In re Duncan

8 F. Cas. 1, 8 Ben. 365
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedFebruary 15, 1876
DocketCase No. 4,131
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 8 F. Cas. 1 (In re Duncan) 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 Duncan, 8 F. Cas. 1, 8 Ben. 365 (S.D.N.Y. 1876).

Opinion

BLATCHFORD, District Judge.

In this case, on the ISth of December, 1S70, a petition in involuntary bankruptcy was presented to and filed in this court, praying that William Butler Duncan, William Watts .Sherman and Francis H. Grain, copart-ners under the firm name of Duncan, .Sherman & Co., be adjudged bankrupts. The petition purported to be the petition of 205 creditors. It set forth the claims of those creditors, and was signed by them. It was properly verified. It averred that the debtors resided in the city of New York, and had carried on business in this district for more than six months next preceding the date of-filing the petition; that the demands of the petitioners were provable in accordance with the provisions of the Revised Statutes and the several amendments thereof; that the petitioners believed that the debtors, as such copartners, owed debts to an amount exceeding the sum of $300; that the petitioners’ demands each exceeded the amount of $250; that the petitioners constituted one- > fourth at least in number of all the creditors of the debtors, as such copartners, whose debts exceeded $250; and that the aggregate of the petitioners’ debts provable under the j said Revised Statutes, and the said several ' amendments thereof, amounted to at least one-third of all the debts so provable against said debtors, as such copartners. It averred properly acts of bankruptcy, and was accompanied by depositions as to such acts, and by depositions as to the claims of the first five signers of the petition. It was also accompanied by a paper signed and acknowledged by the three debtors, in which they stated that, “upon the filing of the petition,” they “severally appear in person and admit that the requisite number and amount of their creditors have petitioned for an adjudication of bankruptcy against them heroin; and waive service of a copy of the petition and of the order to show cause herein, and admit that they committed the acts of bankruptcy alleged in said petition and consent to the entry of said order of adjudication.” It was further accompanied by an affidavit made by Walter S. Carter, one of the attorneys for the petitioning creditors, setting forth, “that he has examined the statement of debts of said alleged bankrupts, and that the total number of creditors of said alleged bankrupts whose claims exceed $250 does not exceed 786, and that the aggregate of all the debts of said alleged bankrupts, provable under the Revised Statutes of Ihe United States, title 01. ‘Bankruptcy,’ and the several amendments and supplements thereof, does not exceed the amount of $3.400.0oo; that the number of creditors whose debts exceed the amount of $250, uniting in the petition herein, is 205, the aggregate of whose debts provable under said Revised Statutes, and said several amendments and supplements thereof, amounts to $2,168,142.49.” On the presentation and filing of these papers, the court made an order, on the Sth of December, 1S75, in these words: “Upon reading and filing the foregoing admission, also the affidavit of Walter S. Carter, and the court being satisfied that said admission was made in good faith, it is hereby adjudged, that the requisite number and amount of the creditors of the said William Butler Duncan, William Watts Sherman and Francis H. Grain, co-partners under the firm name of Duncan, Sherman & Co., have petitioned for an adjudication of bankruptcy against them, in the above-entitled matter, and that the same proceed without further steps on that subject.” Thereupon, on the same day, on the foregoing appearance in person and consent of the debtors, an order of adjudication in bankruptcy, in due form, was entered and filed.

Certain creditors of the bankrupts, six in number, had, prior to the filing of the petition in bankruptcy, obtained judgments against them, as copartners, in a court of the state, and three of those six had, prior to the filing of such petition, brought what are known as creditors' suits, in a court of the state, founded on such judgments, to reach assets alleged to have been transferred by the debtors in fraud of creditors. One other of the six had, prior to the filing of the petition in bankruptcy, made a levy under an execution issued on his judgment, on property alleged by him to be liable to such levy. Seven other creditors have recovered judgments against the debtors, as copart-ners, in a court of the state, since the petition in bankruptcy was filed. On the 24th of December, 1S75, this court, on the petition of the bankrupts, made an order staying the suits brought by the said thirteen creditors until the question of the discharge of the debtors shall have been determined, and staying the issuing of execution on the judgments, and further proceedings on executions issued. The creditors so stayed now present a petition to the court, praying that the adjudication of bankruptcy, and all the proceedings thereunder, be adjudged void and revoked.

One ground urged for setting aside the adjudication is. that the petition for adjudication, and the papers which accompanied it, do not show that the petition is the petition of creditors to one-third of the amount of the debts, but show that it is not the petition of creditors to one-third of the amount of the debts. Another ground urged is. that it may now be shown, by evidence aliunde the papers which were before the court when the adjudication was made, that one-third in amount of the creditors did not unite in the petition, and that sm-li fact has been shown.

The 12th section of the act of Juno 22, 1S74 [3]*3(18 Stat 180), in amendment of the 30th sec-' tion of the act of March 2,1807 (13 Stat 530), provides that any person residing within the .jurisdiction of the United States, and owing provable debts exceeding the amount of'$300, who shall commit any one of certain specified acts, “shall be deemed to have committed an act of bankruptcy, and. subject to' the ■ conditions hereinafter prescribed, shall be adjudged a bankrupt on the petition of one or more of his creditors, who shall constitute one-fourth thereof, at least, in number, and the aggregate of whose debts provable under this act amounts to at least one-third of the ■debts so provable;” and that “the court shall, if such allegation as to the number or amount -of petitioning creditors be denied by the debtor, by a statement in writing to that -effect, require him to file in court forthwith -a full list of creditors, with their places of .residence and the sums due them respectively, and shall ascertain, upon reasonable no-tice to the creditors,' whether one-fourth in ■ ■number and one-third in amount thereof, as aforesaid, have petitioned that the debtor be •adjudged a bankrupt" The section then proceeds: “But if such debtor shall, on the filing ■of the petition, admit in writing that the requisite number and amount of creditors have ^petitioned, the court if satisfied that the admission was made in good faith, shall so adjudge, which judgment shall be final, and •the matter proceed without further steps on that subject. And if it shall appear that .such number and amount have not so petitioned, the court shall grant reasonable time, not exceeding, in cases heretofore commenced, twenty days, and, in cases hereafter ■commenced, ten days, within which other creditors may join in such petition. And if, at the expiration of such time so limited, the number and amount shall comply with the requirements of this section, the matter of bankruptcy may proceed; but if, at the expi-' ration of such limited time, such number and amount shall not answer the requirements -of this section, the proceedings shall be dismissed, and, in cases hereafter commenced, with costs.” The 13th section of the act of 1874, in amendment of the 40th section of the act of 1SG7 [14 Stat.

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Bluebook (online)
8 F. Cas. 1, 8 Ben. 365, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-duncan-nysd-1876.