In re Chadwick

5 F. Cas. 398, 5 Law Rep. 457
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 15, 1842
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 5 F. Cas. 398 (In re Chadwick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Chadwick, 5 F. Cas. 398, 5 Law Rep. 457 (W.D. Pa. 1842).

Opinion

IRWIN, District Judge.

On the 23d of October, 1841, the bankrupts, Hanson S. Chadwick and Hart A. Leavitt, merchants of the city of Pittsburgh, made an assignment of all their estate, rights and credits, to assignees, in trust for certain preferred creditors; and on the 19th and 25th of March, following, they severally presented their petitions for the benefit of the bankrupt act, and [399]*399were subsequently declared to be bankrupts. Tlieir petitions for discharge are opposed on the ground that the assignment was voluntarily given of all their property, rights and credits, in contemplation of bankruptcy, and is therefore fraudulent and void. On the part of the bankrupts it is contended that the assignment is not embraced in the bankrupt act; that the words, “all future payments, securities,” &c.. found after the enacting clause of the second section, which it is supposed to infringe, mean all payments, &c., subsequent to the time the act took effect; and that if the act does include the assignment, they are protected by the first and second provisions of the said second section. The act was passed on the 19th of August, 1S41 [5 Stat. 449], and the seventeenth section declares “that this act shall take affect from and after the first day of February next.” Until the time last mentioned, the act had no legal existence or power, except as to such parts of it as, in express words, are retrospective, or which declare that certain provisions shall take effect from “and after the passage of the act.” The rights which it creates, its disabilities, and obligations began on the 2d day of February. 1841, except where it otherwise provides in words, the import of which cannot be mistaken, as in the retrospective clause of the second section, which prevents the discharge of a bankrupt, who has made an assignment with preferences, subsequent to the first of January, 1841, or at any other time, in contemplation of the passage of a bankrupt law, unless assented to by a majority in interest of the unpreferred creditors, and in that part of the 4th section which declares that the bankrupt shall not be entitled to a discharge and certificate “who shall not have kept proper books of account, after the passage of this act, nor any person who, after the passage of this act, shall apply trust funds to his own use.” These words are not found in any •other part of the act, from which it may be inferred that, where congress, in any other case, intended to give the act effect from its passage, the same language would have been used; yet, if equivalent words are used, and the context and the scope of the act indicate the same purpose, they must receive the like construction. One leading and important object of the act is to place the creditors of a bankrupt upon an equality in the distribution of his assets; and to effect this, in the first section, “any fraudulent conveyance, assignment,” etc., is made an act of bankruptcy, and in the second section, all “payments, securities,” etc., with preferences, in contemplation of bankruptcy, are declared to be a fraud upon the act The words “any fraudulent conveyance,” &c., in the first section, ■embrace the fraudulent acts mentioned in the second section, and they are alike void, and a fraud upon the act, and subject to the same action in case of both voluntary and involuntary bankruptcy. They are, with the other enumerated cases in the first section, acts of bankruptcy It has become material to inquire, from what time they are'so? No argument need be used to show that the “persons liable to become bankrupts within the true intent and meaning of the act,” are only such as committed acts of bankruptcy from the time it took effect. This is too obvious to be denied. The great aim and object of the law is to declare -what shall be acts of bankruptcy, and who are to be bankrupts; all the rest is but details of proceedings in bankruptcy, and these proceedings must necessarily begin to operate at the time when the subject matter of them can be reached. Unless, therefore, an exception is made of a particular class of bankrupts, whose acts are void, from the passage of the law, there can be no decree of bankruptcy made which will have relation back to that time. It is contended that this exception is made by a fair construction of the second section of the act; that though it may be admitted that the first four classes of persons mentioned in the first section as liable to become bankrupts could only become so after the law took effect, yet that the fifth class, such as make “any fraudulent conveyances, assignments,” &c., from the natural meaning of the words “future payments,” &c., in the second section, which only define the frauds referred to in the first section, must be deemed bankrapts from the passage of the act. It must be admitted, that where a statute requires something to be done in future, or forbids that which was lawful before to be done in future, and there should not be found in any other part of it language to restrict, qualify, enlarge, or show another meaning than the words naturally import, it takes effect from its passage, however inconvenient or injurious the consequences. The second section, unconnected -with any other part of the act, would involve those who made “payments, conveyances, &e.” in bankruptcy from the passage of the act, so that all such “payments, conveyances, &c.” from that time would be fraudulent and void, and the person making them could not receive a discharge, ■while from the operation of the first and seventeenth sections all other acts of bankruptcy are created such at a future day, the act as to them not going into effect until more than six months from its passage. In the first section those liable to become bankrupts are ranged in classes, the fifth being such as “make any fraudulent conveyance, assignment, &e.,” and but for the words “future payments, &c.,” in the second section, this class as well as the first foui' could not be known as bankrupt before the day on which the act was to take effect. Can it be that the legislature intended to discriminate between them, so that one class should be the immediate subject of notice and punishment while the other classes are protected for more than six months longer? In the nature and in the degree of frauds [400]*400they are all placed by the statute upon the same equal ground, but they were not so before the statute was passed, for the first four always bore a character of fraud, while the fifth, as defined by the second section, makes that fraudulent which was before sanctioned by general usage among merchants and by the laws of the state. It might be supposed therefore, that if it was designed to apply the law to one act of bankruptcj'- at one period, and to another at a later period, the longest notice was due to the persons whose assignments and transfers, by long usage and the statutes of several of the states— Pennsylvania among the number — were valid and sometimes meritorious, and who, if the bankrupt law took effect from its passage, could not in distant parts of the union, and after they had made bona fide transferances of property, know that they had subjected themselves to its provisions. It is a mistake to suppose that such assignments had any character of fraud.

In the case of Brashear v. West, 7 Pet. [32 U. S.] 614,

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Bluebook (online)
5 F. Cas. 398, 5 Law Rep. 457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-chadwick-pawd-1842.