In re Morris

17 F. Cas. 785, 1 Law Rep. 354, 1837 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 3, 1837
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 17 F. Cas. 785 (In re Morris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Morris, 17 F. Cas. 785, 1 Law Rep. 354, 1837 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15 (E.D. Pa. 1837).

Opinion

HOPKINSON, District Judge.

On the 28th day of July, 1801. a commission of bankruptcy was issu'ed by the district judge for the Pennsylvania district, against Bobert Morris, directed to John Haliowell, Joseph Hopkinson, and Thomas Cumpston, commissioners. The bankrupt being duly summoned, surrendered himself to the commissioners, and submitted himself to be examined; the commissioners having previously declared the said Bobert Morris a bankrupt. On the 6th day of August the commissioners received proof of sundry debts. On the 26th of August proof of debts was received from about twenty-one creditors, and the choice of assignees postponed until the 12th day of September. On that day further proofs of debt were received from nearly forty of the creditors of the bankrupt. At several subsequent meetings of the commissioners proofs of debts were continued to be received, amounting in the whole to upwards of ninety, and whose aggregate amount of debt was about three millions of dollars. On the 8th day of December, 1801, the commissioners executed an assignment of all the estate and effects of the bankrupt to John B. Smith, Esquire, and John Craig, and Nathan Field, merchants, they being the assignees chosen by the creditors. Here the proceedings by and before the commissioners stop. The assignment still remains among the papers of the commission, never having been accepted by the assignees, nor any counterpart executed by them. No attempts were made by or on the part of the creditors to call upon the assignees to execute the trust, nor to have [791]*791other assignees appointed to supply their place and take charge of the estate and effects of the bankrupt. It may he here remarked that the petitioner now .before me made no proof of his debt before the commissioners, or took any part in the proceedings under the commission. The estate and effects of the bankrupt, whatever they were, were' thus abandoned by the creditors; not only by those who had proved their debts, and neglected or declined to use the rights they had under the commission, but by those also who by not proving, exhibited even more indifference to his affairs. It cannot be believed, indeed it is not pretended that the petitioner, being in the city where these proceedings were going on, was not acquainted with them. At all events, he had the notice which the law required, and which was given to the creditors of the bankrupt generally.

Things remained in this situation, in a state of absolute inaction, and without any symptom of a revival, until the month of November, 1825, that is twenty-four years, within a few days. In the mean time, that is, in the month of -, 1806, Robert Morris, the bankrupt, died. On the 21st day of November, 1825, Henry Morris, one of the children of Robert Morris, presented his petition to the Honorable Richard Peters, then judge of the district court of the United States, for this district, the same who had issued the commission, in which he recites the proceedings under the commission, and alleges that the assignees do not appear ever to have accepted the trust; nor have they executed any counterpart of the assignment; nor has there been, as he believes, anything further doné in the premises. He states that the said Robert Morris,' died in 1807 (1800), leaving a widow and five children, whereof the petitioner is one. He then alleges and sets forth, "That at the time of the said bankruptcy, the said Robert Morris was seized and possessed of a large estate, real and personal, which, in consequence of the neglect of the said creditors and assignees, in not duly prosecuting the said commission, has been wasted and misapplied, without benefit to the creditors or to the bankrupt.” This allegation has not been disproved, nor as I recollect, denied to be true, from that time to the present. It is the ground and reason on which the petitioner, Henry Morris, prayed the district judge “that the said commission of bankruptcy may be vacated and superseded.” This petition, as appears by an endorsement on it, was read, filed, and a rule granted to show cause, &c,, returnable on 20th December, 1825. On that day the rule was enlarged till 13th January, 1826. No further proceeding was then had, for reasons which do not appear, nor does it appear to whom the rule to show cause was directed, nor that any service of it was made. On the 15th of January, 1830, the application on behalf of Henry Morris, was renewed to me; and Mr. Williams was heard as the counsel for the petitioner. No counsel appeared to oppose it. On the 22d of the same month, I ordered, that notice of the application be specially given to John H. Huston, the petitioning creditor; and a public notice, in the National Gazette, three times a week for two weeks, to all the creditors of the bankrupt, that the judge will proceed to hear and decide upon the petition on Friday, the 19th of February, 1830. On that day proof was given that the notices, respectively, had been given in conformity with the order. The application then rested until the 17th of the following September, during the whole of which time it cannot be doubted, that any application or argument, in opposition to the petition, would have been attended to. On the 17th of September, no opposition being made, either by the creditors who had proved ■under the commission, or by any other person claiming to be a creditor, or to have any right or interest in the estate of the bankrupt — the ordey was made “That the commission issued in the case be vacated, and superseded, according to the prayer of the petitioner.” How far these proceedings were known to the creditors of Mr. Morris by the public notice given to them, I cannot say; Mr. Sansom, in a way which has not been satisfactory to the opposite counsel, has denied a knowledge of them, or rather as they say. that he had notice of them; perhaps this criticism is rather too close and verbal, as it would involve Mr. Sansom in an equivocation equal to an untruth, under his solemn affirmation, which ought not to be imputed to him, without a more satisfactory demonstration. The proceeding on the petition of Henry Morris, was not hurried. It was pending nearly five years. If in that time it was known to Mr. Sansom or any other of the creditors of Robert Morris, it was also known to them in law if not in fact, for the petition was open to them, that the application for the supersedeas was made on the ground that Robert Morris was possessed of a large estate, which in consequence of the neglect of the creditors and assignees, was wasted and misapplied; and it was also clearly understood, for otherwise the supersedeas would be fruitless, that something remained to be redeemed from the neglect by which so much had been lost, and which, if redeemed, would enure to the benefit of the creditors, if they would look after it; or to the family of Mr. Morris, if the creditors by abandoning it would suffer it to return to the representatives of the bankrupt, by superseding the commission. The effect of the supersedeas, if lawfully ordered, was to annihilate the commission, and to place the bankrupt with his estate and effects in the same situation they would have been in, had it never existed. He, or, in this case, his representatives, were fully restored to all their rights over his property, and resumed the management, control, and disposition of it. So they remained, unquestioned and undisturbed, until the 8th day of December, 1836 — a period of more than six [792]*792years. On that day the petition of William Sansom was filed, followed by his affidavit, on the 15th of the same month. The petitioner states that he was a creditor of B..

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Bluebook (online)
17 F. Cas. 785, 1 Law Rep. 354, 1837 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-morris-paed-1837.