In re Graves

9 F. 816
CourtDistrict Court, D. Delaware
DecidedJuly 1, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 9 F. 816 (In re Graves) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Graves, 9 F. 816 (D. Del. 1881).

Opinion

Bradford, D. J.

The questions to be considered and decided arise upon a rule to show cause why certain claims of Swan, Clark & Co., of the city of Philadelphia, against the bankrupt, Thomas J. Graves, should not bo disallowed and expunged from the list of unsecured debts proven before the register in bankruptcy. An answer has been put in to the petition and replications thereto, and issues joined. By an amendment, the statute of limitations has been pleaded. These claims consist of two promissory notes, and a book of account for moneys due and owing from the bankrupt to Swan, Clark & Co., and are as follows:

(1) $846.78. Wilmington, Delaware, May 20,1873.
Sixty days after date T promise to pay to the order of Swan, Clark & Co.» at the First Xatioual Bank of Wilmington, $846.78, without defalcation, for value received. Thomas J. Graves.
Indorsed: Swan, Clark & Co.
(2) $300. Wilmington, Delaware, May 12,1873.
Sixty days after date T promise to pay to the order of Swan, Clark & Co., at the First Xatioual Bank of Wilmington, $300, without defalcation, for value received. Thomas J. Graves.
Indorsed: Swan, Clark & Co.
(3) A bill of goods sold by Swan, Clark & Co. to the bankrupt, amounting to $222.40, the date of the last entry being June 26, 1873.

[818]*818The objections to the proof of these claims are—

(1) Payment. (2) The statute of limitations. (3) The reception of a preference against the provisions of the act of congress which they have not surrendered to the assignee for the benefit of the general creditors.

We do not think this plea of payment has been sustained. The declarations to that effect by one of the partners of the firm of Swan, Clark & Co., on the supposition that they had made a valid purchasof certain loan stock, is not enough. Such a declaration must have been made on the supposition that the sale had been a valid one, and as such had paid and wiped out the debt due on the promissory notes and book account. Now, that sale was set aside as void by the circuit court. If Swan, Clark & Co. have any merits on other grounds, and desire to come in on these claims pari passu with the other general creditors, they should not be prohibited because of the fact that they were mistaken in the supposition that they had made a valid purchase which had satisfied these notes and the book account. The court decided that no value passed by the transfer of the loan stock to Swan, Clark & Co., therefore there could not have been any payment in this mode of the notes and book account. We think this plea has not been sustained.

The statute of limitations has been urged as a bar to the proof of these notes and book account before the register in bankruptcy. It will be seen that these notes and bill of goods sold were not barred by the statute of limitations at the time of the adjudication of bankruptcy, that having been made on the twenty-ninth day of September, 1873. If they were so barred at that time, it is admitted that the bar remains in force, and they cannot be proven; but if the, bar has not already operated to prevent proof, does it run, or is it suspended by the bankruptcy and the appointment of the assignee ?

On one side it is urged that the United States courts will follow the state law in applying the statutes of limitations as they are applied in the states when the United States courts sit, and as six years bars the proceeding on notes, and three years on book account, it is alleged by the petitioners that these claims should not be proven. On the other hand, it is nowhere said in the Revised Statutes that claims barred by the state laws shall not be proven before the register in bankruptcy; and such being the case we inquire whether, in the administration of the bankrupt laws, it is consistent with their intention to apply the state limitation laws ?

[819]*819The theory on which the limitation acts are based is the prevention of the collection of stale claims, and this is founded on the reasonable presumption that a man, if he had a valid claim, would proceed to recover it by suit; but on the legal principle of causa cessante lex ipsa cessat that rule cannot have application, whore, by the provisions of the bankrupt act, the assignee cannot be sued by the creditors. The distribution of the bankrupt’s estate is committed to him without vexatious interference by suits of creditors. No time is fixed by law within which they must present their claims for proof. We think, the result of the authorities is that if the bar of the statute is not complete before the adjudication of bankruptcy, it does not run afterwards; and as that was the ease here, we are led to conclude that the statute of limitations of the state of Delaware does not present a bar to the proof of these claims. The most serious objection to the proof of these claims is based on the allegation that these creditors have held security for their payment, which they have not surrendered for the benefit of the general creditors. Now, it is undoubtedly true, to enable a secured creditor to prove his claim he must surrender his security, and all benefit and advantage arising therefrom, before he can prove his claim thus secured; and it is also true that if he contests his right to his security in the courts, and chooses to rely on it for the ultimate payment Of his claim, and fails, he loses his right to prove his claim as an unsecured one, unless he does it before the entry of the judgment or decree of the court against him. I do not consider it necessary to repeat what has been said on another occasion on this subject, as the view I take of the law and the facts of this case make it unnecessary to do so.

This is an objection to the proof of this claim which appears to me to be insuperable: Swan, Clark & Co. did, without a doubt, hold a security for their claims, which they now wish to prove within the meaning of the bankrupt law. They held the paper or instrument which secured them. It was of such a character that it could have been assigned or transferred to the assignee of the bankrupt prior to the decree, but not after it. It is true that the right to the loan stock was coupled with conditions, but they did not impair the right in the owner to transfer the stock subject to such conditions, or its value in the hands of the assignee after it should have been transferred.

The act of congress makes it imperative on any creditor thus secured to give up his security to the assignee before he shall be permitted to prove his claim. He can elect to stand on one or the other,— [820]*820that is, he can rely on his security, or he can give it up and prove liis claims as a general unsecured creditor, — and as he elects he must stand or fall. The original act of congress of March 2, 1867, applicable to this case, is in the following words, viz.:

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Bluebook (online)
9 F. 816, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-graves-ded-1881.