In re Richter's Estate

20 F. Cas. 748, 1 Dill. 544
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Iowa
DecidedOctober 15, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 20 F. Cas. 748 (In re Richter's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Richter's Estate, 20 F. Cas. 748, 1 Dill. 544 (circtdia 1870).

Opinion

DILLON, Circuit Judge.

1. As to the Motion of Greenwald & Co. The cardinal idea of the bankrupt act isanindiscriminating distribution of all of the effects of the debtor, to all of his creditors. This legislation is essentially founded upon the doctrine that equality is equity. When a debtor finds himself embarrassed, experience has shown that there arises in his mind a strong temptation, either to conceal his property, or to distribute it as his favor or [750]*750his enmity, or both may dictate. When creditors perceive their debtor's embarrassment, concert of action for the mutual benefit of themselves and the debtor becomes almost impossible, and the most vigilant or the most unfeeling seek an advantage or priority by means of writs of attachments, or other legal process, or by obtaining mortgages or confessions of judgment. Recognizing the essential equality of right of all the creditors of a common debtor, and the duty of the latter, if he cannot pay all in full, to pay all in equal proportions, and the practical impossibility of accomplishing full and equal distribution without stringent provisions, the bankrupt act prohibits the debtor from making, and the creditor (having reasonable cause to believe the debtor to be insolvent) from accepting any preference, in money or property, directly or indirectly, absolutely or conditionally, which contravenes the policy of has the effect to defeat the purposes of the act.

The temptation to prefer, and the danger of doing so, inhere in the situation of an insolvent debtor; and hence it is (to use language applied to purchases of trust property by trustees) “the wise policy of the law has put the sting of a disability into the temptation, as a defensive weapon against the strength of the danger which lies in the situation.” Notes to Fox v. Mackreth, 1 Lead. Cas. Eq. 161.

The 18th, 23d, 29th, 35th. and 39th sections of the bankrupt act abundantly evince the anxiety of the legislature to guard against preferences, which operate as a fraud upon the policy of the act. Such preferences are not only prohibited and declared void, but certain penalties are denounced against creditors who, under the circumstances specified, accept of preferences. Thus it is declared that such a creditor shall not “vote for, or be eligible as assignee” (section 14), and “shall not prove his debt in bankruptcy” (section 39. and compare section 23), and shall be liable to the assignee for the money or property received (section 35).

In the case now under consideration, the debtor, a retail merchant, three days before filing his petition to be adjudicated a bankrupt, sold his whole stock of goods to Green-wald & Co., his largest creditors. The as-signee of the bankrupt, after his appointment, commenced, under the 35th section of the bankrupt act, an action against Greenwald & Co. to recover the value of the goods which the bankrupt had transferred to them,'in fraud, as it was alleged, of the provisions of that act. The petition in that aetion made the averments required by the law; among others, Richter’s insolvency, his sale of his whole stock of goods to Greenwald & Co., out of the usual course of business, his intent to evade and defeat the bankrupt act, and the purchasers’ reasonable cause to believe their vendor to be insolvent, etc. Issue was taken upon these allegations; the jury found for the assignee, and judgment was rendered accordingly, and the amount of the judgment was paid by Greenwald & Co. to the marshal on execution, but it ■ was paid promptly on the same day the execution issued, or the next. And it is the effect of this judgment upon the rights of Greenwald & Co. as creditors of the bankrupt, that we are now to consider. And first we may remark that this judgment, as between the estate of the bankrupt and Green-wald & Co. conclusively establishes that the purchase of the stock of goods by them from the bankrupt was made in fraud of the bankrupt act. This is res judicata, and Green-wald & Co. are estopped to deny it To entitle the assignee to a recovery in that suit, he would have to establish: 1. That Richter, when insolvent, or in contemplation of insolvency, made the transfer. 2. That he made it with a view to give Greenwald & Co. a preference. 3. That they had at the time reasonable cause to believe he was insolvent, ahd that it was made in fraud of the act, or to defeat or evade its provisions.

Having recovered, it is conclusively presumed that the assignee did establish each of these propositions, and if so, he then necessarily established that Greenwald & Co. sought to get a preference, or advantage over other creditors, which was fraudulent in the contemplation of the bankrupt act. Greenwald & Co., having accepted a fraudulent preference, the question is, how does it affect their claim or debt, and their rights as creditors? The answer to this is given in the 23d and 39th sections of the act. By the former section it is enacted that the creditor accepting a fraudulent preference, “shall not prove the debt on account of which the preference was made or given, nor shall he receive any dividend therefrom, until he shall first have surrendered to the assignee all property, money, benefit, or advantage received by him under such preference.”

By the latter section named, it is enacted, without qualification, that a creditor receiving a fraudulent preference “shall not be allowed to prove his debt in bankruptcy,” and nothing is said about allowing proof of the debt, in case the creditor surrenders to the assignee the property, etc., received by way of preference. It is a settled principle of law that where there is a positive repugnancy between two sections of the same act, the last governs, as presumptively the latest expression of the legislative will. This rule is highly artificial, and is never to be applied where its application is not necessary. Another, and much more reasonable rule of law, is that a statute shall be so construed, if possible, that all of its provisions may stand; and in this case it is possible to give effect to sections 23 and 39 either first by holding the former applicable to constructive, and the latter to actual and intentional frauds; or second, by holding the former applicable alone to cases of voluntary, and the latter alone to cases of involuntary, bankruptcy; or third — which would seem to be the correct view — construing the two in pari materia, applicable to both classes of bankruptcies, and [751]*751to all cases falling within their terms, -which would, by construction, annex the qualification in section 23 to the proviso in section 39, •and both sections thus construed should, as far as applicable by their terms, be applied to cases arising under section 35 of the act. But this is a point on which we need not longer -dwell or give any positive opinion, since we will assume in favor of Greenwald & Co. that section 23, which relates specifically to preferences, is the one which governs their rights. By this ib is declared that whoever receives a fraudulent preference, “shall not prove the debt or claim on account of which the preference was made or given, nor receive any dividend therefrom until he shall have first surrendered to the assignee all property * * * received by him under such preference.”

Under these circumstances, and with this provision in force, Greenwald & Co. made the motion to prove up the balance of their claim, of the denial of which they now complain. Note the motion: it is “for leave to prove up the balance of their claim, viz., $1,-471.88, being the amount credited Richter, October 16, 186S, when said goods were obtained.”

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Bluebook (online)
20 F. Cas. 748, 1 Dill. 544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-richters-estate-circtdia-1870.