Hall v. Wager

11 F. Cas. 271, 3 Biss. 28

This text of 11 F. Cas. 271 (Hall v. Wager) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hall v. Wager, 11 F. Cas. 271, 3 Biss. 28 (circtwdwi 1871).

Opinion

HOPKINS, District Judge.

Mr Lakin was,, beyond all question, I think, insolvent, and had been so for over two years when he gave the mortgage to defendants, although he-swears he did not suppose he was, but, on the contrary, he thought he was worth $10,000 over and above all his debts. Soon after giving the mortgage, his other creditors instituted an investigation into his affairs, and it was made apparent that he was insolvent. He-then attempted to compromise, but failed to-accomplish it; and on the 8th of January,. 1870, twenty-four days after giving this mortgage, he filed his petition in bankruptcy.

Mr. Mack, of Sandusky, Ohio, swears that Wager told him in November, 1867, that he-thought Lakin insolvent, and that he intended to send out and get a mortgage to secure his-claim. Wager denies that he said so, but says that Mack told him at that time that he (Mack) thought he would not stand it longr but that he told him he knew better, and that he was good, and Mr. Wager is partially sustained in his version by a Mr. Spencer, who was present. The defendants swear that they considered him worth $10,000 or $15,000 over his debts when they took the mortgage. The defendants’ counsel claim that the facts, as proved, fail entirely to make-out a case under the bankrupt act, and contend that to avoid the mortgage it must be shown that Lakin was insolvent when he gave the mortgage, and that he knew it; for if he did not know that he was insolvent he could not be said to have given the mortgage with a view to give the mortgagees a preference, which it would be necessary for the court to' find as a question of fact under the thirty-fifth section of the bankrupt act, in order to avoid the mortgage.

The meaning of that part of the section is not entirely clear, and has been construed differently by the courts and judges who have been called upon to pass upon it. But I cannot concur with the defendants’ counsel in their interpretation of it. The section does not require the debtor to know his insolvency, or to believe it. It treats of insolvency as a condition of fact, not of belief. He cannot set up his ignorance of that condition to defeat the operation of that section. He is presumed to know, and is chargeable with knowledge of it, and neither ignorance nor willful blindness will exonerate him from the operation of its provisions, so that, being insolvent in fact, and chargeable by law with knowledge of such condition, it would follow, it seems to[273]*273me, as a logical sequence that he gave the mortgage with a view to give the defendants a preference. For not having property to pay all his creditors, the giving the defendants security to pay them in full necessarily operated as a preference, and he should be held as having intended the rational and logical consequences of his acts. This section of the bankrupt act is almost a literal copy of section 89 of the Massachusetts insolvent law, and their court before its adoption by congress had placed this construction upon it. Perhaps if the bankrupt had any reasonable cause to believe himself solvent, it might be held that he did not give the security with intent to give a preference. But treated as a rational man, and looking at the facts of his case as they really were, could Lakin reasonably have believed he was solvent? A case might arise in which a court might hold that a party had reasonable cause to believe himself solvent, when he was in fact insolvent, but it would have to possess some peculiar features, and the party would have to furnish a very satisfactory excuse for want of a knowledge of the fact showing his insolvency. This does not present such a case. From the facts of this ease it does not seem possible that he could have believed himself solvent when he gave this mortgage. The case of Jones v. Howland, 8 Metc. [Mass.] 377, relied upon so strenuously by defendants’ counsel, arose under the bankrupt act of 1841, and the supreme court of Massachusetts has not followed that as applicable to their insolvent law, from which this section of the bankrupt act of 1867 under consideration was copied. Chief Justice Shaw, in delivering the opinion of that court in Holbrook v. Jackson, 7 Cush. 136, says: “The provision of the bankrupt law of the United States under which the case of Jones v. Howland was decided was very different from the present; it turned on the question of actual belief and intent, and not on reasonable ground to believe.” And in the same opinion (page 149) he says: “We do not think it necessary, in order to avoid the conveyance, that the debtors knew they were insolvent, or in fact contemplated proceedings in insolvency; it is enough that they were in fact insolvent, and had no reasonable ground to believe themselves solvent.” That court again in Yennard v. McConnell, 11 Allen, 562, says: “The proposition cannot be maintained consistently with the established rules of law that the payment of a debt by a party who is insolvent cannot be regarded as a preference, if made with the hope and expectation by the debtor that he will be able eventually to pay all his debts in full. The adjudicated cases leave no room for doubt on this point. Thompson v. Thompson, 4 Cush. 127; Lee v. Kilburn, 3 Gray, 594; Holbrook v. Jackson, 7 Cush. 136, 149; Barnard v. Crosby. 6 Allen, 327.” And in Beals v. Clark, 13 Gray, 21, the court says: “The jury were rightly instructed that it was competent for them to infer from the fact that Clark did give a preference to the plaintiff, that he intended to give it. Denny v. Dana, 2 Cush. 72.” These cases abundantly show that the courts of Massachusetts have not regarded the case of Jones v. Howland, supra, as giving a construction of their insolvent law, and I am satisfied that the United States courts which have adopted that interpretation as a proper construction of the provisions of our present bankrupt act have not examined the provisions of the two bankrupt acts critically, nor the insolvent law of Massachusetts and the construction given to their section in regard to preferences by the courts of that state, for if they had they would at once have seen that the provisions of the act of 1841, under which that was given, were entirely different from the present act, and that that decision had uniformly been held there as not applicable to the provisions of their insolvent law.

The weight of authority In the federal courts, I think, is largely in favor of the construction I have given to that section. Campbell v. Traders’ Nat. Bank [Case No. 2,370]; Scammon v. Cole [Id. 12,433]; In re Kingsbury [Id. 7,816]; Graham v. Stark [Id. 5,676]; Ahl v. Thorner [Id. 103]; Vogle v. Lathrop [Id. 16,985]; In re Black [Id. 1,457]; Bradshaw v. Klein [Id. 1,790]. The preferences declared void by the second section of the act of 1841 were such as were made by a party contemplating becoming a bankrupt under the act. There the'intent of the debtor was the principal question. Under the present act a preference created by a party “being insolvent” is made void, and his intent or belief is not a question. The fact of insolvency being established or admitted, the preference ordinarily as to the debtor is presumed to be void— the presumption being strong or slight according to the circumstance of each case.

But I cannot see that the fact that the debtor knew or did not know of his insolvency at the time of creating the preference has much to do in determining the question as to him.

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11 F. Cas. 271, 3 Biss. 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-wager-circtwdwi-1871.