Clinton v. Mayo

5 F. Cas. 1057, 12 Nat. Bank. Reg. 39
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedJuly 1, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 5 F. Cas. 1057 (Clinton v. Mayo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clinton v. Mayo, 5 F. Cas. 1057, 12 Nat. Bank. Reg. 39 (E.D. Va. 1875).

Opinion

HUGHES, District Judge.

Before the amendment of June, 1S74, there was substantially but one inquiry in adjudicating upon involuntary petitions in bankruptcy. It j was. whether an act, or acts, of bankruptcy ! had been committed. The trial of that fact might be by jury, if seasonably demanded by the debtor defendant The law in that respect remains as before. But the amendment of June, 1S74, superadds another inquiry. It gives jurisdiction in involuntary bankruptcy only in cases where a fourth in number and a third in value of the creditors unite in the petition. Accordingly, there are .substantially two charges in this petition: .First. That certain acts of bankruptcy have been committed'; and. second. That a fourth .in number and a third in interest of the creditors have united in the petition. The debt- or was called upon to answer these charges on the 2Dth day of March. He declined, though personally present on that day, to formally appear and defend. The court, therefore, had nothing to do as to the first •charge, but to take it for confessed that the nets of bankruptcy charged in the petition were committed, and treat that part of the petition as adjudicated. But the amendment of June, 1S74 [IS Stat ISO], now also requires that the court shall be “satisfied” that the number of creditors which has been stated shall have united in the petition; and provides that if the bankrupt deny the allegation of the petition in this respect, his denial shall be in writing; and he shall be required at once to file a schedule of all his creditors, and of the amounts due them. Then, if it appear to the court that the number having signed the petition is short of what is requisite, ten days are to be given the petitioners in which to add the proper number. I therefore inquired the debtor, Mayo, when called upon to testify as a witness, to put his denial in writing, under oath, and at once to file a list of his creditors and the amounts due them.

As to the point insisted upon by counsel, that the creditors who have received a confession of judgment giving them a preference, should not be heard to make the objection of insufficiency in the number of petitioning creditors; it is true that they are not yet regularly in court, and will not be until either they shall have proved their claim, or a bill in chancery shall have been filed to set aside their judgment; still, not only they, but any one may suggest at the return day of the order on the debtor to show cause, that the number of petitioners is not sufficient; and, either upon such suggestion, or ex mero motu, in order to be “satisfied” on that point, the court will call upon the debtor for a list of his creditors, and take any other evidence it can avail itself of on that subject. I accordingly did, at the suggestion of M. E. McDowell & Co., call upon Mayo for such a statement. The demand for a jury was not made by the debtor defendant, Mayo, on the retara day of the order on him to show cause. He was present on that day, though he did not enter a formal appearance. The return of the marshal on the order was that he had been served with a copy of it on the 20th of March. When such service has been made, and the debtor is present, the terms of section 5025 of the Revised Statutes do not authorize an “adjourned day” for the hearing of the petition; and, therefore, the terms of section 502G require that the demand in writing for a jury shall be made on the return day, and do not give that right on any other day. I therefore denied the demand for a jury in writing on the 30th, which the law expressly required to be made on the 2i)th of March.

The single question now left in this case is, whether the debt of twenty-four thousand seven hundred and sixty-three dollars, for which the confession of judgment given on the 23d day of January, 1S75, for the purpose of preferring M. E. McDowell & Co., is provable in whole, or for a moiety, and to be computed as to the whole or only as to half, in this preliminary proceeding. Before the amended bankrupt act of the 22d of June, 1S74. if the claim of a creditor were doubted by the judge or disputed, especially a claim for which a creditor had accepted a prefer-[1059]*1059enee, it -was postponed, and conld not be proved until after an assignee was appointed. 'There was then no provision in the bankrupt law requiring that any specific number of •creditors should join in a petition in involuntary bankruptcy; and no computation was necessary of the number of creditors, which could be affected by postponing the proof of the claim. Before the amendment of June 22, 1874, requiring a specific number of petitioning creditors to join in such a petition, there was no provision in the 39th section authorizing or requiring the court to pass upon the question, whether a preference had been given in fraud of the provisions of the bankrupt net, in adjudicating upon the petition in involuntary bankruptcy; because it was then unnecessary to give it that power. But when the amendment of June 22, 1874, was passed, an additional clause was added to the 39th section, immediately following the clauses requiring a specific number of creditors to join in the petition; which clause was, in fact, made necessary by that amendment That clause empowers the court at the time of ascertaining whether one-fourth in number and one-third in amount of creditors had joined in the petition, to decide, pro hac vice, whether the preferred creditor had had “reasonable cause to believe that the debtor was insolvent; and knew that a fraud upon the bankrupt act was intended.” I say it was necessary to add this clause to the 39th section, and to give this power to the court, at least for the purposes of adjudication. I do not pretend that the decision of this court on this question, in this preliminary stage of the proceeding, is final and conclusive as against the parties to the preference; but a decision is necessary, and is final, so far as the preference affects the jurisdiction of the court to adjudicate upon the petition. If the court did not have this power, all that it would be necessary for any creditor and a colluding insolvent to do to defeat the proceeding in bankruptcy, would be to arrange a confession of judgment for a sum so large as to exceed by double the aggregate claims of bona fide creditors. The validity of the confession of .judgment now under consideration being the ■only question left in this case, what are the facts in regard to it? The debtor defendant Mayo is made a witness and put upon the stand by M. E. McDowell & Co. He proves that M. B. McDowell, the senior partner, “was a whole week, till Friday, January 22, 1S74, examining Mayo's affairs, and that it .appeared upon the examination of his accounts, that his assets were less than his liabilities.” He proves that this appeared at the examination in his factory, when Mayo’s liability to McDowell & Co. was ascertained on that Friday, January 22, 1S75, to be less than sixteen thousand dollars. He proves that on the next day, McDowell & Co. took a confession of judgment from him for twenty-four thousand seven hundred and sixty-three dollars. He proves, also, that on the day of confessing the judgment for this larger amount, he asked McDowell & Co.’s counsel, in the presence of M. E. McDowell, whether this confession of judgment would be an act of bankruptcy, and that this counsel (who did not seem to know of the previous examination of his affairs by McDowell, which had disclosed to him Mayo’s insolvency), advised him to consult his own counsel; but stated that the amount for which the judgment was to be confessed was too large to allow of the remaining creditors taking steps in bankruptcy. Do these facts, proved by the witness whom McDowell & Co.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 F. Cas. 1057, 12 Nat. Bank. Reg. 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clinton-v-mayo-vaed-1875.