In re Scott

21 F. Cas. 805, 15 Nat. Bank. Reg. 73
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Missouri
DecidedDecember 15, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 21 F. Cas. 805 (In re Scott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Scott, 21 F. Cas. 805, 15 Nat. Bank. Reg. 73 (E.D. Mo. 1876).

Opinion

TREAT, District Judge.

This is a proceeding by creditors to have the debtors adjudicated bankrupts. The original petition, with accompanying papers, was filed July 22, 1876. Thereupon, under an order to show cause, the debtors, on August 9, 1876, filed their answer, and demanded a jury. On September 5th they filed a petition for composition, a meeting to consider which was ordered for September 18th. The history of what ensued is set out in the report of the register, to understand which many supplementary facts and proceedings must be considered.

At the first meeting held for composition certain attaching creditors appeared and claimed the right to participate therein, which claim was denied — and rightfully. See section 17 of act of 1S74 [18 Stat. 182]. These attaching creditors, unless an adjudication were had, would retain their lien as security; and, therefore, within the terms of the act might, or might not, be secured creditors, dependent on the fact whether an adjudication of bankruptcy should be had. The act contemplates that secured creditors shall not have a vote at said composition meeting unless they first relinquish their security. True, the act, in terms, refers to creditors fully secured; but that must be held to have reference solely to the value of the security compared with the amount of the debt. Hence, if the attaching creditors desired to participate in said meeting, they should have released their attachments. It seems they pre[806]*806ferred, inasmuch as no adjudication was had, to hold their attachments; so that, if the composition were effected, they .could obtain their demands in full; yet it was obvious that the debtors, who .had interposed a denial of bankruptcy, could, at any moment, by consenting to the adjudication, cause the attachments an'd the supposed security based thereon to disappear. Thus the attaching creditors were, in a certain sense, subject to the ¡ will of the debtors. The latter denied bankruptcy. and if no adjudication followed, the attaching creditors were secured, and consequently could not be heard at the composition meeting. If the composition were effected, in that condition of affairs, without adjudication, the attaching creditors would not be disturbed in their secured demands. Still, the debtors had it in their power to cause that security, by attachment, to disappear at any instant, by consenting to adjudication. The way out of that difficulty was for the creditors to release their attachments, or for the debtors to permit adjudication tof be ¡ made. No such action having been had, the first composition meeting was held and the resolution duly passed; the votes of the attaching creditors having been rightfully excluded.

The second meeting, or hearing, was then ordered, at which the attaching creditors again appeared and insisted upon entering into a protracted examination, not of the bankrupts alone, but of an indefinite number of witnesses. Application having been made to the court to determine what was the lawful course to be pursued under the then state of facts, it was held, substantially, that the attaching creditors could not, nor could the debtors, play “fast and loose;” that if the attaching creditors wished to intervene, they must assume the position of unsecured creditors; and, on the other hand, if the debtors wished to contest the allegations of bankruptcy, in good faith, whereby the attaching creditors were secured if no adjudication followed. they ought, in some way, so to appear of record. It was obvious that the respective parties were standing at bay — each holding the other at arm’s length — to the great injury of all others in interest, and involving an indefinite delay in the proceedings, with accumulating costs. Hence, on application to the court, it was ruled that the proceedings for the hearing should not be delayed or interrupted by the attaching creditors, unless they first released their supposed securities; nor should they or other creditors protract the investigation unnecessarily. That ruling may have been improvident from a failure to scrutinize with due accuracy the precise condition of the case as then pending. It was supposed by the court that the order of reference to the register required him to report not only whether the resolution for composition had been duly passed at the first meeting, but, also, whether it had been confirmed by the required signatures, and whether the terms of the composition were for the best interest of all concerned. It seems that the order did not include either of the latter questions, as it should have done. Hence, much of the confusion and difficulty, entailing upon the register and others a large measure of embarrassment.

Before proceeding to consider in detail any of the many exceptions to the register’s report, it is necessary to interpret carefully the provisions of the statute under which these proceedings for composition have been had. The United States act, as to composition (1874), is, to a large extent, borrowed from the English act of 1868. The changes made must be carefully noted, in order to ascertain what congress designed should be the proper course of proceedings in this country. It is well known, and was so pronounced by Justice Miller on this circuit, that the act of 1874 was designed to mitigate, in favor of the debtor, the rigors of the act of 1867 [14 Stat. 517]. One of the most important amendments, by the act of 1874, related to involuntary bankruptcy, whereby it was no longer left in the power of one creditor, regardless of the wishes of all others, to force a debtor into bankruptcy. The amendatory act of 1874 required one-fourth in number of the creditors, whose demands were equal, in the aggregate, to one-third of the provable debts, to join, in order to commence involuntary proceedings. The act of 1874 permits a discharge of a voluntary bankrupt whose assets equal thirty per cent, of his debts proved, or who procures the assent of at least one-fourth of his creditors in number and one-third in value. That act therefore, had a plain and evident intent, viz.: to put proceedings in voluntary and involuntary bankruptcy on exactly the same footing so far as the action of creditors was needed'; for precisely the same requirements for a discharge in voluntary cases are exacted as for involuntary proceedings — discharges, under the latter, following, as a matter of course, so far as dependent on the assent of creditors. Thus, if the required number to force a debtor into bankruptcy choose so to do, they thus act with full knowledge that the debtor's discharge will follow irrespective of the percentage realized from his estate. The law was thus made simple and uniform. In voluntary cases the required number assent to the discharge at the close of proceedings, and in involuntary the same number, by instituting the proceedings, assent in advance. .So, when the provisions as to composition are considered, we find the same design to favor the unfortunate debtor. Previously, compositions had (to be effective) to have the assent, as a general rule, of all the creditors — a rule which put it in the power of one creditor, as in the cases of involuntary bankruptcy, to thwart the wishes and interests of all other creditors and of the debtor. As to composition, however, a larger number is required than to effect involuntary bank[807]*807ruptcy, to wit: a majority in number, and three-fourths in value of the creditors assembled, to be confirmed by the signatures of two-thirds in number and one-half in value of all the creditors. This provision as to composition proceedings, furnished a large measure of relief to the debtor and assenting creditors.

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Bluebook (online)
21 F. Cas. 805, 15 Nat. Bank. Reg. 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-scott-moed-1876.