In re Klein

14 F. Cas. 716, 1 How. 42
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Missouri
DecidedJuly 1, 1843
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 14 F. Cas. 716 (In re Klein) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Klein, 14 F. Cas. 716, 1 How. 42 (circtdmo 1843).

Opinion

CATRON, Circuit Justice.

This is an appeal from the district court of Missouri, in a case of bankruptcy, on the voluntary petition of the appellant to be discharged from his debts, on the surrender of his property, according to the act of congress of 1841 [5 Stat. 440]. The proceeding being in all respects regular, the petitioner moved for his discharge. The district court refused to grant such motion, “because it considered the act of congress under whica said Klein asked to be discharged from all his debts as being against the constitution of the United States, and therefore the court had no power to grant such discharge.”

The ground of this judgment the circuit court is called upon to revise. I am relieved from setting forth at any length the opinion of the district judge, because this has been already done, in an opinion delivered by me in the supreme court of the United States at its last term, when an attempt was made to bring the present question before that court to have it decided for the purposes of this case. By the constitution, congress is vested with power “to establish uniform laws on the subject of bankruptcies throughout the United States.” The district judge was of opinion that the extent of the power is limited to the principle on which the English bankrupt system was founded; and to that system the convention referred, when it adopted the clause above recited, for its definition. That system provided a proceeding by a creditor against a debtor, who was a trader; a distribution of a bankrupt’s effects equally among his creditors; and a discharge of the debtor from his - contracts, obtaining the consent of a given majority of his creditors. That it was a proceeding for the benefit of creditors, the whole system being founded on the prin[717]*717ciple that a trader who owed debts in the various parts of the country, and was fraudulently making away with his property, instead of paying his debts with it, should have the property taken away and placed in the hands of trustees or other- officers, with which his debts should be paid, and each of his creditors, whether present or absent, have his fair dividend, and that the bankrupt law of 1800 is a fair exposition of the constitutional provision. Briefly, that a bankrupt law was one by which honest creditors could force fraudulent debtors, who were traders, to surrender their property to pay ratably all their just debts; but that a law made solely and entirely for the benefit of debtors, and which enabled them at their own election to avoid their debts, was opposed to the whole intent, spirit, and object of a bankrupt law. 1 state this much of the grounds on which my brother judge’s decree was founded from his printed opinion, because this case has not been argued on the part of the creditors, for whom no counsel appeared in. this court, nor did there in the court below, as 1 am informed. The accuracy, industry, and unquestioned ability of the district judge have, I do not doubt, brought forward the best reasons that exist in support of the judgment he gave. The tenor and true spirit of the English bankrupt laws, such as they were when our federal constitution was adopted, he has given; and I agree with him that the act of 1841, in so far as it permitted the debtor, at his own sole election, to come into court and coerce an extinction of his debts, and abrogation of his contracts, contrary to the will of his creditors, was in violation of the leading principles on which the English laws were founded. Our law contemplated a proceeding by a debtor against his creditors, provided the debtor was insolvent. By the English law, the creditor alone could originate the proceeding; and it mattered not whether the defendant was insolvent or otherwise; if he did the fraudulent act, it made him a bankrupt, — a fraudulent trader. Then, by the English laws, “a fraudulent trader” could only be a bankrupt. With him as debtor, and with his creditors, could courts deal: and this at the election of the creditors, the debtor having no election to ask for distribution or for a discharge from his debts. If the power conferred on congress carries with it these restrictions, then the district court properly refused to discharge the applicant Klein, because the act of congress was unconstitutional in his case. But other and controlling considerations enter into the construction of the power. It is general and unlimited. It gives the unrestricted authority to congress over the entire subject, as the parliament of Great Britain had it. and as the sovereign states of this Union had it before the time when the constitution was adopted. To go no further: What was the power of the States on the subject of bankruptcies? They could, and constantly did, permit the debtor to come in voluntarily and surrender his property, and ask a discharge from his debts. The property was distributed generally among the creditors, and the debts of the petitioner annulled. Nor does the constitution prohibit the states from passing such laws. New York. Pennsylvania, Louisiana, and others now have them in full operation. The insolvent laws of Pennsylvania are in substance, and to a great extent in detail, similar to the act of congress of 1841, and no doubt furnished some of the ideas that were incorporated into the act. That Pennsylvania had power to pass these laws no one ever doubted, so far as she was not restricted by the constitution of the United States. The supreme court held, in the case of Ogden v. Saunders, 12 Wheat. [25 U. S.] 313, that the states retained the power and could exercise it by law, and that the law would operate to discharge the contract between debtor and creditor, they being inhabitants of the particular state at the date of the proceeding, if the contract had been made there after passing the law. In such case the parties contracted subject to the law, and it entered into the contract. The case of Boyle v. Zacharie, 6 Pet. [31 U. S.] 636, settled the contested question of power; and that it remained with the states to this limited extent. But the restrictions depend on general principles of international law and other parts of the constitution, especially that which prohibits the states from passing any law impairing the obligations of contracts, as will be seen by reference to the leading case on the subject of Sturges v. Crowninshield, 4 Wheat. [17 U. S.] 122. What the states might do before the adoption of the constitution may well be ascertained from what they now do in virtue of their respective powers. They may frame a bankrupt law in any form they see proper. This has never been questioned, so far as my knowledge extends. The controversies in the supreme court turned on the question whether the constitution inhibited the states (there being no acts of congress opposed to it) from legislating on the subject of bankruptcies, or whether the power was exclusive in congress. In the state tribunals the debtor comes involuntarily, and forces the creditor to prove his debt or be barred. One not a trader may apply. Neither is the consent of the creditors (or any portion of them) necessary to authorize a discharge from the contracts of the debtor. So he may have no property to divide, and many debts to annul, from which he seeks a discharge, and from which he is discharged. These powers clearly belonged to the state governments, before congress was invested with them, and this was done without limitation.

The district court relied confidently on the ground that congress can pass no law by violating contracts; and that the clause of the constitution conferred no such authority, [718]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 F. Cas. 716, 1 How. 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-klein-circtdmo-1843.