In Re Fant

21 F.2d 182, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1352
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. South Carolina
DecidedAugust 16, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 21 F.2d 182 (In Re Fant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Fant, 21 F.2d 182, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1352 (southcarolinawd 1927).

Opinion

NORTHCOTT, Circuit Judge.

This matter comes before the eourt upon the petition of the People’s Bank of Anderson, S. C., for a review of the order of C. E. Cooley, Esq., referee, dismissing petition of said bank, requesting leave to file an amended formal proof of claim in the matter of E. G. Fant, Sr., bankrupt.

There seems to-be no dispute as to the facts in this case. The People’s Bank was the petitioner, and the sole petitioner that brought the bankrupt into court, and it was upon the petition of the bank, and upon at least part of the bank’s alleged claim against the bankrupt, that E. G. Fant was adjudicated bankrupt. The claim of the petitioner was fully set up in the petition as at first filed, and was admitted in part to be correct by the bankrupt, and it was upon the claim of the bank, as partially admitted, that the special master, afterward the referee, based his recommendation to the court that Fant be adjudicated bankrupt. This was done.

Afterward the attorney of record for the bank as petitioner, acting as attorney for the trustee in this case, brought and prosecuted to a successful termination a suit in the state eourt to set aside a conveyance theretofore made by the bankrupt, and by this suit there was brought into the bankruptcy eourt a considerable fund. There is no other fund except this, with the exception of an insignificant amount recovered from insurance policies of the bankrupt. The expenses of the trustee’s litigation in the state court far exceeded this amount: In the suit in the state eourt, the bank’s claim against the bankrupt was set up, and the claim was passed on and upheld, at least in part, by the .state court in its decision.

After the expiration of the year fixed by the statute, it was discovered that the bank had filed no formal proof of claim, other than that set out in its petition, and the referee was petitioned by the bank for permission to file an amended proof of claim, or a proof of *183 claim on a nunc pro tunc order. This was refused by the referee.

The United States Circuit Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, in the case of Globe Indemnity Co. et al. v. Keeble, Trustee, 20 F.(2d) 84, decided June 3, 1927, laid down the rule “that amendments to an imperfect claim, to make it correct, may be allowed after the expiration of the year for filing claims, if, in the opinion of the courts, such a course is in furtherance of justice.” See authorities cited in this opinion.

The trend of modem decisions on this question, without exception, is to the effect that, where there is anything in the record in the bankruptcy case which establishes a claim against the bankrupt, it may be used as_ a basis for amendment after the expiration of the statutory year, where substantial justice will be done by allowing the amendment.

The bank brought Fant into court, and it was upon the bank’s petition, and the bank’s claim sot out therein, that Fant was adjudged a bankrupt. It was through the efforts of the bank’s attorney, representing the trustee, that the fund was brought into court through the suit in the state court. It was through the efforts of the hank, as petitioner, that the trustee himself was appointed. The bank, at the request of the trustee, thereby recognizing it as a creditor in the bankruptcy case, agreed to pay the cost of the proceedings in the state court, and the bank co-operated in every way possible in that suit. The hank’s claim was set up in the suit in the state court, and was at least partly used as the basis for the favorable result there obtained. There is no escaping the conclusion that, if it can bo lawfully done, the bank should be allowed to participate in the distribution of the funds in the bankruptcy court as a creditor. Any other course would be inequitable and unjust in the extreme. That this is true was virtually admitted in the argument of the case.

The fact must be recognized that courts cannot legislate, and that, no matter how equitable or just a claim may be, it cannot be allowed, unless authorized by the Bankruptcy Act, properly interpreted. It remains, therefore, to be determined whether or not there was a sufficient claim filed, or sufficient appeared from the record of the ease itself, within the year fixed by the statute, to support an amendment after the expiration of the year.

In Remington on Bankruptcy, vol. 2, § 747, it is said: “An amendment must be based upon an original claim, filed. And the power of permitting amendment must not be perverted to let in dilatory creditors who have failed to file any proof of claim within the statutory year limited for filing claims. # * * »

Again in the same section it is said: “But, at any rate, the original proof need not be formal in order to support an amendment. Thus an agreement to accept a settlement, signed by the creditor and setting forth the amount and nature of his claim, will be sufficient to support an amendment. Again, a mere letter mentioning the claim, received by receiver and acknowledged by him to the creditor, has been held a sufficient basis.”

It would seem from this authority and cases cited in the notes to section 747 that the allowance of the amendment addresses itself largely to the discretion of the court, provided there is a sufficient basis for the amendment. Again in the same authority (section 889), we find:

“Of course, there must have been an original proof duly filed within the year; otherwise there would be nothing by whieh to amend; and the power of amendment is not to be distorted to let in dilatory creditors who have filed no proof within the limited year. But the original claim need not have been styled ‘proof of debt,’ and the creditor’s pleadings in a suit by the trustee may be sufficient. And the filing of an informal claim with the receiver or trustee may be sufficient. And the rule has been so relaxed by recent decisions that it has finally come to be held in one circuit that a failure to file within the year, owing to a ‘pardonable mistake,’ will warrant the allowance of a nunc pro tune order, especially where it also appears that the claim was recognized by the court and the creditors as one entitled to share in composition proceedings.”

In Re Salvator Brewing Co. (C. C. A.) 193 F. 989, the court said: “The testimony taken in proceedings before the referee presented all the facts necessary to establish Meyer’s claim. This was not in the shape of a formal proof, it is true, but it cannot be questioned that the records of the bankruptcy court contain proof that these directors have a valid claim against the estate. It was but a reasonable exercise of its discretion for the court to permit an amendment, conforming the proof to the rules and practice of the court; the fact being undisputed that its own records informed the court that a perfectly valid claim existed.” See, also, In re Standard & Electric Co. (D. C.) 186 F. 587.

In In re Faulkner (C. C. A.) 161 F. 900, it is said: A paper in no way purporting to be a proof of claim was held to be sufficient document upon which to base an amendment *184 filing a formal proof of claim. See, also, In re Roeber (C. C. A.) 127 F. 122; Buckingham & Estes (C. C. A.) 128 F. 584; In re Levinson (C. C. A.) 1 F.(2d) 851.

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Bluebook (online)
21 F.2d 182, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1352, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-fant-southcarolinawd-1927.