In re Oregon Bulletin Printing & Pub. Co.

18 F. Cas. 783, 3 Sawy. 614, 14 Nat. Bank. Reg. 405, 3 Cent. Law J. 515, 14 Alb. Law J. 130, 1876 U.S. App. LEXIS 1789
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Oregon
DecidedMay 24, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 18 F. Cas. 783 (In re Oregon Bulletin Printing & Pub. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Oregon Bulletin Printing & Pub. Co., 18 F. Cas. 783, 3 Sawy. 614, 14 Nat. Bank. Reg. 405, 3 Cent. Law J. 515, 14 Alb. Law J. 130, 1876 U.S. App. LEXIS 1789 (circtdor 1876).

Opinion

SAWYER, Circuit Judge,

after stating the facts. The question is, whether under the statute, as it now stands, a corporation can be adjudged a bankrupt upon the petition of a single creditor, or any number less than one-fourth of the whole, and without regard to the amount of the debts.

The district judge, in an elaborate and very able opinion, which merits, and which has received, the most careful and respectful consideration, held the affirmative of the proposition. [Case No. 10,558.] On the other hand, in Be Leavenworth Savings Bank [Id. S,1G5], the district judge of the Second district of Kansas, adjudged the point the other way; and this ruling was affirmed on a petition for review by Mr. Circuit Judge Dillon in a well-considered opinion, notwithstanding Dbje opinion of the district judge in this case, which was cited at the hearing. So far as I am aware, these are the only adjudications directly upon the point, and as there is no authoritative decision upon the question by the supreme court, it will be necessary to examine the question anew. Certainly no more important question has arisen under the bankruptcy act. and it deserves the most deliberate examination.

The Revised Statutes, which embodied in a different arrangement the provisions of the bankrupt act of 1867, and repealed the latter as a separate and independent act, were actually passed on the same day with the act of June 22, 1874, purporting to amend and supplement the act of 1867 so repealed. Which of the two acts passed first in point of time on that day, does not appear. It is necessary, to a proper discussion of the question presented, to ascertain and keep in view the relation of these two statutes to each other. Section 5595 provides that, “The foregoing seventy-three titles embrace the statutes of the United States, general and permanent in their nature, in force on the first day of December, one thousand eight hundred and seventy-tliree,” etc. And the following sections repeal the previous acts. It is plain, that whatever the result, the intent was, in this act, to express without change of sense, in a different form and arrangement, all the general statute law of the United States as it existed on December 1, 1S73; to substitute this arrangement and expression for prior acts as of that date; and to adopt that date as the dividing line by which its relation to all other legislation subsequent to December 1, should be determined. In accordance with this intention, section 5601 provides that “the enactment of the said revision is not to affect or repeal any act of congress passed since the first day of December, one thousand eight hundred and seventy-three, and all acts passed since that date are to have full effect as if passed after the enactment of this revision, and so far as such acts vaiy from, or conflict with any provision contained in said revision, they are to have effect as subsequent statutes, and as repealing any portion of the revision inconsistent therewith.”

Thus, by express enactment, the Revised Statutes, for the purpose of determining their relation to other legislation at the same session, are to be regarded as though passed on the first day of December, 1873, and all other acts passed after that date, although in fact [785]*785passed before the Revised Statutes, are to be treated and enforced as subsequent statutes, repealing the Revised Statutes so far as they are inconsistent therewith. Under these provisions, the act of June 22, 1874, purporting to amend and supplement the bankrupt act of 18G7, must be regarded as passed after the passage of the Revised Statutes, and although referring in terms to the act of 18G7, must be construed as referring to the provisions of that act, as carried into and expressed, or in the language of the act: “embraced,” in the corresponding sections of the statutes; and as amending and supplementing the provisions of the statutes relating to bankruptcy as therein found expressed. This must be so, for the Revised Statutes expressly repeal the bankrupt act of 1867; and the act of 1874 being construed as subsequent to the Revised Statutes, on any other hypothesis, so far as it is amendatory of the act of 1807, would simply amend, that is to say: change the reading of certain portions of an act already repealed, and no longer in force, without re-enacting it into a law. The result would be, the amendment only of parts of a repealed statute without re-enacting it into a law, while the corresponding provisions of the Revised Statutes would remain in force unchanged, except in those parts expressly repealed by section 21 inconsistent with the amendment, and as to those parts so repealed. there would be no statute at all in force. This clearly could not have been the intention of congress. The amendatory and supplementary act, therefore, must be construed as amending the provisions of the Revised Statutes, corresponding to, and substituted for, the sections of the act of 1867 purported to be amended in the amendatory act; and the other provisions of said act as supplementing the provisions of the Revised Statutes under the title “Bankruptcy.” Any other construction would result in nothing but the grossest absurdity. So construed, section 12 of the act of 1S74 purporting to amend section 39 of the act of 1S67, must be construed as amending, sections 5021, 0022 and 0023 of the Revised Statutes.

The decision of the question under consideration, then, must depend upon the construction put upon the Revised Statutes as thus amended. Section 5122 provides that “the provisions of this title shall apply to all moneyed, business or commercial corporations, and joint stock companies.” This provision is comprehensive, and embraces every provision of the title “Bankruptcy,” except those which are inconsistent with some express or necessarily implied limitation, or which, from the inherent character of corporations. cannot, in the nature of things, be made applicable: as. for example, a corporation cannot, in the nature of things, be arrested or imprisoned. Section 5023 provides that "an adjudication in bankruptcy may be made on the petition of one or more creditors, tne aggregate of whose provable debts amounts to at least two hundred and fifty dollars.” This is one provision of the title, is general and comprehensive, and is applicable to corporations under the provisions cited from section 5122, unless clearly repugnant to some other provision expressly relating to corporations; and there is no such provision, unless it be found in the clause, “or upon the petition of any creditor of such corporation, or company,” in section 5122. Are these two provisions necessarily, or by any reasonable construction, upon a consideration of the whole title, and the general policy indicated in it, repugnant? In my apprehension they are not. It must be borne in mind that the principles upon which the act proceeds, and all the details and specific provisions relating to matters of bankruptcy, are prescribed in the other sections; and that the provisions of section 5122, relating to corporations, are intentionally brief, general, and incomplete, specifically providing merely for inherent differences between corporations and natural persons, and referring to the other provisions of the title for particulars unaffected by such inherent differences. Thus, it was necessary to indicate in what way the corporate will should be manifested in a voluntary petition, as questions might arise upon this point, and did in fact arise under the act as plain as it seems to be, in Re Lady Bryan Co. [Case No. 7,978].

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18 F. Cas. 783, 3 Sawy. 614, 14 Nat. Bank. Reg. 405, 3 Cent. Law J. 515, 14 Alb. Law J. 130, 1876 U.S. App. LEXIS 1789, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-oregon-bulletin-printing-pub-co-circtdor-1876.