In re Sheffer

21 F. Cas. 1225, 4 Sawy. 363, 17 Nat. Bank. Reg. 369, 1877 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 232
CourtDistrict Court, D. California
DecidedOctober 15, 1877
StatusPublished

This text of 21 F. Cas. 1225 (In re Sheffer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Sheffer, 21 F. Cas. 1225, 4 Sawy. 363, 17 Nat. Bank. Reg. 369, 1877 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 232 (californiad 1877).

Opinion

HOEFMAN, District Judge.

On the ninth of August, 1877, a petition was filed against C. M. Sheffer, by creditors constituting the requisite number, and representing the requisite amount of his entire indebtedness.

The order to show cause was made returnable August 21. Service was duly made, and on the return day he appeared by counsel, and the hearing was, by successive adjournments. continued until September 25. On the twenty-first of September, a stipulation, signed by all the petitioning creditors, consenting that the proceedings be dismissed, was filed in the clerk’s office.

On the adjourned day, September 25, a petition was presented by certain creditors, who had not united in the original petition, praying leave to intervene, and that the court proceed to adjudicate on the original petition.

This petition was opposed on the part of the bankrupt, and a motion on his behalf was made that the proceedings be dismissed, pursuant to the stipulation on file. Leave was given to either side to present affidavits, and on the day set for the hearing voluminous depositions were read, by which all the facts and circumstances of the case were made apparent. It is not denied that the petitioning creditors are sufficient in number, and the debts due them sufficient in amount to satisfy the requirements of the aet.

But it appears that, since the filing of the petition, the wife of the alleged bankrupt has satisfied all their demands, taken an assignment of them to herself, and procured from the creditors the stipulation on file.

It also appears that, shortly before the commencement of the proceedings, the alleged bankrupt conveyed away all his visible property. receiving in exchange therefor some lands in Illinois, the deed for which he caused to. be made out in the name of his wife. The pretext for this transaction was an indebtedness said to be due his wife for previous advances made to him out of her separate estate. It is charged by the intervening creditors that the transaction was fraudulent in fact, and the conveyance without consideration. The truth of this allega[1226]*1226tion cannot now be ascertained. But it is evident that the debtor has at least committed a fraud upon the act by giving his wife an unlawful preference.

The creditors who intervene are the vendors of the identical property disposed of by the debtor, the proceeds or representative of which have been conveyed to his wife. These creditors still hold the notes, or substitutes for them, given for the purchase-money. But since the filing of the petition in bankruptcy the debtor has commenced a suit in the Fifteenth district court in San Francisco, in i which he alleges that the notes were obtain- ¡ ed by fraud and misrepresentation, and he j prays that they may be decreed to be deliver- ! ed up to be canceled, and also that damages j may be awarded him. j

To complete the history of the ease, it may '■ be added that a warrant was issued, on the • application of the petitioning creditors, for ¡ the arrest of the respondent as an tCbsconding j debtor. He was accordingly arrested at Sac- . ramento and brought back to San Francisco, where he gave bonds and was liberated.

The forty-second section (section 5026, Bev. St.) of the bankrupt act provides that, “if the petitioning creditors shall not appear and proceed on the return-day, or adjourned-day, the court may, upon the petition of any other creditor to the required amount, proceed to adjudicate on such petition, without requiring a new service or publication of notice to the debtor.” The words “such petition,” in this section, evidently refer to the petition of the original petitioning creditor; and the act contemplates that if he fails to appear, or to proceed on the return-day, or the adjourned-day, any other creditor may intervene, and on his application the court may proceed to an adjudication. This right cannot be cut off or defeated by any action of the court, or arrangement between the petitioning creditors and the bankrupt. In re Lacey [Case No. 7.965], where the motives and policy of the ■ •enactment are very clearly explained by Mr. ' J. Woodruff. ■ !

In the case at bar, no order of dismissal 1 was obtained on the filing of the stipulation I by the petitioning creditors. If any such order had been made it w'ould have been erroneous and void. The intervening creditors have regularly appeared on the “adjourned-day,” and are therefore entitled to all the.I rights conferred by the section which has been I cited. I

It is urged, however, that, in view of the I late amendments to the act, the words “any ! other creditor to the required amount” must ; be construed to mean “any other creditors ! constituting one-fourth in number of all the . creditors, and representing one-third of the ; aggregate of all the debts due by the bank- Í rupt;” and this on the ground that it would ¡ be unreasonable to permit a creditor to continue and keep alive a proceeding which he would have been incompetent to originate.

But this view is more plausible than sound. The language of the section is explicit It confers the right to intervene upon any other creditor “to the required amount,” i. e., to the amount of $250. It has been suffered to stand notwithstanding the adoption of the amendment, and it is the existing law. The court has no right to disregard so clearly expressed a provision of law, and to substitute for it a provision essentially different, upon a conjecture that the section may have been overlooked, and that it would have been modified if the attention of congress had been called to it.

Whether this section was ■ overlooked or advisedly suffered to stand we cannot know. But it may well be doubted whether sound policy would have permitted its alteration. The motives which led to the adoption of the-amendment which requires what, for convenience, we may call the quorum of creditors, to unite in the petition in involuntary cases, are well known. It was thought expedient so far to mitigate the supposed harshness of the law as to deprive any single creditor or creditors representing in number or amounts due them an insignificant proportion of the body of the creditors, or of the total indebtedness of the debtor, from throwing the latter into bankruptcy contrary to the wishes and, perhaps, against the interests of their fellows. As the law stood, a single creditor to the amount of $250 could, from caprice or malice, precipitate the ruin of any one who might be in a condition of technical insolvency, and convert what might have proved a temporary embarrassment into an irremediable catastrophe. The concurrence, therefore, of a certain quorum of the creditors was required. But. when that quorum has concurred, and the court has become possessed of the cause, the object of the amendment has been attained, undue severity or oppression has been prevented, and the rights of the other creditors have attached. There seems to be no reason why those rights should be any less or different from those possessed by them under the original act. The failure on the part of the petitioning creditors to appear or to proceed cannot be known until it occurs. In most, cases it will not be anticipated. A single creditor may provide for its occurrence by attending at the return-day or adjourned-day with his own petition; but to oblige him to arm himself with a petition signed by the quorum of all the creditors is to subject him to an unreasonable, and what may prove an unnecessary inconvenience.

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

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 F. Cas. 1225, 4 Sawy. 363, 17 Nat. Bank. Reg. 369, 1877 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-sheffer-californiad-1877.