In Re MacKlem

22 F.2d 426, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1563
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedNovember 2, 1927
Docket5082
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 22 F.2d 426 (In Re MacKlem) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re MacKlem, 22 F.2d 426, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1563 (D. Md. 1927).

Opinion

COLEMAN, District Judge.

This case arises upon an involuntary petition for an adjudication of bankruptcy, and an answer thereto which asserts that the individual sought to be so adjudicated is exempt by virtue of section 4b of the Bankruptcy Act (11 USCA § 22), because a farmer.

The petition was filed August 22, 1927, against John W. Macklem by three creditors, the Havre de Grace Banking & Trust Company and two individuals. It alleges that Macklem is a eanner of com and tomatoes, is insolvent, and within four months preceding the filing of the petition, namely, on August 9, 1927, committed an act of bankruptcy, in that he then made a deed of trust of all his property for the benefit of creditors. The petition is otherwise sufficient on its face. Macklem, in his answer, denies that he is a eanner, and alleges, first, that he is a person chiefly engaged in farming or tilling of the soil, and thus exempt; second, that the petitioning creditors have been preferred within four months of the filing of the petition, and are therefore disqualified; and, third, that one of these creditors, the Havre de Grace Banking & Trust Company, is estopped from filing the petition, because it endeavored to induce the respondent to make a general assignment to it, or its nominee, for the benefit of his creditors.

*427 Taking np first the question of estoppel, it seems clear that this is entirely without merit. There is evidence that the secretary of the Havre de Grace Banking & Trust Company, together with the president of another creditor bank, proposed to respondent that ho might best get hack “on his feet” by appointing them a committee, temporarily, to mange' his affairs. But there was nothing improper in this, or nothing inconsistent with the trust company’s present position.

As to the matter of disqualification of the three petitioning- creditors, Bankruptcy Act, § 59b (11 USCA § 95), provides that “three or more creditors who bjavo provable claims against any person * * may file a petition to have him adjudged a bankrupt.” Under some of the decisions, “provable” is held to mean any claim which might be proved, whether preferred or not; while other cases hold that it is the equivalent of “allowable.” See In re Standard Detroit Tractor Co. (D. C.) 275 F. 952, 954. But ibe weight of authority is that a creditor, who has received a voidable preference, may still join in the petition, though he may not be counted as one of the required three petitioning creditors, unless he surrender's his preference. Stevens v. Nave-McCord Co. (C. C. A.) 150 F. 71; In re Gillette (D. C.) 104 F. 769; Canute S. S. Co. v. Pittsburg Coal Co., 263 U. S. 244, 44 S. Ct. 67, 68 L. Ed. 287; In re Cooper (D. C.) 12 F.(2d) 485. As was said in the Stevens Case, page 76:

“The evil of preferences which the bankrupt law was enacted to remove, the remedy of an equal distribution of the property of the bankrupt which it was passed to provide, the prohibition of the use of their claims by preferred creditors until they surrender them, which the act contains, the general scope of the law and all its provisions read and considered together, and the duty to give to it a rational and sensible interpretation, have forced our minds to the conclusion that it was the intention of Congress that creditors who hold voidable preferences should not be counted either for or against the petition for an adjudication in bankruptcy until they surrender their preferences. This intention, thus deduced, must therefore prevail over the technical rules of construction which counsel for the appellees invoke. The result is: A creditor who holds a voidable preference has a provable claim in the sense that he may make and file the formal proof thereof specified by the bankruptcy law; but he may not procure an allowance of his claim, he may not vote at a creditors’ meeting, and he may not obtain any advantage from his claim in the bankruptcy proceeding before he surrenders his preference.
“Such a preferred creditor may present or may join in a petition for an adjudication of bankruptcy. But he may not be counted for the petition unless he surrenders his preference before the adjudication. In re Hornstein (D. C.) 122 F. 206, 273, 277; In re Gillette (D. C.) 104 F. 769.”

The question, therefore, becomes whether the petitioners, or any of them, have received voidable preferences, there being only the minimum number of petitioning creditors, three. The preferences alleged in the answer are that on May 2, 1927, Maeklem paid to one cf the individual petitioners $59 on account, and on July 11, 1927, to the other individual petitioner $133.59 on account; these petitioners knowing Maeklem was then insolvent. As to the third petitioner, the Havre de Grace' Banking & Trust Company, the claim is that it was prefeired by the payment on July 16,1927, of a note for $206.20, dated May 6, 1926, and also by payment of interest about the same time on another note which it held for $10,000.

The court does not think that any of these payments can he called preferences. It does not appear that the debtor was actually insolvent at the times the payments were made. True, he was in financial difficulties; but that is not the equivalent of insolvency. Indeed, on July 5, 1927, 11 days prior to the last payment, at a meeting of the directors of the Havre de Grace Banking & Trust Company, it was their opinion, after examining Macklem’s assets and liabilities, that he was not then insolvent. But the intent of the creditor to whom the alleged preferential payment is made is not material. It is the intent of the debtor that controls. In re Truitt (D. C.) 203 F. 550. Macklein seems to have had no intent to prefer the parties paid, over his other creditors; also payments of currently maturing liabilities in such comparatively small amounts as these are probably not preferential payments in any event. In re Columbia Real Estate Trust Co. (D. C.) 205 F. 980; Houchin Sales Co. v. Angert (C. C. A.) 11 F.(2d) 118.

The real point in the case, then, is narrowed down to the single question of whether Maeklem was a fanner or tiller of the soil. This is a question of fact, to be decided upon the circumstances presented by each case. In re Driver (D. C.) 252 F. 956; In re Sutter (D. C.) 270 F. 248; In re Brais (C. C. A.) 15 F.(2d) 693. Whether he is exempt must be determined by consider» *428 tion of the relative importance of all of his activities at the date of the act charged as an act of bankruptcy. In re Disney (D. C.) 219 F. 294; In re Brown (C. C. A.) 253 F. 357; In re Brown (D. C.) 284 F. 903. The burden of proving that he is not within the exempt class is upon the petitioning creditors. In re Brais, supra; Smith v. Bank of Brownsville (C. C. A.) 15 F (2d) 792.

With this outline of the legal considerations to be borne in mind, the facts now must be analyzed. Mr. Macklem’s father had operated the cannery here involved for a number of years prior to his death in 1924. Thereupon the son took over the business. He greatly improved and enlarged the plant in 1925, preparatory to the canning season of that year. He owns two farms, and a 10-acre traét upon which-his house is situated.

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Bluebook (online)
22 F.2d 426, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1563, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-macklem-mdd-1927.