Fisher v. Currier

48 Mass. 424
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1844
StatusPublished

This text of 48 Mass. 424 (Fisher v. Currier) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fisher v. Currier, 48 Mass. 424 (Mass. 1844).

Opinion

Shaw, C. J.

This is another important question upon the construction of the insolvent law. Ever since the repeal of the bankrupt law of the United States, and the consequent revival of the insolvent law of the Commonwealth, it has been made a question, whether a person, who had been declared a bankrupt, and who had not obtained his discharge, could proceed and take the benefit of the insolvent law, and obtain a discharge from his debts, in the usual course of proceedings. On the one hand, it is argued, that the insolvent law is explicit and imperative, and [426]*426provides that a debtor may apply, &c.; and upon certain facts being shown, the judge or master in chancery shall proceed to grant a warrant, upon which the proceedings required, in regard to proof of debts, grant of a discharge, &c. will follow in due course. It is also urged, with great plausibility, that as the case supposes a debtor whose property is open to attachment by the usual process of law, it would be to defeat one of the obvious objects of the policy of the insolvent law, to hold that it could not be brought under the administration of that system of insolvency, which may insure an equal distribution among all creditors, when there is not property sufficient to pay the whole. Be sides, it may be asked, (and the question demands an answer,) if he cannot be brought within the operation of the insolvent law, soon after his discharge under the bankrupt law has been refused, how long shall he be thus incapable ? Shall it be one, or two, or more years, or shall he never again be subject to the operation of a system of laws supposed to be founded on considerations of equity and sound policy, in respect to all parties, and to the interests of the community ?

On the other hand, it has been argued with great force, that to permit one, who has beqn declared a bankrupt under the law of the United States, all of whose property has gone into the hands of an assignee, and who has been refused a discharge under that law, on account of fraud, or some cause which must be presumed to be good and sufficient, to apply voluntarily to a magistrate of the State, acting under another law, when perhaps he has little or no property to offer, and obtain a discharge from those very debts which existed against him as a bankrupt, would be manifestly unjust, and contrary to the spirit, if not the terms, of the insolvent law. . ■

This is an instance, where, in consequence of two distinct systems of law, operating at the same time upon the citizens of the United States, it is necessary, by a cautious discrimination, to prevent a conflict between them, and to give to each its full, just and proper effect and operation, and no more. The law of the United States does not act directly on that of the State, to repeal or modify it; nor can the law of the State directly affect the law of the United States; but both act unon the citizens, and deeply [427]*427affect their rights; and it is only when they come immediately into opposition and conflict with each other, that the law of the State must yield to that of the United States, as the supreme law of the land. In the case stated, it.appears to us that both can stand together, and each, in its proper sphere, have its proper effect and operation.

1. We take it to be settled, that the property of a bankrupt., which passes to his assignee, under the commission, is all the real and personal property, and all the rights of property vested in him at the time of the decree declaring him a bankrupt, and that after acquired property does not go to the assignee. Ex parte Newhall, 5 Law Reporter, 306, and 2 Story R. 360. We take it also to be settled, as the construction of the bankrupt law of the United States, that all debts of the bankrupt, existing at the time of the decree, whether then due and payable or not, are proveable under the commission, and will be barred by the certificate. Downer v. Brackett, 5 Law Reporter, 392.

Assuming then that a person, who has been declared a bankrupt under the law of the United States, but who has not obtained his discharge, or whose discharge has been denied by the competent tribunal, may have property which does not go to the assignee, and who owes debts not proveable under the commission, he is then within the terms of the insolvent laws of the Commonwealth ; he owes debts which he is unable to pay in full, and he may have a considerable amount of property, acquired by bequest or by descent, or even by his own earnings, which is not exempted from attachment, or seizure on execution, by the ordinary process of law. Such a case seems also to be equally within the spirit and policy of the insolvent laws. It is for the general interest of his creditors that his property should be equally distributed, instead of being seized and appropriated by legal process to the satisfaction of some particular creditor, to the exclusion of all others ; and it is for the interest of the debtor, upon the surrender of all his property, to obtain his discharge.

2. Such being the provisions and the policy of the insolvent laws, the question is, whether these proceedings can be commenced and prosecuted to their termination, without interfering [428]*428with the law of the United States. To determine this, it is proper to trace these proceedings through, and see what the result would be.

The constitution of the United States having vested in con gress the power to establish unifqrm laws on the subject of bankruptcies, such laws must extend to all the rights, duties and obligations, incident to a state and condition of bankruptcy ; and, amongst other things, to provide when, how, on what terms, and to what extent, a bankrupt shall be discharged from his debts. Such laws, when made, are declared, by another clause in the constitution, to be the supreme law of the land, and of course they supersede all state legislation on the same subject. The bankrupt law of 1841 has provided when, on what terms, and with what effect, such a discharge shall be granted, and has invested the courts of the United States with authority to adjudge ahd determine, in each particular case, whether the bankrupt is within its provisions, and whether he is entitled to his discharge, and to grant or withhold it accordingly. It follows then, that, as to all debts which would come within the purview of such discharge — that is, as to all debts proveable under the commission, whether actually proved or not ■— the courts of the United States have exclusive jurisdiction to decide judicially whether they shall be discharged or not; and hav ing jurisdiction of the whole subject, their adjudication is equally conclusive, when it denies or withholds a discharge, as when it grants one. We are therefore of opinion, that, as to the debts existing and proveable under the commission of bankruptcy, the power of discharging them in invitum, and against the will of the creditor, being exclusively in the courts of the United States, and these courts having exercised the power, and adjudged that they shall not be discharged, such judgment protects the creditor against any discharge of the same debts, by operation of the law of the State.

3. Supposing then such creditors' cannot, against' their own consent, be barred of their debts by a discharge under the insolvent laws, then the question is, whether they may, at their own option, come in and prove their debts, and take a dividend [429]*429pari passu with those creditors whose debts accrued afterwards. And we are of opinion that they may.

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Bluebook (online)
48 Mass. 424, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fisher-v-currier-mass-1844.