precedent for annulling the sale, and though the bankrupt was on the stand as a witness, and knew whether he then notified the defendant of such an intent, and whether he even entertained such an intent, yet the plaintiffs, whose business and duty it is to show the facts, which invalidate a sale, put no such questions to him, to draw out those decisive facts. He was asked if the defendant knew his embarrassments, and he replied, that the defendant probably suspected them, but that was all. And the bankrupt afterwards paid some other debts, and attempted a compromise with all his creditors.

In Gorham v. Stearns, 1 Metc. [Mass.] 366, an assignment was made to a creditor to pay him, in choses in action, only two days before he went into insolvency, and after goods had been attached. But when he conveyed them, he did not contemplate going into insolvency, and the transfer was held not to be void as to other creditors. That statute and the bankrupt act use similar language on this. The burden and duty lie on assignees, to show that the transfer was with a view to give a preference, and in contemplation of bankruptcy. Id. 367. It was admitted in the case in Metcalf, that the debtor was insolvent, which is the chief fact here, from which it is argued, that the creditor should have inferred he was looking to the insolvent system, and meant to violate its spirit. Id. 368. But almost the whole' facts here tended to rebut such an intent at that time, as the bankrupt law was not then in operation, and he did not apply for the benefit of it for more than a year afterwards; and sought in the mean time to effect a compromise with his creditors. So most of the circumstances here actually put in tended chiefly the other way, rather than to support this objection. Had the debtor then contemplated taking the benefit of the act, he would probably have applied for it in the February after, when the act went into effect. But he delayed it for more than a year; he delayed it, too, under suits and inconveniences, which would have probably hastened his application, had he intended in the December previous to have made one. The only other evidence at all relied on to justify a different conclusion, is the naked fact of the sale of most of his tangible property. But he retained some of that and a large amount of notes, and postponing, so long after, to go into bankruptcy, looks more like an original design not to do it at all; because, in that event, he would be obliged to surrender all his notes as well as other estate. The existence of such an intent being therefore doubtful, and not attempted to be proved by the best testimony, the bankrupt himself; and these remarks applying still more strongly to the evidence on the next point, the most important one, whether a notice was given to the defendant of such an intent; there is nothing left to avoid the sale, unless some prior act of bankruptcy-had occurred, of which Steere was apprised. But nothing of that kind is pretended. These being the facts and the law, was there any direct or incidental ruling by the court,, on any of these questions, which was erroneous?

It is said that the jury were instructed that a preference of one creditor over another, by a bankrupt, would not alone avoid, such a sale, and that in this there was a misdirection. I have no doubt that the bankrupt law intended to prevent a bankrupt from having his discharge, if, “in contemplation of bankruptcy,” he made a preference-of one creditor over another; yet I never supposed that either of these would alone be sufficient to avoid the sale.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In re Nathan
92 F. 590 (D. Nevada, 1899)
Fenlon v. Lonergan
29 Pa. 471 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1857)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 F. Cas. 15, 2 Woodb. & M. 347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ashby-v-steere-circtdri-1846.