In Re B. F. Miller

1904 OK 11, 75 P. 1128, 13 Okla. 557, 1904 Okla. LEXIS 11
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 3, 1904
StatusPublished

This text of 1904 OK 11 (In Re B. F. Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re B. F. Miller, 1904 OK 11, 75 P. 1128, 13 Okla. 557, 1904 Okla. LEXIS 11 (Okla. 1904).

Opinion

*558 Opinion of the court by

PaNCOAst, J.:

This was an action in bankruptcy, commenced in the district court of Caddo county, by Slaydem-Kirksey Woolen Mills, of Waco, Texas, Carroll, Brough & Robinson, and Eskridge & Cheatham, of Oklahoma City, on July 11, 1902, filing an involuntary petition in bankruptcy against B. F. Miller, of'Bridgeport, Oklahoma, asking that Miller be declared a bankrupt, because of having committed certain acts of bankruptcy alleged therein. At the time of filing the petition, on application a receiver was appointed to take charge of the bankrupt’s property. A restraining order was algo issued in the ease, restraining the Alton-Dawson Mercantile Company and one C. J. Tuohy, their agent, from selling the property alleged to be the property of the bankrupt, and which the Alton-Dawson Mercantile Company held under a chattel mortgage from B. F. Miller. The order directed the receiver to take immediate charge of the assets of Miller, including the mortgaged property. On July 34, 1902, the Alton-Dawson Mercantile Company filed an application to dissolve the restraining order, and the order appointing the receiver, and praying that such order be set aside. In this application, they made a showing of their claim, and the conditions under which they held the property covered by their mortgage.

A hearing was had upon said application, and on the 38th day of July, 1902, the court dissolved the injunction and set aside the order appointing the receiver, and ordered the property held by the receiver to be returned.

On the 23rd of July, 1902, the Alton-Dawson Mercantile Company,,'claiming to be a creditor of B. F'. Miller, entered *559 an appearance in tbe action, and asked to be beard in opposition to tbe prayer of tbe petition, and to be allowed to show why tbe petition should be dismissed without an adjudication; and among other reasons alleged why adjudication should not be made, was- that the petitioning creditors filing the petition did not in the aggregate have provable claims against Miller in the amount of five hundred dollars. This application was verified, and was heard on August 8, 190&. All parties being present, after hearing the evidence and argument of the counsel, the court sustained the application, and dismissed the petition.. The petitioners, feeling aggrieved, pray an appeal to this court.

A motion has been filed to dismiss this. appeal for various reasons, which have been argued at length, some of which are probably well founded. To notice them in detail, however, would require an opinion of great length, far greater, we think, than the nature of the case warrants. We will, therefore, pass some of the propositions contended for without notice, and mention only those which we deem of most importance, and as decisive of the case, calling attention to one only, which, as the record stands, is sufficient to warrant a dismissal, ’ but which might probably have been cured had the appellant exerted as much energy in bringing to this court a proper record, as he has in laboring to convince this court that the imperfect record is sufficient to enable us to review the errors complained of.

The question arises upon the giving of an appeal bond, which appellee claims has not been given because the record-does not disclose it. It is conceded, and properly so, that before an appeal can be allowed or perfected-in a case like the *560 one at bar, an appeal bond must be given and approved, the court fixing the amount, and the same filed and made a part ■of the record in the case. The bond, however, being given in the trial court, the record, in order to be perfect, should recite that such bond has been given, approved and filed.

The record in this cas!e is entirely silent upon this point, and instead of the appellent suggesting a diminution of the record, and having the clerk certify to this court the record showing the bond to have been properly given and approved, he asserts that the bond was given, and argues that this court should presume it to have been given, because the court below would not have issued a citation without having first approved the bond.

It seems strange to what extent counsel will labor to direct an appellate court around and over by a circuitious route to arrive at a conclusion that should be easily reached .and made certain with one small part of the energy exerted.

The law requiring the appeal bond to be taken in the. trial court, the only way that this court can ascertain the fact that an appeal bond has been given is by an examination of the record on file. If the record is silent on this point, and does not affirmatively show what is required, it is imperfect, and, unless the record is perfected by certifying the •omitted parts to this court, which duty devolves upon the appellant, the cause on motion should be dismissed. However, if the appeal should be dismissed without having been heard upon its merits, possibly a new citation might be had and the appeal perfected, and for that reason alone we pass this proposition without further comment, to deal with one including more of the merits of the case.

*561 Upon tbe application of tbe Alton-Dawson Mercantile Company to dismiss tbe petition in bankruptcy without adjudication, tbe record shows by tbe journal entry of tbe court that evidence was introduced upon the bearing, and tbe court, after bearing tbe evidence and arguments of counsel, being fully, advised in the premises, found that tbe petition should be and the same was dismissed, for tbe reason that tbe petition, together with tbe proof of claims, did not show facts sufficient to entitle the petitioners to an adjudication in bankruptcy. In other words, that the petitioners claims did not, in the aggregate, amount to five hundred dollars, unless there was included tbe sum of one hundred and seventy dollars, which the petitioners allege they had received, and which they say was an unlawful preference under the bankruptcy law, and which they offered to return and refund.

There is no statement in the petition of any fact that would enlighten the court as to the nature of what is termed the “unlawful preference” which is offered to be returned. The statement is more of a conclusion than of a fact. The petition should have shown facts sufficient to make it appear from a reading of it that the payments made were of .such a character as to constitute preferences under the law, and, not only that, but of such a character as to constitute such a preference as, when refunded, would allow the petitioners to participate in the proceedings in bankruptcy, and, by refunding the preferences, prove their claims against the estate.

It seems that the record shows that with this petition the petitioners filed proof of their claims, but what this proof of claims shows is impossible to be determined by this court, because the record does not contain such proof of claims. They are not included in the record.

*562

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Bluebook (online)
1904 OK 11, 75 P. 1128, 13 Okla. 557, 1904 Okla. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-b-f-miller-okla-1904.