In re Bunster

4 F. Cas. 684, 15 Ben. 242
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJune 15, 1871
StatusPublished

This text of 4 F. Cas. 684 (In re Bunster) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Bunster, 4 F. Cas. 684, 15 Ben. 242 (S.D.N.Y. 1871).

Opinions

[By

John Fitch,

Register:]

2 [This is a proceeding in involuntary bankruptcy. The proceedings in the cause are regular and according to law, up to and in-■eluding the return of the order to show cause why the above named bankrupt should not be discharged according to law. Several creditors, who have duly proved their respective claims, have filed notice of their appearance by their respective attorneys, and have a right to file specifications of their grounds of opposition to the discharge of said bankrupt within the time prescribed by the act By the schedule, it appears that the debts from which the bankrupt seeks to be discharged, were contracted since January first, eighteen hundred and sixty-nine, which brings this case within the provisions of the amendment to section thirty-three of the bankrupt act, approved July twenty-seventh, eighteen hundred and sixty-eight, which reads as follows: “That the provisions of second clause of the thirty-third section of said act, shall not apply to the cases of proceedings in bankruptcy, commenced prior to the first day of January, eighteen hundred and sixty-nine, and the time during which the operation of the provisions of said clause is postponed, shall be extended until said first day of January, eighteen hundred and sixty-nine.” And said clause as amended July fourteen, eighteen hundred and seventy, reads as follows: “In all proceedings in bankruptcy, commenced after the first day of January, eighteen hundred and sixty-nine, no discharge shall be granted to a debtor whose assets shall not be equal to fifty per centum of the claims proved against his estate upon which he shall be liable as the principal debtor, unless the assent in writing of a majority in number and value of his creditors to whom he shall have become liable as principal debtor, and who .shall have proved their claims, be filed in the case at or before the time of the hearing of the application for discharge.” Several creditors have duly proved their claims, amounting in the aggregate to the sum of thirty-two thousand and sixty-three dollars and eight cents, and the assets to ten ' thousand dollars, as appears by the certificate of the assignee. The bankrupt has not shown that his assets equal in value, since the adjudication of bankruptcy, fifty per cent, of the debts proved against his estate as required by law, or that they will do so.

[Counsel .for the bankrupt, upon all the proceedings in the case, applies for the usual certificate of conformity. He does not offer or tender the assent in writing of a majority of his creditors who have proved their claims, nor any of them, as is required by ,said section thirty-three, neither does he ask for an adjournment of the order to show cause, but applies for a discharge and the usual certificate of conformity, and claims as a matter of law that said section thirty-three is not applicable to an involuntary case, and only applies to voluntary bankruptcy, and chat he is entitled to the certificate of conformity without filing proof that his assets equal fifty per cent, or filing the assent of a majority of his creditors, both in number and value us required by law. That the bankrupt, being an involuntary bankrupt, has the same right to apply, under section thirty-three as amended in eighteen hundred and sixty-eight, for a discharge as if he was a voluntary bankrupt. That he having been declared a bankrupt by this court, and having delivered up all his property and effects, both real and personal, to the assignee, he is entitled (the assignee not opposing) to his discharge. That any other construction of section thirty-three might be the means of transforming the statute from a liberal one to a very harsh one, inasmuch as it might put it into the power of a few of the principal creditors to utterly preclude the bankrupt from obtaining a discharge, although he had in good faith surrendered all his effects to the assignee, and that in this case the bankrupt is entitled to his discharge without the consent of a majority of his creditors, or the payment of fifty per cent, in value as required by section thirty-three. The bankrupt, by his counsel, not only declined to ask for, but positively refused an adjournment of the order to show cause to some future day, which I was willing to grant in order that if the district court decides that said assent was necessary, the same, if possible, might be obtained. The bankrupt claims that he can apply at any future time for permission to file the assent of his creditors to his discharge, and that his failure to do so on the return day of the order to show cause, does not prejudice any of the proceedings already had, and may show assets equal to fifty per cent.

[I certify that in the course of the proceedings in this cause now pending before me, the following questions arose pertinent to said proceedings, and were stated and agreed to by counsel for the bankrupt, and also by [685]*685counsel for creditors, and requested the usual certificate to the district court: I. Can an involuntary bankrupt apply for a discharge under any of the provisions of the bankrupt law? H. Is the thirty-third section of the bankrupt act as amended July twenty-seventh, eighteen hundred and sixty-eight, and July fourteenth, eighteen hundred and seventy, applicable to proceedings in involuntary bankruptcy? III. Can an involuntary bankrupt whose assets have been surrendered to the assignee, but without proof that the assets equal or amount to fifty per cent, of the amount proved against his estate, be discharged without the assent of a majority in number and value of his creditors who have proved their debts, &c., as required by said section thirty-three of the bankrupt act as amended, having been filed in the case at or before the time of the hearing of the application for discharge ? IV.' Can the certificate of conformity be granted in an involuntary case, when the assets do not equal fifty per cent, of the claims proved, which accrued subsequent to January first, eighteen hundred and sixty-nine, and the bankrupt does not file an assent of the majority of his creditors who have proved their claims, &c., as required, by the aforesaid section of the bankrupt act as amended? V. Can a bankrupt who neither pays the fifty per cent., and who does not prove that his assets equal or amount to that sum, and who does not tender or file the required assent, apply again for a discharge under and by virtue of the order to show cause, unless the return day of the order to show cause has been adjourned?

[The bankrupt act prescribes a particular and specific code of procedure or practice which the bankrupt must comply with before the question as to whether he is entitled to a discharge can be entertained by the court. In this case the bankrupt has complied with all the requirements of the bankrupt act, with the exception of paying fifty per cent of the amount of debts proved against his estate, or showing that they equal or amount to fifty per cent., or filing an assent in writing of a majority in number and value of his creditors who have proved their debts to his discharge, without regard to the percentage which may be realized from his estate. That section thirty-three of the bankrupt act expressly provides that a bankrupt may be discharged if he files such an assent on or- before the return day of the order to show cause why he should not be discharged; consequently, if he fails so to do, and his estate does not equal or amount to fift3r per cent, of the debts proved, the court cannot entertain his motion or application for a discharge.

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Related

Martin v. Berry
37 Cal. 208 (California Supreme Court, 1869)
In re Bunster
41 How. Pr. 406 (U.S. District Court, 1871)
In re Lanier
14 F. Cas. 1116 (N.D. Alabama, 1868)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 F. Cas. 684, 15 Ben. 242, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-bunster-nysd-1871.