Crane v. Conro

2 Ill. Cir. Ct. 58
CourtIllinois Circuit Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1878
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Ill. Cir. Ct. 58 (Crane v. Conro) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crane v. Conro, 2 Ill. Cir. Ct. 58 (Ill. Super. Ct. 1878).

Opinion

Drummond, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court:—

The consequences of delay in the decision of this case are so serious that I have come to the conclusion that I would dispose of the petition in review at the earliest practicable-moment.

It is objected that it is improperly brought into the circuit court, under the second section of the original bankrupt law (sec. 4986, Rev. Stat. U. S.), which provides for a review of any decision of the district court, and which declares r “The circuit court for each district shall have a general superintendenee and jurisdiction of all cases and questions arising in the district court for such district when sitting as a court of bankruptcy, whether the powers and jurisdiction of a circuit court have been conferred on such district court or not, and except when special provision is otherwise made, may, upon bill, petition or other proper process, of any party aggrieved, hear and determine the case as in a court of -equity. ’ ’1

This law provides for the superintendence and jurisdiction of the circuit court over all cases and questions arising under the act; and unless special provision is otherwise made, it declares how the court shall exercise this supervision and jurisdiction. Therefore, unless the law has provided elsewhere for an appeal from the decision of the district court in this case, it must necessarily come up under the second section of the bankrupt law. Rev. Stat. sec. 4986.

It is not necessary that I should go into a history of the ■case; that has been done by the district judge. It is only •of importance that I should state the fact that Fox & Howard, having become bankrupts, and a provisional assignee having been appointed, on his application to the district ■court he was directed to receive bids for the property of the bankrupts; and he accordingly received a bid from J. Hodgkins, on the 2d day of July, 1875, for certain property of the bankrupts, for which Hodgkins agreed to pay the sum of $40,000. An order nisi was thereupon entered by the district court requiring all parties to show cause why that bid should not be received, and on the 9th of July following the same was confirmed to Mr. Hodgkins. On the 12th of July following, on application of the assignee to the district court, this order of confirmation was set aside and another bid was received and confirmed to other parties on an advance in the price, $40,500, and the sale was confirmed to them and the money paid, and the property turned over to the new purchasers.

It is these sales and confirmations made by the district court that are the subject of controversy here. And the point is, whether or not there is provision otherwise made than in the section already referred to, for the appellate jurisdiction of the circuit court over this action of the district court. I think there is not.

This is simply a sale of the property of the bankrupts; and the question is, whether the sale shall stand as the act of the éourt, and the property of the bankrupts pass to the purchaser. It is not such a decree or judgment as is provided for in the eighth section of the original bankrupt law (Rev. Stat. sec. 4980), which gives an appeal or writ of error; and unless there is an appeal or writ of error given elsewhere than is provided in the third section, then it necessarily follows that the circuit court must exercise superintendence and jurisdiction over the case under that section.

It is apparent that the question whether or not a sale of the estate of a bankrupt shall stand, is one of the greatest importance. Upon it may depend not only the rights of the bankrupts, but the rights of all the creditors. And it is manifest that the statute intends to give the circuit court superintendence and jurisdiction over such cases. It would be a serious matter to hold that the order of the district court as to the validity of a sale of the property of a bankrupt is necessarily final, and that because the district court has confirmed the sale and turned over the property to the purchaser, and received the money, therefore there is no power in the circuit court to interfere with it. That would be a very simple way of depriving the circuit court of jurisdiction over a case, and it might well happen that property might be sacrificed and the rights of creditors jeoparded by the action of the district court.

It is manifest, I think, therefore, that it was the intention of the bankrupt law to allow the circuit court to have jurisdiction over all cases of this kind; and, inasmuch as an appeal or a writ of error is not elsewhere given, the right of supervision and jurisdiction must exist under the second section of the bankrupt law.

It is said that in this case there has been no record, or, at -least, no full record brought into the circuit court, and that the court has not considered the full record upon which the •district court acted. That is true; but it is nothing more than fair to state the circumstances under which the record is brought before this court. A printed abstract of the testimony has been introduced, all of which the court has read. The court has not read all the original testimony, of which this is a full abstract; but the case has been submitted to the court upon this abstract, and was argued, in part, upon the abstract; and it was not until after the ease was partially heard, that objection was taken by some of the counsel to the fact that this was not a full record; but, as I understand, it was submitted to the court upon this abstract for convenience, and to save labor and trouble to the court, with the understanding on both sides that, if there was any error or mistake in the abstract, it might be corrected by reference to the original depositions or testimony in the case. I so understand it. And if there is any material error in this record or abstract as it has been presented, of course I desire it to be rectified; and I wish to state to counsel upon both sides that this is the only testimony which this court has considered. But I ought to add, no material error has been pointed out.

That being so, the question is: whether the order of the district court, made on the 9th of July, 1875, confirming the sale to Mr. Hodgkins, and that made on the 12th of July, rescinding the order of confirmation and confirming a sale to other parties, should stand — one or both? When the order was made by the district court rescinding the sale to Mr. Hodgkins and confirming it to other parties, that action of the district court was brought for review before this court, and this court remitted the ease to the district court with -directions to open that order for the purpose of allowing Mr. Hodgkins or Mr. Crane, for whom it was claimed Mr. Hodgkins made the bid, to be heard, because the confirmation of the sale being made by the district court to Mr. Hodgkins, he became a party in court, and before any order affecting his rights could be properly made by the district court he was entitled to his day in court, to notice, and to be heard. The order of confirmation was set aside without any notice to him whatever, and without giving him an opportunity to be heard, upon the ex parte application of the assignee. This court decided that to be error, and remitted the case to the district court, in order that Mr. Hodgkins and Mr. Crane might be heard upon their right to this property. They were accordingly heard, and the court affirmed its order of the 12th of July, rescinding the order of sale made to Mr. Hodgkins.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Ill. Cir. Ct. 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crane-v-conro-illcirct-1878.