Gilman v. Davis

126 F.2d 296, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 4128
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMarch 4, 1942
DocketNos. 8901, 8902
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 126 F.2d 296 (Gilman v. Davis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gilman v. Davis, 126 F.2d 296, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 4128 (6th Cir. 1942).

Opinion

MARTIN, Circuit Judge.

At the first meeting of the creditors of the bankrupt, a single creditor, M. T. Davis, with a proven claim of $5,496.10, voted for Loewenthal for trustee of the bankrupt estate; and four creditors, whose proven claims aggregated $1,555.76, voted for Albert A. Gilman. One candidate, therefore, received a majority in the amount while his opponent received a majority in the number of claims. The referee, however, ruled out the single vote cast for Loewenthal, declared Gilman elected trustee and entered an order to such effect.

Upon petition for review, Davis brought the controversy to the district judge, who, in a memorandum opinion, upheld the action of the referee in rejecting the right of M. T. Davis to vote his claim in the election, but disapproved the action of the referee in permitting the four creditors constituting the majority in number of claims to vote, and ordered that the election of Albert A. Gilman as trustee be set aside and that a new election be held.

The trustee, Gilman, has appealed from the order, insofar as it sustained the petition for review, set aside the election, and required that powers of attorney be both witnessed and acknowledged before a Notary Public. The creditor, Davis, has appealed from the order to the extent that it requires that the acknowledgment of a power of attorney shall contain a statement that the person executing the power is personally known to the person taking the acknowledgment, or that his identity has been established by satisfactory proof. Davis has also appealed from the refusal of the district court to declare Loewenthal the duly elected trustee.

(1) Davis subscribed and swore to his proof of claim before a Notary Public and attached a sworn and duly witnessed power of attorney delegating to his proxy, inter alia, the right to vote for a trustee. This power of attorney executed by him was in exact conformity with Official Form No. 18, promulgated by the Supreme Court January 16, 1939, and effective February 13, 1939. Nevertheless, the referee rejected the right of Davis’ attorney-in-fact to vote. His ruling was grounded upon an opinion delivered in 1921 by District Judge Westenhaver of the Northern District of Ohio, in which it was held that a power of attorney executed by a partnership creditor to be used in voting upon a composition in bankruptcy was insufficient, under a General Order similar to that under interpretation here, where the Notary who certified that the instrument was “subscribed and sworn to” by the claimant made “no statement over his signature that the deponent was personally known to him, or that his identity was established.” In re Saslaw, D.C., 275 F. 587, 588.

In the instant case, however, the district judge did not predicate his decision upon the authority of In re Saslaw, supra, but reasoned thus:

“General Order 38 [11 U.S.C.A. following section 53] requires that the forms annexed to the General Orders shall be observed and used, with permissible alterations for particular cases. General Order 21(5) seems a little obscure, in the light of Official Form 18, but a safe construction requires the adoption of a practice which fulfills the requirements of the General Order as well as those of the Official Form. If, as asserted by the petitioner, the Notary’s acknowledgment need not contain a statement responding to the provision of General Order 21(5), but that the Notary’s personal knowledge or established identity [299]*299of the person executing the power may be proved before the referee when challenged, delays and confusions surely would result. This is not to say that the contention of the petitioner is wholly without merit or force. It is possible that the uncertainty well might be resolved the other" way, — that is, that compliance with the Official Form is enough unless challenged in respect of the Notary’s personal knowledge or proof of identity of the person executing the power of attorney.
“But considering the practical necessities it seems to me the theory advanced by petitioner, that General Order 21(5) was intended as a direction to Notaries, that they shall know, or have identified, persons executing powers, must fall before the more reasonable belief that the high court intended by the General Order to prescribe for an express essential to a valid power of attorney. And to make reasonably certain that the requirement has been complied with, the Notary’s assurance of fulfillment should be expressed in the power of attorney itself and should not be left to assumption or later oral proof. The General Order, and the Official Form should be read together and expressly and specifically complied with. Why the requirement of the General Order was not appended' to the form, we can only conjecture. It must be borne in mind that we are dealing presently with an official legal form (18) made so by statute and General Order 38, and also with a provision of law [General Order 21(5)] requiring something more than the official form.”

The court then ordered that “the official form be adopted and required in every detail, including a witness thereto, plus an acknowledgment responding to General Order 21(5),” and that a “new election should be held, with the distinct understanding that only those powers will' be effective to vote that comply with this direction.”

We do not construe the meaning of General Order 21(5) as did the district court. The third sentence of the General Order reads: “When the person executing [a power of attorney] is not personally known to the officer taking the proof or acknowledgment, his identity shall be established by satisfactory proof.” We find no mandate in this language that a Notary, or other officer taking the acknowledgment of a claimant, must certify that the affiant is personally known to him.

Form No. 18, promulgated for powers of attorney, prints beneath the blank for the signature of a claimant the words, “Signed, sealed and delivered in the presence of ———•, -,” followed by a prescribed form of acknowledgment: “Acknowledged before me this - day of -, 19-, [Official character.]”

The express language of the prescribed form gainsays any intention of the Supreme Court in promulgating General Order 21(5) to require that the certificate of the Notary Public or other officer taking the acknowledgment should recite the official’s personal acquaintance, with the affiant. Such personal acquaintance must be presumed from the Notary’s certification under the sanction of his official oath that the claimant acknowledged the power of attorney. The plain implication is that the claimant, was known to the officer and, in fact, acknowledged the instrument. Elwood v. Flannigan, 104 U.S. 562, 568, 569, 26 L.Ed. 842, by analogy, justifies this deduction.

Had the Supreme Court intended to require a certificate of personal acquaintance, it is obvious that either the General Order or the prescribed form would have so provided. The General Order requires only that when the official is unacquainted with the person executing the power of attorney, the identity of the affiant shall be established by satisfactory proof. In the absence of a contrary showing, the presumption always is that a public officer has performed his duty. See In re Henschel, 2 Cir., 113 F. 443, 445. It may, therefore, be inferred that when an officer signs the certificate prescribed in Form 18, he is in fact personally acquainted with the affiant.

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Bluebook (online)
126 F.2d 296, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 4128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilman-v-davis-ca6-1942.