In re Mirkus

289 F. 732, 31 A.L.R. 435, 1923 U.S. App. LEXIS 2043
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedApril 9, 1923
DocketNo. 224
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 289 F. 732 (In re Mirkus) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Mirkus, 289 F. 732, 31 A.L.R. 435, 1923 U.S. App. LEXIS 2043 (2d Cir. 1923).

Opinion

HOUGH, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts as above), The bankruptcy court alone has the power to grant a discharge, but the effect of a discharge is matter for the consideration of any court to which it may be presented as a defense or otherwise. In re Havens (C. C. A.) 272 Fed. 975. The case at bar questions the effect of a composition agreement carried through in accordance with the statute. In substance the composition order is offered as a defense; i. e., a means of denying the right of the present petitioner to file a claim consisting of its original indebtedness. The fact that this defense or denial of right was advanced in the court below—i. e., a bankruptcy court—disguises the issue; the point would be exactly the same had this- petitioner sued Mirkus on its original debt and been met with a plea of composition.

Therefore consideration begins with ascertaining the nature and substance of a composition under the act of 1898. Under section 70f (Comp. St. § 9654), the property of a bankrupt revests in him by operation of law upon the confirmation of a composition, and by section 21g (Comp. St. § 9605) a certified copy of the order of confirmation shall constitute evidence of the revesting of title. Thus the order of confirmation becomes in effect a discharge and is pleaded in bar with like effect. Cumberland, etc., Co. v. De Witt, 237 U. S. 447, at page 452, 35 Sup. Ct. 636, 59 L. Ed. 1042. This citation is complete justification for the common dictum that a composition is a discharge pro tanto; i. e., the bankrupt is discharged from all those debts which have been properly treated in the composition order, except that fraction thereof which he has agreed to pay.

Under section 12e (Comp. St. § 9596), upon the confirmation of a composition, “the consideration shall be distributed as the judge shall direct, and the case dismissed.” Only when the composition is not confirmed shall the estate be further administered in bankruptcy; and this court has held that with the signing of the order of confirmation the bankruptcy court loses jurisdiction. In re Hollins, 238 Fed. 788, [734]*734151 C. C. A. 637. The only power left in the bankruptcy court, after signing the confirmation order, is to set the composition aside within six months, for the reasons, and only the reasons, set forth in section 13 (Comp. St. § 9597). In re Eisenberg [D. C.] 148 Fed. 325.

It is now urged that a composition regular in form, not produced by fraud, wherein the consideration has been deposited and distributed as required by law, and where the original bankruptcy proceeding has accordingly been dismissed, is nevertheless imperfect and in a sense inoperative (if the consideration consist in part of promissory paper), unless promises of deferred payment are made good. It is further said that such failure to make good the promise to pay in futuro revives the original debt; i. e. the very debt that is the subject-matter of composition.

The argument in favor of this proposition has two parts: (a) That a composition is to be treated as at common law; or (b) that the true construction of the statute produces a result identical with that of the Bankruptcy Act of 1867 (14 Stat. 517). It is undoubted that at common law, where a debtor and his creditors agreed to discharge the claims of the latter in consideration of a partial payment, the debtor was only discharged upon performance; and this was true, whether the performance was to be in prsesenti or futuro. The transaction was a kind of accord and satisfaction, wherefore, if satisfaction was absent, the original debt revived. But the promisee could elect whether to sue on his original cause of action or on the new contract. This is pointed out admirably in Beck v. Witteman, 185 App. Div. 643, 173 N. Y. Supp. 488, where the court expressed the opinion that this doctrine was applicable to bankruptcy compositions under the act of 1898. We have no doubt that the' court intended to express the foregoing as its view of the whole matter, although the exact question was whether a plea of composition was a good bar, when it was not shown that there had ■been either a distribution of the consideration or an order of confirmation.

That a composition not carried out according to its terms revived the original debt under the act of 1867 is true, though it would be more accurate to say that such uncompleted composition never canceled, discharged, or barred the original debt. This was a necessary consequence of the language of that act, which as originally enacted contained no provision whatever for compositions. They came into the statute by the amendment of 1874. 18 Stat. 182. Cf. In re Scott, 15 N. B. R. 73, Fed. Cas. No. 12,519.

Under this amendment, literally construed, cash only could be the consideration of a composition; but business necessities compelled a somewhat astute construction of the statutory language so that compositions payable by installments, with the installments secured by notes, raised questions similar to the one at bar. In re Langdon, 2 Low. 387, Fed. Cas. No. 8,058. But over such compositions with deferred payments the court never lost jurisdiction. It retained, until composition had been completed in respect of payment, what Wallace, J., well called “supervisory jurisdiction,” and could “enforce the composition as against creditors or as against the debtor.” Ransom v. [735]*735Geer (C. C.) 12 Fed. 607. If at. “any time” it appeared to tíie court that such composition could not “proceed without injustice or undue delay to the creditors,” the court could “refuse to accept and confirm such composition or set the same aside,” in which case the bankruptcy proceeded. Act of 1874, supra. In other words, such a thing, as a confirmed composition prior to its actual fulfillment by payment was an impossibility under the act of 1867.

Under the present statute the case is wholly different, as above shown. The duty of the court is fulfilled, and the power of the court is exhausted, with the entry of the order of confirmation, and under the specific language of section 12d (Comp. St. § 9596) the judge “shall confirm a composition” .if circumstances are made to appear such as existed in this matter of Mirkus under the first petition; i. e., that the debtor had made an offer of cash and notes, that the creditors were satisfied therewith, that the cash and notes had been deposited, that the matter was done in good faith, and that the bankrupt had done nothing which would- “bar his discharge.”

This last phrase is a powerful argument in favor of the similitude between a confirmed composition, and a discharge granted; the tests for barring discharges are identical with those barring compositions. It follows that, if the reasons against confirming a composition are the same as those against granting a discharge, the effect of avoiding such reasons for refusal is also .the same. Consequently the statute, in section 1 (12), being Comp. St. § 9585b, defines discharge as meaning “the release of a bankrupt from all of his debts which are provable in bankruptcy, except such as are excepted by this act;” and section 14c (Comp. St. § 9598) specifically declares that the confirmation of a composition “shall discharge the bankrupt from his debts, other than those agreed to be paid by the terms of the composition and those not affected by a discharge.”

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Bluebook (online)
289 F. 732, 31 A.L.R. 435, 1923 U.S. App. LEXIS 2043, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-mirkus-ca2-1923.