Hunt v. Pooke

12 F. Cas. 930
CourtDistrict Court, D. Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 1, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 12 F. Cas. 930 (Hunt v. Pooke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hunt v. Pooke, 12 F. Cas. 930 (D.R.I. 1870).

Opinion

KNOWLES, District Judge.

The petition in this case was filed on the fifteenth of September, eighteen hundred and seventy, and process thereon ordered returnable October fifth, eighteen hundred and seventy. The petitioners named are Seth B. Hunt, Philip Til-[931]*931liughast and Robert W. Abom, of the city of New York, who represent that they are creditors of William Pooke and Anthony Steere, late partners as Pooke & Steere; and that said Pooke & Steere have committed an act of bankruptcy, namely: have been actually imprisoned for more than seven days on a •civil action for a sum exceeding one hundred ■dollars. The petition is subscribed, “Hunt, Tillinghast & Co., petitioners, by Philip Til-linghast, Jr., special attorney.” The oath or verification of this petition, though written •“I, Philip Tillinghast, Jr., special attorney of the petitioners above named,” etc., is sub-, scribed similarly to the petition, as also is the deposition to the act of bankruptcy, although the deposition is drawn as that of Philip Tillinghast, Jr., of the city of New York, testifying simply as a witness. 'The deposition as to the petitioning creditors’ claim, filed with their petition, was by the said Philip Tillinghast, Jr., and subscribed as above stated. On the fifth of October the respondents appeared by counsel, denying their bankruptcy, and waiving their right to a jury trial,- whereupon the case was continued for hearing at a day future. On the fourteenth of October, one ofJ the respondents, Steere, deceased, and on the suggestion of his death the case was further continued, to await an appointment of an administrator. On the appointment of Thomas E. Steere to that office, he was active to appear and assume the defence of the suit; and accordingly on the first of March, eighteen hundred ■and seventy-one, he entered an appearance and filed his motion in writing, that the said suit be abated and dismissed, because of the death of the said Anthony Steere. Neither party being prepared for a hearing on that •day, the case was continued without special assignment until the seventh of June, when, by agreement, it was called for hearing before the court.

As the counsel for the petitioners was proceeding to state the case, as one of simply a denial of the act of bankruptcy, the court reminded the parties that a motion to dismiss upon some ground unknown to the court had been filed, and if that was not waived, to that must attention first be given.. A conference between counsel then ensued, in the course of which it appeared that the respondents proposed raising many points of defence, other than that specified in their written motion, they contending, among oth- • •er grounds, that there was “no case here— nothing to try.” The result of the confer- ‘ enee, as understood by the court was, that the respondents withdrew their specific motion to dismiss the petition, agreeing that under the general issue (so to speak), all imaginable defences were to be open to the respondents. In accordance with the arrangement, the opening on the part of the petition- ‘ •ers was but brief. Assuming and averring • that the petition and all the accompanying papers were in due form, so far as they knew or had reason to believe, they maintained that a bare recital of the facts, as agreed upon by the parties, was alone necessary to show that a decree of bankruptcy should be entered against the respondents. What could be, or was to be submitted in opposition to this view, they had not as yet been apprised, and should-not presume to anticipate Concerning the facts — actual ■ occurrences — the parties were not at variance, thus: The respondents, Pooke & Steere, once copartners, were on the forenoon of the eighth day of September, eighteen hundred and seventy, committed to the Providence county jail, as joint debtors, upon an execution issuing from the United States circuit court, for the sum of one hundred and eighty-seven thousand dollars and upwards, .in favor of Hunt, Tillinghast & Company. That said Pooke, on the same day, -gave bond as a prisoner for the jail limits, and to remain a true prisoner, and-left the jail building; while said Steere, not giving such bond, remained in the jail building as a prisoner, until between ten and twelve o’clock a. m., September fifteenth, when said both Pooke and himself were discharged from their commitments, upon certificates from the proper officers that they had severally and respectively taken the poor debtor’s oath, pursuant to the laws of Rhode Island and of the United States.

In view ot these facts, it being also conceded that the petition in ■ bankruptcy was filed before (by an hour or two), the taking of the oath by the respondents, the petitioners contended that the act of bankruptcy charged, (actual imprisonment for more than seven days), was fully proven, and there rested their case.

On behalf of the defence, several points were presented. One of them being, that the decease of Anthony Steere prior to any adjudication upon the question of bankruptcy, was legal cause for a dismissal of the petition as against both Steere and Pooke; and in regard to it, it seems sufficient to say, I must overrule it as untenable, in view of the provisions of the twelfth section of the-bankrupt law [of 1867 (14 Stat. 522)].

■ A second point was, that the said Pooke had already been, as long ago as May twenty-sixth, eighteen hundred and sixty-nine, declared a bankrupt on a creditor’s petition; to which it seems a sufficient answer, that the proceeding of eighteen hundred and sixty-nine, was against said Pooke as an individual, without reference or allusion to any co-partnership then or theretofore existing between him and the said Steere, or any other person, while the pending petition is against him and Steere, as' “late partners as Pooke & Steere,” constituting a co-partnership or firm. An individual, it is obvious, may be hopelessly insolvent, while the firm of which he is a member is beyond question [932]*932able to pay all Its liabilities on demand, and vice versa.

The third point of defence was one of greater nicety, as it involved the question stated in brief, whether an imprisonment commencing'on the forenoon of the eighth of September, eighteen hundred and seventy, and terminating before noon on the fifteenth of that month, was actual imprisonment for more than seven days within the meaning of the thirty-ninth section of the bankrupt act?

The only act of bankruptcy charged, as above stated, was such imprisonment; and this, it was contended on behalf of the respondents, was not shown by the agreed facts. That the parties were imprisoned on the eighth of September and on the seven succeeding days was conceded, and this, argued the petitioners, was an impris-. onment of - more than seven days. On the contrary, argued the respondents, firstly, the statute prescribes expressly, that in computing periods of days, the first day is to be excluded; and secondly, under certain circumstances, days are to be decreed to be consecutive periods of twenty-four hours, irrespective of sunrisings or sunsets; and in this case the parties were in prison but seven of such periods at the most And as bearing upon the second point the court’s attention was directed by the respondents-to many authorities.

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Bluebook (online)
12 F. Cas. 930, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunt-v-pooke-rid-1870.