In re California Pac. R.

4 F. Cas. 1060, 3 Sawy. 240, 2 Cent. Law J. 79, 11 Nat. Bank. Reg. 193, 1874 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 131
CourtDistrict Court, D. California
DecidedDecember 18, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 4 F. Cas. 1060 (In re California Pac. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re California Pac. R., 4 F. Cas. 1060, 3 Sawy. 240, 2 Cent. Law J. 79, 11 Nat. Bank. Reg. 193, 1874 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 131 (californiad 1874).

Opinion

HOFFMAN, District Judge.

A petition having been filed praying that the above corporation be adjudged a bankrupt, it appeared specially and under protest, and through its counsel moved that the proceeding be dismissed on various grounds particularly set forth, in the exceptions on file. The cause has been argued at very great length, and with a zeal and ingenuity proportioned to the magnitude of the interests and the importance of the questions involved in its determination.

First. It is objected that the bankrupt act is unconstitutional, in so far as it attempts to subject to its operation any persons other than “merchants and traders.” That at the time of the adoption of the constitution the bankruptcy acts of Great Britain only embraced this class of persons, and that the grant in the constitution must be construed as limiting this power of congress to those persons only who were considered by the framers of the instrument capable of becoming or being adjudged “bankrupt.” But this question is no longer open to discussion. Mr. J. Story says (Comm, g 1113): “In the English system the bankrupt laws are limited to persons who are traders or connected with matters of trade or commerce; but this is a mere matter of policy and by no means enters into the nature of such laws.”

The only case in which the restricted view of the constitutional grant was adopted— In re Klein [Case No. 7,860], — -was overruled by the circuit court, Mr. J. Catron presiding. In his opinion, that eminent judge observes: “But other and controlling considerations enter into the construction of the power. It is general and unlimited; it gives the unrestricted authority to congress over the entire subject, as the parliament of Great Britain had it, and as the sovereign states of this Union had it when the constitution was adopted. * * * In considering the question before me, I have not pretended to give a definition, but purposely [1061]*1061avoided any attempt to define the mere word 'bankruptcy.’ It is employed in the constitution in the plural, and as part of an expression — ‘the subject of bankruptcies.’ The ideas attached to the word in this connection are numerous and complicated. They form a subject of extensive and complicated legislation; of this subject congress has general jurisdiction, and the true inquiry is, to what limits is that jurisdiction restricted? I hold it extends to all cases where the law causes to be distributed the property of the debtor among his creditors. This is its least limit. Its greatest is the discharge of the debtor from his contracts, and all intermediate legislation affecting substance and form, but tending to further the great end of the subject — distribution and discharge — is in the competency and discretion of congress. With the policy of a law letting in all classes, others as well as traders, and permitting the bankrupt to come in voluntarily and be discharged without the consent of his creditors, the courts have no concern.” [Nelson v. Carland] 1 How. [42 U. S.] 278. The principles thus clearly enunciated have, so far as I am aware, been uniformly and universally followed by the courts, and they have recently been distinctly adopted and reaffirmed in cases which have arisen under the existing bankrupt act. In re Silverman [Case No. 12,835], per Mr. J. Deady; In re Reiman [Id. 11,073], per Mr. J. Blatchford. The poiDt must therefore be regarded -as settled. The exception is overruled.

Second. It is objected that the act is unconstitutional so far as it applies to corporations, inasmuch as it denies to them the right to obtain a discharge in any case. It is contended that it is of the essence of a bankruptcy law to provide a discharge for all persons brought within its scope, unless that right has been forfeited by the misconduct- of the bankrupt, that congress cannot make a law a “bankruptcy law” by merely designating it as such, nor, under •color of passing such a law, assume the power to provide for the collection of debts and to regulate the relations of debtor and creditor throughout the United States; and that, inasmuch as this act prohibits the discharge of corporations in any case, it is not as to them a bankrupt law, and is, therefore, unconstitutional. The answer to this objection is, that it unwarrantably assumes the fundamental proposition on which it rests. I can nowhere find it decided or maintained that a law to be “a law on the subject of bankruptcy,” within the meaning of the constitution, must provide for the discharge of all persons subject to its provisions.

The constitutionality of the act of 1841 was doubted, and even denied, so far as it sought to discharge a debtor and his future acquisitions from debts [created]2 before its passage, without the assent of a majority of his creditors; but I am not aware that it was contended that it must provide for his discharge, or else it would cease to be “a law on the subject of bankruptcy.” By the bankruptcy law of 1841 [5 Stat. 443], every debtor could be discharged without payment in whole or in part, and without the assent of his creditors. With respect to this feature of the law, Chancellor Kent observes: “The provision in the bankrupt act which rendered it a general insolvent act, and was the one almost exclusively in operation, gave occasion to serious doubts whether it was within the true construction and purview of the constitution, and it was that branch of the statute that brought this system, and I think justly, into general discredit and condemnation, and led to the repeal of the law.” 2 Kent, Comm. 391.

The constitutionality of the law was fully upheld (5 Hubb’s N. G. R. [5 Hill] 317-327); but the question raised was, as we have seen, not whether a bankruptcy law must contain a provision for the discharge of the debtor, but whether it could, constitutionally, con'tain such a provision except in respect to merchants and traders adjudged to be bankrupts in an involuntary proceeding.

The bankrupt act [14 Stat. 533], even if all provisions for the granting of discharges were stricken out, would still retain the most important features of a bankruptcy law, viz.: Those which act upon the debtor in invitum. Those provisions are founded on what the author of the bill declared to be “the first principles of all such systems of laws,” viz.: “That when insolvency beyond all reasonable chance of recovery occurs, the administration of the bankrupt’s effects belongs to his creditors and not to himself.” They are also intended for the protection of the creditor against the fraudulent practices and the reckless conduct of his debtdrs. They are designed to prevent preferences on the eve of failure — the secretion or abstraction of the property for the benefit of the debtor’s friends or relatives, to provide that there shall be no transfers which cannot be inquired into, no settlements by an insolvent upon his wife or children which cannot be reached and declared void through the courts of bankruptcy.

To effect these objects the act provides that when a debtor (who need not necessarily be an insolvent) has committed any of the acts of bankruptcy defined in the act, he may be proceeded against in a summary manner. He may be deprived of the possession and control of all his property liable for his debts, and the title thereto vested in an as-signee to be selected by his creditors, such title to relate back to the date of the commencement of the proceedings, and to include all property of the debtor, wherever situated in any state of the Union. Only national legislation could attribute such an operation to the assignment. It appears to me [1062]

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4 F. Cas. 1060, 3 Sawy. 240, 2 Cent. Law J. 79, 11 Nat. Bank. Reg. 193, 1874 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-california-pac-r-californiad-1874.