In re Parker

11 F. 397, 6 Sawy. 248, 1880 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 269
CourtDistrict Court, D. Oregon
DecidedFebruary 19, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 11 F. 397 (In re Parker) 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 Parker, 11 F. 397, 6 Sawy. 248, 1880 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 269 (D. Or. 1880).

Opinion

Deady, D. J.

From the evidence taken before the register it appears that Allen and John Parker and A. B. Morris, in the early part of 1877, and some years prior thereto, were partners engaged in the warehouse business, and dealing in wheat, at Albany. Irvine stored wheat with them until the amount reached about 8,000 bushels, which the firm purchased in December, 1876, or January, 1877, at one dollar a bushel, on “short time.” The firm and the individual members thereof were then' insolvent, and had been so for some time.

In the latter part of February, John Parker and Morris transferred the business and warehouse to Allen, he to pay the debts of the firm as far and as fast as the assets would allow. About February 20, 1877, Irvine was informed of the transfer to Allen Parker, and assented to it, prior to which time he had been paid the sum due him by the firm, less $2,486.86.

On March 26, 1877, Irvine, being aware of the insolvency of the firm and that of the members thereof, demanded of Parker payment of the balance due him, or security therefor, stating “that the company was not able to pay its debts,” but that if Parker would give him his note, secured by a mortgage upon his farm, he would wait a year for the money. Parker, being unable to pay the debt, gave Irvine his note for the same, payable in one year thereafter, with interest at 1 per centum per month, secured by a mortgage upon his farm of 247 acres in Linn county, and certain lots in the town of Albany, valued in the inventory in the aggregate at $7,500.

After this, in the latter part of May, an attempt to compromise with the creditors of the firm having failed, Morris proposed to put [399]*399the firm into bankruptcy, and Irvine endeavored to dissuade him from so doing until the limitation upon the inquiry as to the validity of his mortgage, four months from the date thereof, had expired; hut Morris refused, saying that all the creditors must share alike, and filed his petition June 5th, following, upon which the firm and the individuals thereof were duly adjudged bankrupts.

Upon the hearing before the register the matter was certified here for decision.

Upon the argument the point was made that the note of Parker, being given in payment of the firm debt, a debt for which he wag already liable, is invalid for want of consideration.

The authorities are not uniform upon this question, but the weight of them, as well as reason and considerations of convenience and utility, favor the rule that the note of a third person given and received in payment of the debt of another is a valid contract, and operates to extinguish or discharge the original debt, and that a note given by a partner for a debt of the firm is, as to such debt, the note of a third person.

In Sheehy v. Mandeville, 6 Cranch, 264, Chief Justice Marshall said:

“ This principle appears to be well settled. The note of one of the parties or of a third person, may, by agreement, be received in payment. The doctrine of nudum paetum does not apply to such a case, for a man may, if such be his will, discharge his debtor Without any consideration. But, if it did apply, there may be inducements to take a note from one partner liquidating and evidencing a claim on a firm which might be a sufficient consideration for discharging the firm.” See, also, upon this point, In re Ouimette, 1 Sawy. 53; Cumber v. Wayne, and notes thereof, in 1 Smith, Lead. Cas. 453.

But to constitute an absolute payment of a pre-existing debt by a promissory note there must he an agreement to receive it as such, and the burden of proof is upon the party alleging this fact.

In Harris v. Lindsay, 4 Wash. C. C. 273, Mr. Justice Washington held that when there was an agreement between partners that one of them should retain the partnership effects and pay the debts, “no indulgence granted by a creditor to the paying partner, which falls short of an agreement, express or implied, or to take him as the debtor and to discharge the other partner,” can have the effect to discharge the retiring partner.

The note being valid as the note of a third person received in payment of the debt of the firm, what effect has the bankrupt act upon the transaction? The giving of the note merely, while it increased the liabilities of Allen Parker, and by so much diminished [400]*400his ability to pay hiis individual creditors in full, did not, it seems to me, constitute a preference, as against such creditors.

The mere creation or acknowledgment of a note does not create a preference. ' A debt contracted by an insolvent person is entitled to payment out of- his estate, the same as if he was solvent. Nothing less than payment, or a pledge to secure payment, amounts to a pref-' erence. By means of the note Parker became indebted to Irvine, but the latter was not thereby preferred over the other individual creditors of the former. ' Such creditors have a right to question the validity of this debt, because its allowance diminishes the fund to which they have a right to look for the Satisfaction of their claims. But the note being Valid — given upon a sufficient consideration — the claim, as an - unsecured one, is good as against the individual creditors of Parker. .

' But is it so as against the creditors of the firm ? The bankrupt act (sections 36 and 5121, Bev St.) provides that the joint estate of a partnership shall first be applied to the payment of the creditors of the partnership, and the separate estate of each partner to the payment of his separate creditors, and if there is any balance of either of said estates after satisfying the claims of the creditors first entitled to be paid thereout, it shall be added to the other estate for the benefit of creditors thereof.

Under this rule, if Parker’s separate estate was more than sufficient to pay his individual creditors, excluding this claim of Irvine, the balance would be added to the joint estate for the benefit of the joint creditors. But if this debt is allowed against the separate estate of Parker it must be paid in full before any portion of such estate can be applied upon the debts of the firm. For illustration, suppose that the separate estate is just sufficient to pay the individual debts of Parker, including the claim of Irvine, and that the joint estate is only sufficient to pay the firm creditors 25 cents on the dollar: Irvine, by taking the note of Parker in payment of his claim upon the firm, has obtained a material preference over the other creditors of the firm, whose claims are quite as meritorious as his. By this means, if allowed, he secures the payment of his claim in full out of the surplus of the separate estate which rightfully belongs to the creditors of the joint estate.

But, in fact, the difference between the value of the joint and separate estates, compared with the debts proved against1 them, is greater than supposed.

[401]*401The estates have all been reduced to cash, and neither- of the partners, except Allen Parker, appears to have had any separate estate. According to the report of the register, made on the fourteenth instant, the debts proved against the joint estate amount to $18,419.26, and against the separate estate of Parker, including Irvine’s claim, $7,583.25; and the assets of the joint estate are $849.19, and of the separate estate $5,949.65.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Williston v. Ludowese
208 N.W. 82 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1926)
City of Williston v. Ludowese
208 N.W. 82 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1926)
State v. Mobile O. R. Co.
78 So. 47 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1918)
Allen v. Gray
115 N.Y.S. 928 (New York Supreme Court, 1909)
In re Parker
18 F. Cas. 1112 (D. Oregon, 1878)
In re Parker
18 F. Cas. 1111 (N.D. Illinois, 1868)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 F. 397, 6 Sawy. 248, 1880 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-parker-ord-1880.