In re Peabody

19 F. Cas. 35, 16 Nat. Bank. Reg. 243
CourtDistrict Court, D. Colorado
DecidedJuly 1, 1877
StatusPublished

This text of 19 F. Cas. 35 (In re Peabody) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Peabody, 19 F. Cas. 35, 16 Nat. Bank. Reg. 243 (D. Colo. 1877).

Opinion

HALLETT,- District Judge.

In December last the assignee filed a report of sales made by him of goods belonging to the estate, and of certain property set off to the bankrupt as exempt, which report was on the same day approved by the judge then presiding in this court Edward Russell, a creditor who obtained a lien upon all of the goods so sold, and some of the goods so set off, by judgment and execution against the bankrupt before the petition in bankruptcy was filed, now complains of this order of the court as having been irregularly entered, and moves to set it aside. He also objects upon several grounds to the report of the assignee, but these objections cannot be considered while the order approving the report is allowed to stand. To explain the force and effect of this order, it will be necessary to state some of the facts presented in the record. The petition in bankruptcy was filed in the district court of the Third district of the late territory, April 28, 1876, and the assignee was chosen and. appointed on the 20th of May thereafter. On the same 20th of May, 1876, the register of that district made out and signed a paper in the form No. 20, adopted by the supreme court, which was doubtless intended to be a schedule of the property set aside to the bankrupt under the exemption laws. Upon examination, however, it will be found to have but few of the requisites of such a schedule. In the first place it was made by the register, the act (section 5045) and the general order (19) requiring that it shall be made by the assignee. It is true that the form No. 20 has the words “district judge (or register)” at the foot, apparently indicating that it is to be signed by one of those officers. But this is obviously a mistake of the draughtsman, for the act of setting apart exempt property cannot be performed by either the judge or register consistently with the provisions of the law. The property is in the possession of the assignee, and he only can deliver it The act imposes upon him the duty of selecting the articles to be set apart to the bankrupt; and provides for reviewing his decision. The general order requires him to report to the court the articles set apart by him, with the value of each, within twenty days after receiving the deed of assignment and provides that creditors may except to his report Usually and properly this report is made to the register, who also hears the exceptions of creditors, and bis decision, if unsatisfactory to either of the parties, is reviewed by the court. All this is utterly inconsistent with the notion that the register may set off the property to the bankrupt in the first instance; a notion which has no other foundation than the mistake made in appending unnecessary words to the form.

If it is claimed that this paper is a direction from the register to the assignee as to the property to be set off to the bankrupt, the reply is that the register had no authority to give such direction. His duty is confined to receiving and filing the schedule after it has been made by the assignee, and passing upon the exceptions, if any are made by creditors. The matter of designating the property which is exempt from the operation of the act is entrusted to the assignee, and his discretion cannot be controlled or supported by a direction from any source previously given. But if the schedule had been made by the as-signee, it does not appear to have been reported to the court, as required by the general order. It was not filed with the register; nor with the clerk until December 22d, 1S76, when it was approved by the court It seems to have been kept by the assignee, for it is attached to his report made in Decern-[36]*36her. •which contains all his doings up to that time. But wherever it may have been it was not in the proper place, and creditors had no opportunity to except to it before it was aproved by the court. If a proper schedule liad been filed with the register within twenty days after the assignment, as required by general order 10, and no exceptions thereto had been filed within twenty days thereafter, probably all creditors would be precluded from objecting at this time. For the protection of an assignee who has performed his duty fairly, creditors ought to bring forward their objections to the schedule, if they have any, at an early day, as the rule requires. But if an assignee withholds his report until long after the time specified in the rule has expired, he cannot, by an order obtained ex parte, shut off inquiry as to the regularity of his proceedings. These objections to the schedule appear to be substantial, and to demand the revocation of the order made by my predecessor.

Another objection to the schedule, prepared by the register, is found in the fact that there is no sufficient description of the articles set off, nor is the value of each given. This was corrected to some extent, but not fully, in a distinct schedule filed with the other in December. The goods set off as stock in trade, and the value of them, is well enough stated in that schedule, but the value of the other goods is stated in the aggregate, and the household furniture, books, and some other things are not in any way described. But this defect may not be a ground for vacating the order, and it is not material to our present inquiry.

In so far as the order of December 22d relates to the sale of the estate, the right of a creditor to be heard rests upon the same consideration. No one who is interested in the estate can be cut off from being heard by an ex parte order entered upon the application of the assignee. Justice is not administered in that way. "When the matter' to be passed upon has been submitted to a general meeting of creditors, and, if it has' not been so submitted, if due notice has been given, an order may be given which will settle the rights of all parties, but without notice nothing can be done which will arrest investigation into the conduct of the assignee. It is true that a creditor is a party to a bankruptcy proceeding, and, as such, bound by all that is regularly done in the course of the proceedings. But confir-. mation of the acts of an assignee, without notice to the creditors of the estate, and without giving them an opportunity to be heard, is not regular or proper, and therefore they are not bound by it.

The power of the court to grant the relief asked was briefly discussed and perhaps seriously denied at the hearing, but there is little room for doubt on the point. Upon contested questions regularly decided, it may be that authority ends -with the judgment which is given. But as to judgments by default, and all ex parte orders, the rule is otherwise. Harris v. Hardeman, 14 How. [55 U. S.] 334. In bankruptcy proceedings there are no terms of court by which authority to correct what has been done amiss can be said to be limited, and probably the court has full control for that purpose over the whole proceeding from the beginning until the end is reached.

Whether the motion to vacate the order was made in apt time is more doubtful. There is nothing of record to show when Russell was first advised of the order, unless indeed he was bound to take notice of the schedule within twenty days after it was filed. This would have brought knowledge of the facts to him early in January, and the motion was not filed until July. Such delay would be inexcusable in a case where the situation of the parties may change, and the assignee may suffer by the delay. But this is not the rule; for the as-signee must file his schedule of exempt property within twenty days after the assignment to him, and if he does not do so the creditors may fairly suppose that no exemption has been claimed or made.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 F. Cas. 35, 16 Nat. Bank. Reg. 243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-peabody-cod-1877.