In re McLean

16 F. Cas. 240
CourtDistrict Court, D. Delaware
DecidedJuly 1, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 16 F. Cas. 240 (In re McLean) 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 McLean, 16 F. Cas. 240 (D. Del. 1869).

Opinion

BRADFORD, District Judge.

On the 12th of June last, a rule to show cause why the prayer of the petitioner, William Canby, as-signee in bankruptcy of John McLean and John P. McLean, trading as John McLean & Son, to obtain authority from this court to take from the separate-estate of John P. McLean, funds, and apply the same to the payment of joint creditors pari passu with the separate creditors, was granted, and made returnable on the 26th day of the same month. William Bush, administrator of Maria T. Smith's estate, and as such a creditor of John P. McLean individually, opposed the granting of the petition, and was represented by the Hon. S. F. Bayard, as his counsel. The petitioner was represented by George H. Bates and Edward G. Bradford; Jr. The questions involved were argued at great length with much ingenuity and elaboration; and the confidence expressed by the counsel for the petitioner in the equity of the application, and the careful preparation they have given to the ease, have induced me to go at greater length into its examination than I otherwise should have done. The direct object and purpose of the petitioner, for which he seeks the sanction of this court, stripped of all unnecessary verbiage, is to take money from a fund which is appropriated by law to the payment of one class of creditors to the exclusion of the other class until the first is fully satisfied, and apply the same pari pas-su between the separate and firm creditors in such manner that the separate fund is rendered insufficient to pay the separate creditors. Whether this may be done is the precise question to be answered, and all argument having a tendency to show what ought to be the law on this subject, arising out of the supposed equal equity between the separate creditors of the firm and the joint creditors, worked out through the medium of John McLean’s equitable claim against his bankrupt partner, must give way to the actual state of the law as now existing on the subject of the distribution of the estate of the bankrupts, under the bankrupt act now in force.

The first question to be considered is, what is the law on this subject to be administered by a court of equity outside of the provisions of the bankrupt law? And the second is, has that law been changed by the bankrupt acts? It is the undoubted law of this country, decided and sanctioned by the -supreme court of the United States, that the separate estate of insolvent partners must be first appropriated to the payment of the separate or individual creditors before it can be touched for the payment of the joint or partnership creditors. It is too late to enter on an examination of the reasons of the law and its equity. There was a short period during which joint creditors were permitted under a joint commission to prove against the separate estate, and come on that fund pari passu with the separate creditors. But that law was after-wards changed, and in England the result of the law is at last settled as above stated, with some exceptions not applicable to this case. Justice Storv in his treatise on Partnership (section 376), says, “In the first place then, it is a general rule in bankruptcy, that the joint debts are primarily payable out of the joint effects, and are entitled to a preference over the separate debts of the bankrupt; and so, in the converse case, the separate debts are primarily payable out of the separate effects of the bankrupt, and possess a like preference, and the surplus only after satisfying-such priorities can be reached by the other class of debts. For this purpose the joint estate and the separate of the bankrupt constitute separate funds to be administered separately by the assignees under the commission, whether it be a separate commission against one partner, or a joint commission against all the partners.’ Justice Story is not altogether satisfied with the certainty and definiteness of the equity underlying the decisions; but still states this to be the settled law of England, with three exceptions in which joint creditors shall be permitted to come on the separate property: — !. “Where the joint creditor is the petitioner for a separate commission against a bankrupt partner; 2. Where there is no joint estate and no living solvent pai-tner; 3. Where there are no separate debts. In the first ease the petitioning creditor may prove his debt, and ?'. : re pari passu with the separate creditors in the separate estate. In the second case, all the joint creditors enjoy the same privilege; and in the third case, all the joint creditors share pari passu with each other.” Mr. Gow, in his work on Partnership (pages [242]*242312-334), cited in note 1, Story, Partn. § 377, gives a statement of the decisions in England on this subject and arrives at the same result. Chancellor Kent, in Murray v. Murray, 5 Johns. Ch. 72, reviews all the law on this subject, stating Lord Hardwicke’s rulings —Lord Thurlow’s subsequent adverse decision by which he permitted the joint creditors to share pari passu with the separate creditors, and Lord Roselyn’s restoration of the old rule, not to permit the joint creditors to share in the separate fund until the separate creditors were satisfied (with the exceptions as stated by Story, above quoted). The court of appeals of Maryland in McCulloh v. Dashiell, 1 Har. & G. 96-107, review the law on this subject, and after examining the authorities, say, “but this examination will satisfy us that amidst all the fluctuations of the rule the principles established in the first cases, occurring more than a century since, have been but for a short period materially encroached upon, and that now the leading principles of distribution, with some modifications, are what they were originally established to be;” and further on “we are thus disposed to adopt the ancient rule as more consonant to equity and justice, that the joint creditors can only look to the surplus after the payment of the separate debts; and on the other hand, that the separate creditors can only seek indemnification from the surplus of the joint fund after the satisfaction of the joint creditors.” The Massachusetts cases in 9 and 10 Cush. and 10 and 13 Gray, cited by the counsel for the opposing creditor, all recognize this rule to be the established one in England; but ground their decisions on the language of their state insolvent act, which separates the funds and apportions them to different classes of creditors primarily, and then over to the other class after the preferred class has been satisfied. The statute of Massachusetts in this respect is, with the exception of the use of the word “company” for “partnership,” identical with the national bankrupt act now in force, and these decisions will be hereafter referred to for another purpose.

This separation of the funds and their appropriation to the two classes of creditors, so that neither class can share in the fund appropriated to the use of the other until the latter has been fully satisfied, is recognized by the supreme court of the United States as the settled law of this country. The exceptions not pertinent to this case which have been above recited as attaching to the English rule are not considered as law in this country. Murril v. Neill, 8 How. [49 U. S.] 421. The case arose on the construction of a deed of trust for the benefit of creditors. The premises conveyed by the deed were the private property of one of the insolvent partners.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In re Telfer
184 F. 224 (Sixth Circuit, 1910)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 F. Cas. 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-mclean-ded-1869.