In re Ollinger & Perry

274 F. 970, 1921 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1232
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Alabama
DecidedAugust 12, 1921
StatusPublished

This text of 274 F. 970 (In re Ollinger & Perry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Ollinger & Perry, 274 F. 970, 1921 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1232 (S.D. Ala. 1921).

Opinion

ERVIN, District Judge.

This was a petition in bankruptcy by Perry against Ollinger & Perry as a partnership and Charles G. Ollin-ger as an individual, seeking to have himself and the firm of Ollinger & Perry and Charles G. Ollinger declared bankrupt.

The petition filed hy Perry is on form No. 2 with the necessary changes so as to show that the said Charles G. Ollinger was not consenting to the adjudication of himself or the partnership as bankrupts.

It did not contain any statement that the partnership was insolvent, nor -does it allege any act of bankruptcy as having been committed by it or by Ollinger.

Ollinger demurs on the ground of failure to allege an act of bankruptcy as having been committed by the partnership.

The demurrer raises a question on which the decided cases and text-hooks all seem to have taken one side. Loveland on Bankruptcy (4th Ed.) 524Collier (12th Ed.) 177; Brandenburg (4th Ed.) § 193; Remington (2d Ed.) § 73.

The text-books state the names of the cases holding that no act of bankruptcy by the firm need be alleged.

I am, however, so firmly convinced that these decisions have grown out of a misconception by the courts, which misconception was fol[971]*971lowed by the text-books, that I feel it incumbent upon me to explain my views upon the question.

Section 5 of the Bankruptcy Act reads as follows:

‘‘(a) A partnership, during the continuation of the partnership business, or after its dissolution and before the iinal settlement thereof, may be adjudged bankrupt.” Gomp. St. § 0580.

After much discussion among the authorities as to the separate entity of the partnership, as such, they are now practically unanimous in holding that the adjudication of the firm as an entity is provided for by this act.

The Supreme Court under authority of Congress prepared general orders and forms in bankruptcy. Form of petition No. 1 is a debtor’s petition for voluntary bankruptcy.

Form No. 2 is a partnership voluntary petition, and an examination of this form will show that it was contemplated by the court and expressly prepared by it so that it should be signed by all of the partners of the firm. Following the statement contained in the petition for voluntary adjudication of an individual, No. 2 states that said partners owe debts which they are unable to pay in full; that said partners are willing to surrender all their property for the benefit of their creditors except such as are exempt by law, and desire to obtain the benefit of the acts of Congress relating to bankruptcy.

The prayer is that said firm may be declared bankrupt.

It then provides for certain schedules of the partnership creditors and property and for the individual creditors and property.

Form No. 3 is a creditor’s petition seeking to have the debtor declared an involuntary bankrupt, and there is written into the statement of facts in this form the following;

“That your petitioner further represent that said - is insolvent, and that within four months next preceding the date of this petition, the said -committed an act of bankruptcy, in that he did heretofore, to wit, on the-day of-

These are all the forms prepared by the Supreme Court of peti-. tiojis to have any one declared bankrupt whether voluntary or involuntary, but it was undoubtedly intended by the court that the necessary allegations written into these forms should be copied into the petitions when prepared, according to the facts necessary to be stated, whether for involuntary or voluntary adjudication, so that form 3— the creditor’s petition — should be used against any one who is sought to he declared an involuntary bankrupt, while forms 1 and 2 should be used in voluntary cases.

The Supreme Court prepared at the same time general orders, and No. 8 of these orders reads as follows:

“Any member of a partnership who- refuses to join in a petition to have the partnership declared bankrupt, shall he entitled to resist the prayer of the petition in the same manner as if the petition had been filed by a creditor of the. partnership, and notice of the filing of the petition shall be given to him in the same manner as provided by lato and by these rules in the ease of a debtor petitioned against; and he shall have the right to appear at the time fixed by the court for the hearing of the petition, and to make proof, if he [972]*972can, that the partnership is not insolvent or has not committed, an aot of hauler up toy, and to make all defenses which any debtor proceeded against i8 entitled to take by the provisions of the act. * * * (Italics mine.)

The Supreme Court had an order similar to this as applied to the bankrupt act of 1867 (14 Stat. 517), and it was held by the lower courts that it was not necessary to allege an act of bankruptcy by a partnership where the petition was filed by one of the partners; but the Supreme Court speaking of the effect of this order in the case of Medsker v. Bonebrake, 108 U. S. 66, 2 Sup. Ct. 351, 27 L. Ed. 654, says that, where one partner was brought in under the petition of the other partner, it was a case of involuntary bankruptcy as to such partners so brought in.

If it is an involuntary proceeding, must not the statements of fact or charges contained in the involuntary form be used?

Now there is this difference between the act of 1867 and the act of 1898 in reference to partnerships, in that the act of 1898 confers the right to declare the partnership bankrupt as a separate entity, which the act of 1867 did not do.

If there was no power to declare the firm bankrupt under the act of 1867, then there was no necessity to allege the commission of an act of bankruptcy by it.

In the case of In re Forbes (D. C.) 128 Fed. 137, it is said that it is not necessary to allege an act of bankruptcy in the petition by one partner against the firm, but is necessary to allege insolvency. The following language is used:

“Neither the act of July 1, 1898, * * * nor the act of March 2, 1867, * * * nor the general practice of courts of bankruptcy under either act, has required an allegation of an act of bankruptcy in a petition filed by one partner to bring into bankruptcy his partnership and partners.
“The act of 1898 does not require an allegation of insolvency, though the allegation that the partners are unable to pay their debts, which is contained in form No. 2, promulgated by the Supreme Court under authority of the act, comes almost to the same thing. On the other hand, general order No. 8 under the act of 1898 and general order 18 of the act of 1867 alike have provided that a partner refusing to join in a partnership petition filed by his copartner is entitled to resist the prayer of the petition as if it had been filed by a creditor, and ‘shall have the right * * * to make proof if he can that the partnership is not insolvent or has not committed an act of bankruptcy.’ The general order thus appears to provide that the nonassenting partner may disprove that which the petitioning partner need not allege.”

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Related

Medsker v. Bonebrake
108 U.S. 66 (Supreme Court, 1883)
In re Forbes
128 F. 137 (D. Massachusetts, 1904)
In re J. M. Ceballos & Co.
161 F. 445 (D. New Jersey, 1908)
In re Junck & Balthazard
169 F. 481 (E.D. Wisconsin, 1909)
In re Laughlin
96 F. 589 (N.D. Iowa, 1899)
In re Meyer
98 F. 976 (Second Circuit, 1899)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
274 F. 970, 1921 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-ollinger-perry-alsd-1921.