Commercial Bank of Manchester v. Buckner

61 U.S. 108, 15 L. Ed. 862, 20 How. 108, 1857 U.S. LEXIS 435
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 15, 1858
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 61 U.S. 108 (Commercial Bank of Manchester v. Buckner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commercial Bank of Manchester v. Buckner, 61 U.S. 108, 15 L. Ed. 862, 20 How. 108, 1857 U.S. LEXIS 435 (1858).

Opinion

Mr. Justice WAYNE

delivered the opinion of the court.

The decision which we are about to give would not be satisfactory, unless it'shall be preceded by a statement of the facts of the case as they are disclosed by the pleadings. We shall adopt that which was given-by the counsel who argued the cause, with but little alteration or addition.

The appellants allege, in their bill, that during the years 1841 and 1842, the defendant, Henry S. Buckner, together with M. B. Hamer, who died in April, 1842, and Frederick Stanton, were partners in trade, doing commercial business in New Orleans, under the firm of Buckner, Stanton, & Co., Buckner being the resident partner there; and in Natchez under the firm of Stanton, Buckner, & Co., Stanton conducting it; and at Yazoo city under the firm of M. B. Hamer & Co., Hamer being the resident partner at that place. The three firms were distinct and separate, and kept their books and accounts accordingly. It is alleged that the three firms and the three members of them became hopelessly insolvent in the year 1841, and that they continued to transact business together until Hamer’s death; that after his death the two survivors carried on the business of the three firms until their bankruptcy. On the 21st July, 1842, Stanton filed his petition in the United States District Court for the southern district of Mississippi, both individually and as a member of the three firms, was decreed a bankrupt on the 8th November, 1842, and received his certificate of discharge on the 21st February, 1843. On the 18th July, 1842, Buckner made a similar application to the District Court in New Orleans, was decreed a bankrupt on the 5th September, 1842, and received his certificate of discharge on the 5th December, 1842. It is also said that their applications for their discharges in bankruptcy were made by Buckner and Stanton in concert, with a view to future business.

It appears at the time of these applications they were indebted *114 to the appellants in the sum of $49,020.14, besides interest, on twelve promissory notes and on one bill of exchange, all which had become due in January, 1842. Three of them were payable on or before the 6th January, 1839; three others on the 3d April, 1889;' four on or before the 3d March, 1841; and the last in the month of January, 1842, six months before Buckner filed his petition in bankruptcy. Buckner acknowledged the indebtment in his schedule filed with his petition in bankruptcy. The complainants proved a portion of their claim in the bankruptcy proceedings of Stanton. It is admitted that they received a small dividend from the assets of the firm; but they aver they did so in ignorance of the frauds upon the bankrupt law, committed by Buckner and Stanton, of which they knew nothing until the year 1853, when they discovered the frauds. And they further allege that they would not have proved their claim, nor have'received a dividend, if they had known the frauds; and they assert that the certificates of discharge are null and void, by reason of the frauds.

It is then stated in the bill that the three firms had existed before 1837, in which year they suspended payment, but that they never recovered from their embarrassments, though they had resumed business. It is again alleged that their affairs were hopeless in 1841, and that executions on judgments obtained against Stanton as a member of the firm were in that year returned nulla bona.

That all the indebtment of the firms which made them insolvent was due prior to the 1st March, 1842, at which time the frauds began. That then, Buckner and Stanton .had agreed that they would take the benefit of the bankrupt law, and, in contemplation of doing so, committed the fraud stated in the bill.

Twelve different charges of fraud are specified, all of them being payments to preferred creditors, in fraud of the general creditors — contrary to the provisions of the act of the 19th August, 1841. No charge of any other fraud is made, except a transfer of some property in New Orleans, upon the understanding that Buckner was to have the right to redeem it on payment of the debt, and that the arrangement had secured for him an ultimate profit, in fraud of creditors. They also say, that it was because of the fraud of Buckner and Stanton in concealing a knowledge of the facts from them, that they were induced to believe the discharges valid; and so they did not proceed to enforce their claims at law or in equity, but that they had found them out only within two years. How or from what source they had made the discovery they do not state distinctly, though to support the charge they file -an exhibit of *115 notes discounted for Stanton, Buckner, & Co., by the Commercial Bank of Natchez, which were applied to their credit, and a list of protested notes of Stanton, Buckner, & Co., taken up by them in May, 1842 — two months before Stanton filed his petition in bankruptcy. Two letters from Stanton to Stephen Duncan — one of them dated at Natchez, on the 14th August, 1842, and the other on the 14th September, 1842 — are made ■exhibits; both relate to the affairs of the firm, and to particular transactions of them, which the appellants allege were frauds committed by Stanton and Buckner, in giving preferences to certain creditors, in contemplation of bankruptcy. And they further declare, that since the bankruptcy of Stanton and Buckner, the books of Stanton, Buckner, & Co., had, by some means, passed into the possession of Buckner; that if produced, the fraudulent preferences which had been made would be shown, and that they would also disclose other fraudulent preferences made by Stanton for himself and the firm of Stanton, Buckner, & Co., in' the spring and-summer of 1842, in contemplation of bankruptcy.

The bill is closed with a prayer that the first decree of the District Court, discharging Buckner, should be declared void and of no validity, as far as the rights of the complainants, as set forth in .the bill, could be affected by it, and that Buckner should be perpetually enjoined from setting it up against their rights; and that Buckner should be adjudged to pay them the ■original sum due by him, with interest thereon; to which is added a prayer for general relief.

The defendant demurred to the bill, and, for causes of demurrer, says:

I. That the said complainants have not, by .their said bill, made such a case as entitles this court to entertain j urisdiction of this cause under the Constitution and laws of the United-States. .

II. That the said complainants have not, by the said bill, made .such a case as entitles this court .to entertain jurisdiction,' or grant relief in equity; the remedy of complainants, if any they, have, being at law, and not in equity.

III. That the said complainants having, by their own showing in said bill, made proof of their claims, and received dividends thereon, in the bankruptcy proceedings which resulted in the discharge of this defendant, are not permitted by law to impeach the validity of said discharge in manner and form as sought by said bill; and having been parties and privies to thé judgment of discharge in favor of this defendant, aré forever precluded in law from contesting the validity and effect of *116 said- judgment, on any such grounds as are alleged in said bill.

IV.

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Bluebook (online)
61 U.S. 108, 15 L. Ed. 862, 20 How. 108, 1857 U.S. LEXIS 435, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commercial-bank-of-manchester-v-buckner-scotus-1858.