In re Randall

20 F. Cas. 226, 1 Sawy. 56, 1870 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 33
CourtDistrict Court, D. Oregon
DecidedMarch 7, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 20 F. Cas. 226 (In re Randall) 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 Randall, 20 F. Cas. 226, 1 Sawy. 56, 1870 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 33 (D. Or. 1870).

Opinion

DEADY, District Judge.

This is a motion by a creditor to reject a claim of another creditor, as being illegal.

From the report of the register it appears that on February 2. 1869, Einstein Bros. & Co. received at San Francisco, $450, in coin, from Foster on account of R. and S., and that they had good reason to believe at that time that R. and S. were insolvent; and that their attorney, then resident in Portland, acting under instructions to take such course as their interests required, had on January 30, commenced the proeedings in bankruptcy wherein R. and S. were adjudged bankrupts; and that before the objections of said Peters were filed said Einstein Bros. & Co. bad offered in writing to surrender to the assignee of the estate of It. and S. tiie said sum of $450, and that afterward they paid said sum to said assignee.

For the objecting creditor it is claimed that this case comes within section 30, and that therefore the debt is forfeited and should not be proved.

That section provides, among other things, that an insolvent debtor who makes any payment with intent to give a preference to one or more creditors, shall be deemed to have committed an act of bankruptcy, and upon the petition of certain creditors may lie adjudged a bankrupt therefor — “provided such petition is brought within six months after the act of bankruptcy shall have been committed. And if such debtor shall be adjudged a bankrupt, the assignee may recover back the money or other property so paid * * * provided, the person recovering such payment * * * had reasonable cause to believe that a fraud on this act was intended and that the debtor was insolvent, and such creditor shall not be allowed to prove his debt in bankruptcy.” In the ease under consideration the payment was made after the petition was filed and therefore not within six months prior thereto. Neither was such payment the act of bankruptcy on account of which such petition was brought and adjudication had.

Taken as it reads, this section does not include the case of a payment after petition brought. In morals, I admit that there is no difference between a creditor who takes a preference before petition filed or after-wards, and on this ground it lias been argued for the motion to reject that as this preference is withiD the mischief intended to be prevented by the section, it should be construed so as to include it. If the premises were admitted the conclusion might follow.

So far as the creditor is concerned, a payment or transfer of property by a debtor, after petition brought, is a mere nullity, and the same or its value may be recovered back by the assignee, independent of sections 28, 35, or 39. because from the commencement of the proceedings in bankruptcy, by operation of law, the property of the bankrupt of whatever nature, not exempt from execution, vests in the assignee, and therefore the former can make no valid disposition of it. Bankrupt Act, § 14. Einstein Bros. & Co. acquired no property or interest in the money paid or delivered them by Foster. They were mere bailees of it, and the assignee could have compelled them to return it or its value, without reference to their claim against the estate. Besides this, the debtor making a payment or transfer after petition brought, is liable to be punished by imprisonment at hard labor for not exceeding three years. Id. § 44.

[227]*227A payment or other disposition of property l>y a debtor after petition brought against him is not a preference within the meaning of the act, but simply an unlawful meddling with the property of the assignee. It confers no rights or interest on the party receiving it, and renders the debtor liable to imprisonment.

Preferences are provided for in sections 215, -35, and incidentally in section 30.

By section 23, a person receiving a preference “any time after the approval of the act" having reasonable cause to believe that the same was made or given by the debtor contrary to the act, shall not prove the debt on account of which such preference was given, until he surrenders to the assignee all benefit received by him under such preference. By its terms this section includes all preferen-oes whenever made or given, and leaves it optional with the creditor to surrender and prove his debt, or retain his preference and be excluded from making such proof. But as will be seen, section 35 necessarily limits the operation of this section to cases of preference received more than six months prior to petition brought, because section 35 declares all preferences made within this latter period absolutely void; and as by section 14 all the property of the bankrupt is vested in the assignee from the time of filing the petition against him, this section cannot be construed to apply to the case of a payment or other disposition of property by the bankrupt after such filing, because the same would be void for want of interest in the bankrupt, and could not give the creditor 1 he option to surrender or retain it

By section 35 all payments or other disposition of property by an insolvent debtor, made “within six months before the filing of the petition by or againsRhim” are declared void, and the assignee may recover the same as assets of the bankrupt.

All payments or other dispositions of property within the purview of this section are void, and the person or creditor receiving them cannot retain or surrender them at his option, as in the case of a preference within the purview of section 23; but no penalty is imposed upon him for. receiving the same.

Section 39 goes farther, and after providing for what causes and under what conditions a debtor may be adjudged a bankrupt, declares that the creditor receiving the prefer-enee, and thereby participating in the fraud which constituted the act of bankruptcy for which the adjudication was had, shall not be allowed to have his debt.

In Be Princeton [Case No. 11,433], Mr. Justice Miller, of the Wisconsin district, suggests the reason why section 39 imposes a forfeiture of the debt upon the creditor tak-iug a preference, contrary to it. He says;

“This prohibition as to the creditors (forbidding the proof of their debts) is predicated on the adjudication in bankruptcy upon the allegation in the petition against the debtor. And the creditor, having reasonable cause to believe the alleged violation of the act by the debtor, is considered a participant in the offense against the act, and is, therefore, prohibited from proving his debt in bankruptcy. * * * It cannot be permitted to a creditor, who, with reasonable cause ol' knowledge, has participated in such fraud on the act as to found a proceeding against his debtor, to relinquish his intended preference, and claim to prove his debt under the 23d or any other section of the act.”

This reasoning seems to • assume, rather than to assert, that the forfeiture imposed by this section is confined to the case of a creditor who received a preference which constituted the very act of bankruptcy upon which the adjudication was had.

The language of the last clause of the section gives some color to this conclusion.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 F. Cas. 226, 1 Sawy. 56, 1870 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-randall-ord-1870.