In re Merriman

17 F. Cas. 131, 18 Nat. Bank. Reg. 411
CourtDistrict Court, D. Connecticut
DecidedFebruary 15, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 17 F. Cas. 131 (In re Merriman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Merriman, 17 F. Cas. 131, 18 Nat. Bank. Reg. 411 (D. Conn. 1878).

Opinion

SHIPMAN, District Judge.

Matthew M. Merriman had been duly adjudicated a bankrupt by decree of this court, prior to August 17th, 1S75, and his estate was then in settlement. On that day, upon his application, an order was passed directing a meeting of his creditors to be held on August 30th, 1875, to ascertain if they would resolve to accept a composition to be proposed by him in satisfaction of their respective debts. At said meeting he presented a proposition to pay, in full satisfaction and discharge of their respective claims, twenty-five per centum thereof, which payment was to be secured by his four equal promissory notes, indorsed by Joseph Merriman, to be dated on the day of the final confirmation of the resolution by the court, and payable in three, six, nine, and twelve months from the date thereof, with interest. The American National Bank had duly proved against the estate of said bank-nipt his notes to the amount of four thousand four hundred dollars, indorsed by Joseph Merriman. Said resolution was passed at said meeting by the requisite majority in number and value of the creditors assembled at such meeting, and was confirmed by the signatures thereto of the debtor and of the requisite creditors in number and value. The American National Bank, by their duly constituted attorney, expressly accepted said proposition at the first meeting of creditors, and expressed said acceptance by their signature. At the second meeting of creditors, held on September 11th, 1875, the resolution was found by the court to be for the best interest of all concerned, and was ordered to be recorded. On November 27th, 1875, M. M. Merriman gave said bank his three notes, amounting in all to four thousand four hundred dollars, indorsed by Joseph Merriman, in renewal of the pre-existing notes which were due to said bank, paid the discount due thereon, and continued to renew said notes, making from time to time partial payments on the renewals, and paying the discounts thereon, until December 8th, 1876, when theie was due upon the last renewals three thousand one hundred and eighty-five dollars, which sum with interest thereon is still unpaid. Joseph Merriman has continued to be the indorser upon each set of renewals. The bank received in one year after September 11th, 1875, either in reduction of the notes, or by way of interest, more than the amount which was payable by M. M. Merriman by the terms of the composition. but did not receive the same as a payment on the composition. No notes in accordance with the resolution were ever given to or demanded by said bank, but the giving of said notes was waived by the bank. Joseph Merriman’s indorsement made the original notes and the renewals secure. It was not claimed by the assignee that said bank assented to or signed said resolution under any promise or expectation that the debt of four thousand four hundred dollars was to be paid by the bankrupt. Fraud on the part of either party to the composition was not claimed. M. M. Merriman was again adjudicated a bankrupt by decree of this court on February 10th, 1S77, and John Hooker, Esq., [132]*132was subsequently appointed assignee of bis estate. Said bank has proved against said estate the last renewal notes, amounting to three thousand one hundred and eighty-five dollars. The assignee objects to the allowance of this claim upon the ground that the notes are without consideration, and that the debt which they represent has been legally discharged.

All the questions of law which arise upon the foregoing facts were discussed by counsel, the principal question being, whether an express promise made by a bankrupt to a creditor to pay the amount of his debt is valid, such creditor having theretofore expressly assented to a composition made and confirmed under the 17th section of the amended bankrupt act of June 22, 1874 [18 Stat. 182], and such composition having been substantially carried into effect, and exact compliance with its terms having been waived by the creditor. An express promise by a debtor to pay a debt which had been, previously to such promise, barred by some positive statute, or had been discharged by operation of law, is binding upon the promisor. Cook v. Bradley, 7 Conn. 57; Stafford v. Bacon, 1 Hill, 532. In such cases the moral obligation to make payment, although the debt has been legally discharged, is a sufficient consideration for a new and express promise. In order to revive a debt which had been discharged by bankruptcy or insolvency proceedings, the new promise must be clear, distinct and unequivocal. Allen v. Ferguson, 18 Wall. [85 U. S.] 1. A promise to pay a debt which has been voluntarily discharged by the creditor, as by accord and satisfaction, is not legally binding. Performance of an agreement of composition inter partes, in accordance with the terms of the agreement, or legal tender of performance of such agreement in accordance with its terms, is a discharge of the debt which has been agreed to be compromised, so that the discharged debt cannot legally be revived. An agreement of composition inter partes becomes an executed agreement by full payment on the composition, though not in accordance with the terms of the agreement, provided compliance with the terms is waived by the creditor.

I forbear to consider the question whether the payment within the year to the bank of an amount of money equal to the twenty-five per cent, and interest, which was payable by the resolution, is a satisfaction of the agreement, the money not having been paid to or received by the bank upon the composition, but upon the antecedent debt, and shall assume that, before the last renewal notes were given, the debtor had been legally discharged by his compliance with the terms of the resolution, legal compliance having been waived by the creditor.

The question which was first suggested resolves itself into this: Is a discharge, by performance of the terms of a bankruptcy composition, a discharge by operation of law, or is it a voluntary discharge from the debt which was due to a creditor who had expressly assented to the resolution of composition? The resolution to accept a composition, and the proceedings which result in an assent by the requisite number of creditors, and in the recording of the resolution by order of court, are proceedings in bankruptcy. They are a method of dividing the estate of the bankrupt among his creditors under the control of a court of bankruptcy. Payment under a composition is one mode of distribution; payment of dividends by an assignee is another mode. Theoretically, each mode divides the whole estate. A discharge by virtue of payment of the amount specified in the resolution of composition is confessedly a compulsory discharge as to the non-assenting creditor. The discharge is in a certain sense a voluntary act of an assenting creditor, because it is in his power to give or withhold his assent. Assent is a matter of his own election, and if the requisite number of creditors do not assent, the resolution has no effect. But the discharge is also by operation of law as to the assenting creditor, because the entire proceeding is a part of bankruptcy proceedings instituted under, authority of a court, and this particular method of division of the bankrupt assets has no validity unless the court is satisfied that the proposition is for the interest of the creditors. The assent of the creditors is a means of ascertaining the fairness and propriety of the proposed division. The proceeding is not a composition inter partes, in which proceeding each creditor can make his assent or dissent final as to himself, but is a statutory composition wherein the assent only of a specified number is required, subject to a subsequent decree of court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 F. Cas. 131, 18 Nat. Bank. Reg. 411, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-merriman-ctd-1878.