In re Flanagan

9 F. Cas. 239, 15 Sawy. 312, 18 Nat. Bank. Reg. 439, 1878 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 284
CourtDistrict Court, D. California
DecidedNovember 15, 1878
DocketCase No. 4,850
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 9 F. Cas. 239 (In re Flanagan) 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 Flanagan, 9 F. Cas. 239, 15 Sawy. 312, 18 Nat. Bank. Reg. 439, 1878 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 284 (californiad 1878).

Opinion

HOFFMAN, District Judge.

On the sixteenth of May, 1878, a petition in involuntary bankruptcy was filed against John Flanagan by certain of his creditors, claiming to constitute one fourth in number of all his creditors, and to represent one third in value of his aggregate indebtedness. On this petition the usual order to show cause was issued, and on the same day a petition was presented by the debtor praying that a creditor’s meeting be called to consider a composition proposed for their approval. The meeting was accordingly held, the composition was accepted by creditors to the requisite number and amount, and on the first of July the composition was duly confirmed by the court, and further proceedings in bankruptcy stayed.

On the twenty-eighth of August, one Thomas Meany, a creditor of the alleged bankrupt, filed his petition, praying that the composition be set aside. The ground of this application was, that the bankrupt had failed, and refused to comply with its terms by depositing certain notes with the register for the benefit of his creditors.

The reason of this refusal was the fact that one King had, previously to the filing of the petition in bankruptcy, levied an attachment upon the whole stock in trade of the alleged bankrupt, which attachment he refused to relinquish, and accept the terms of the composition.

As no adjudication had been made — no as-signee appointed, nor assignment made by the register — the lien of the attaching creditor remained unaffected by the bankruptcy proceedings.

This petition was, after several continuances, finally brought to a hearing on the twenty-fourth of September, 1878, on which day an order setting aside the composition was made. Previously, however, to the making of this order, but subsequently to the filing of Meany’s petition, viz., on the thirty-first of August, Flanagan filed his voluntary petition to be adjudged a bankrupt. The usual order of reference was made, and on the twenty-third of September he was adjudicated a bankrupt by the register. At the creditor’s meeting, called by the register for the election of an assignee, King, the attaching creditor, appeared by his counsel, and objected to the proceedings, on the ground that the court had no jurisdiction in the premises by reason of the pendency of the proceedings under the involuntary petition; and that the same’ not having been dismissed or otherwise terminated, .the court would not permit or take cognizance of the proceedings under the voluntary petition.

The.question thus presented was certified to the court, argued by counsel, and submitted for decision. It is objected, on behalf of the bankrupt, that King, the attaching creditor, has no standing in court, not having proved his debt in either proceeding. To this it is replied that proof of debt was not made in the present proceeding, because the creditor, by so doing, might be deemed to have come in under it, and to have waived his right to object to it Technically, the objection of the bankrupt seems to be well taken; but the omission can be remedied, and the rights of the creditor preserved by ordering him to make such proof, and reserving to him the right to make thereafter such objection to the proceedings as lie may see fit.

In the view I take of the principal question, such an order is unnecessary, for I shall proceed to dispose of the application on its merits, and as if the attaching creditor were regularly in court.

The ground on which the court is urged to set aside the adjudication, and to dismiss the petition in the voluntary case, is that the whole proceeding is void for irregularity. In support of this position, several eases are cited, and confidently relied on by counsel. The first and most pointed of these is In re Stewart [Case No. 13,419]. In that case a petition had been filed against Stewart by his creditors, and he had, before the return day of the rule, to show cause by an indorsement upon the copy of the petition served upon him, admitted that all the allegations of the petition, except those of fraud, were true. He subsequently, and before the re[240]*240turn day of the rule to show .cause, filed his voluntary petition, and was adjudged a bankrupt No reason for this proceeding appears to have been given, and the attorneys for the petitioning creditors moved that the two petitions be consolidated, or else that the adjudication on the second petition be set aside, and the case of the creditors held for trial.

In deciding this motion Mr. J. Duval observes: “It never was intended by the bankrupt act, and no correct rule of practice can tolerate it, that when a creditor has instituted proceedings to force his debtor into bankruptcy the latter should be allowed to become a bankrupt and be adjudicated as such on his own petition before a determination of the creditors’ petition. To permit such a practice might work a flagrant wrong upon the rights of the petitioning creditor.” The adjudication under the voluntary petition was thereupon set aside and the debtor was adjudged on the creditors’ petition. As a general rule of practice the ruling of the learned judge in this case was very possibly correct. But it by no means follows that the right of the insolvent to avail himself of the benefit of the act is in all cases suspended by the filing of a petition against him, or that the court is without jurisdiction to entertain it if filed.

Cases may easily be imagined where it may be indispensable to the interests of the other creditors and to the securing to the debtor the benefit of the act that he should file his voluntary petition. The creditors’ petition may be abandoned before adjudication or the allegation of the act of bankruptcy may be untrue, or the creditors may not be the holders of provable debts, or they may not constitute the statutory quorum of creditors. In these and the like cases it might be a great hardship upon the debtor to compel him either to admit allegations which he knows to be untrue, or else to be subjected to the delay and expense of contesting them, and in the mean time to have his right to the benefit of the act suspended and denied. At the termination of the proceedings, if the result be in his favor, his right to file his voluntary petition would of course revive. But it may then be too late to defeat attach ments and preferences, and to secure the equal distribution of his assets among all his creditors. The principal object of the act would thus be defeated.

The next case cited is In re Wielarski [Case No. 17,619]. In that case the bankrupt filed a voluntary petition in 186S, on which he was adjudicated, and an assignee appointed. In 1870 he filed a second petition. The same debts were set forth, and the same creditors named in both petitions. Objection was made to the proceeding under the second petition, which objection the register held to be well taken. The matter having been referred to the court. Mr. Justice Blatchford said: “The register is correct; the clerk will enter an order staying proceedings in this matter until the further order of the court If any good reason exists for going on with this matter, it may be shown to the court” This case, therefore, not only does not decide that the-filing of the second petition was wholly nugatory and void, and that the court was without jurisdiction to entertain it, but it clearly intimates that the court would proceed in it if any good reason for doing so should be shown.

The next case—In re Drisko [Case No. 4,090]—appears to have no application to the subject under consideration.

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Bluebook (online)
9 F. Cas. 239, 15 Sawy. 312, 18 Nat. Bank. Reg. 439, 1878 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-flanagan-californiad-1878.