In re Oregon Bulletin Printing & Pub. Co.

18 F. Cas. 773, 13 Nat. Bank. Reg. 503
CourtDistrict Court, D. Oregon
DecidedJuly 1, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 18 F. Cas. 773 (In re Oregon Bulletin Printing & Pub. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. 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. 773, 13 Nat. Bank. Reg. 503 (D. Or. 1875).

Opinion

DEADY, District Judge.

The plaintiffs in this case, Blake, Robbins & Co., Leuthwait & Smith, H. W. Scott, and H. L.' Pittock, called in the pleadings the petitioning creditors, bring this action to have the defendant declared a bankrupt. The petition alleges that the defendant is a corporation organized under the laws of this state, with its place of business at the city of Portland, and that at the commencement of this action it owed debts to certain persons, naming them, amounting to about twelve thousand dollars, of which sum four thousand four hundred and eighty-one dollars was due these plaintiffs. and by them provable in bankruptcy; that the defendant on June and July 1, 1875, was insolvent, and committed two several acts of bankruptcy by paying the Western Union Telegraph Company the sums of six hundred and twenty dollars and seven hundred and ten dollars, with intent to give said telegraph company a preference, and also on August and September 1, 1875, was insolvent, and committed two other acts of bankruptcy, by paying to Alexander P. Ankeny on each of said dates the sum of one hundred and forty dollars, with intent to give said Ankeny a preference. The defendant, by its answer, admits that it is a corporation formed under the laws of Oregon; that it is and was indebted to the plaintiffs, except Scott’s debt of three ^thousand dollars, as alleged; that the several payments to the telegraph company and Ankeny were made by it as alleged; and denies that it is or was indebted to Scott; that it is or was insolvent at the dates of said payments, or apy of them; that said payments or either of them were made with intent to give said telegraph company or Ankeny a preference; but avers that said payments and each of them was made in the ordinary course of its business, when and as they became due, and without any intent to prefer said creditors, or to defeat, hinder, impede or delay the operation of the bankrupt act.

In the course of the argument, something has been said about the nature and operation of the bankrupt act [of 1SG7 (14 Stat. 517)],— the law under which this proceeding takes place. It is hardly necessary to say to you, that you and I are both here to administer the laws as we find them; and it does not become us in any way to obstruct the fair and full administration of any of the laws of the United States on account of our personal opinions or prejudices concerning its propriety or expediency. The bankrupt act has been enacted by the congress of the United States, representing the people of the United States, in pursuance of an express authority to that effect in the constitution of the United States. It is intended to meet the case when a debtor becomes unable to pay his debts as they become due in the ordinary course of business, to prevent any of his creditors from getting an advantage over the others, either by the pertinacity or industry of such creditor or connivance of the debtor. It goes upon the just and proper theory that the property of an insolvent debtor belongs to his creditors and not to himself, and that such creditors have a right to dispose of it and distribute the proceeds among themselves in proportion to the amount of their respective claims; that such debtor has not a right to dispose of and distribute it among his creditors as he may think proper or feel inclined to; and that this is a just and proper view of the subject it seems to me cannot be successfully gainsaid. The law also proceeds upon the theory in such cases, that economy, and the interest of the debtor and the whole body of creditors will be promoted, by preventing separate and expensive proceedings by each of such creditors, and therefore the whole matter of the insolvent estate, and the claims of the respective creditors upon it. shall be settled in one proceeding, with as little controversy and [775]*775expense as possible. There is then no- special hardship in this lavy as compared with any other intended to regulate the rights and relations between creditors and an insolvent debtor. In some respects it is a hardship and an unpleasant thing to enforce the collection of a debt against a failing party by any means which can be provided, and which at the same time are effective. But as long as debts are to be collected by legal proceedings, and insolvent debtors aré required to surrender their property to their creditors, the proceedings provided by the bankrupt act are as humane, just, and economical a mode of accomplishing this end as has ever been devised.

A question has been made at the last moment in this case as to whether the law casts the burden of proof upon the plaintiffs or defendant. As the law stood prior to June 22, 1874, it contained a provision in section 41, which in effect required the debt- or to show upon the trial that the facts stated in the petition were not true, or else the verdict should be found against him. In some respects this was a harsh and hard rule of evidence, but fronr the nature of the case, in most respects it did not differ in operation from the ordinary rule on the subject. Most, if not all of the material allegations in a petition in bankruptcy relate to the conduct of the debtor or the state of his affairs. In the nature of things, he is usually better informed as to the truth and details of the alleged transactions than his creditors can be. Therefore, upon slight proof against him in these respects he would be called upon to explain and show that his conduct had been proper or that his estate was solvent. By section 14 of the act of June 22, 1874 (18 Stat. 1S2), section 41 of the act of March 2, 1807, was amended so as to repeal this provision requiring the debtor to disprove the facts in the petition, and therefore counsel for the defendant contends that the burden of proof is now upon the plaintiffs. On the other hand counsel for the plaintiffs insist that the act of June 22, 1867, supra, is void and inoperative, because the said act of March 2, 1867, was repealed by the first clause of section 5596 of the Revised Statutes on said June 22, 1874, and, therefore, there was no such act in existence to amend, at the time of the passage of the supposed amendatory act. How this question should .be decided I am not quite certain in my own mind, but for the purposes of this trial I will follow my impression, and hold that the act is operative, and that the rule prescribed in section 41 of the act of March 2, 1867, is, therefore, changed. This being so, the burden of proof in this case is upon the plaintiffs, and the defendant is not called upon to show that the facts stated in the petition are not true, except it be in such particulars and under such circumstances as your attention will be called to particularly hereafter.

It is incumbent upon the plaintiffs, then, to make out their case to establish to your satisfaction under the instructions of the court three things: 1. That the defendant owed the plaintiffs, or some of them, the debts alleged to be due them in the petition. 2. That the defendant was insolvent at the dates of the several payments to the telegraph company and Ankeny, or one of them; and 3, that said defendant made said payments or one of them, being so insolvent, with intent to give such creditor a preference over its other creditors. Upon the first point you can have no difficulty, as it is admitted by the defendant in its answer that it did owe all the plaintiffs’ debts as alleged in the petition, except Scott’s. That admission is sufficient upon this branch of the case to enable plaintiffs to maintain this action. As to the second point, it is a matter for you to decide, and I instruct you upon it as I have heretofore held, in Re Randall [Case No.

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Allen v. Gray
115 N.Y.S. 928 (New York Supreme Court, 1909)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 F. Cas. 773, 13 Nat. Bank. Reg. 503, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-oregon-bulletin-printing-pub-co-ord-1875.