In re Shepard

21 F. Cas. 1250, 1 Nat. Bank. Reg. 439, 1868 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 351
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. New York
DecidedMarch 31, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 21 F. Cas. 1250 (In re Shepard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Shepard, 21 F. Cas. 1250, 1 Nat. Bank. Reg. 439, 1868 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 351 (N.D.N.Y. 1868).

Opinion

HALL, District Judge.

This case came on to be heard upon the petition of the bankrupt for “a full discharge from all his debts, and a certificate thereof;” and upon due proof of the service and publication of notice of the order to show cause against such discharge, as required by the bankrupt act [of 1867 (14 Stat. 517)], the general orders in bankruptcy, and the rules of this court. At the time fixed for showing cause, two of the bankrupt’s creditors, whose debts were set forth in the schedules annexed to his original petition, entered their appearance, and proposed to contest his right to a discharge: whereupon it was objected that they were not “creditors who had proven their debts,” and consequently had no right to be heard. It was also insisted that the alleged debts, which such creditors had attempted to prove, were barred by the statute of limitations of New York, where such debtor and creditors resided; and that such alleged debts, being so barred by the •statute, the parties appearing were not creditors. and had no right to contest the bankrupt's discharge. It was conceded that a deposition in proper form for the proof of the debt of one of the creditors had been made before a commissioner appointed by the circuit court, and that such deposition had been duly transmitted to the assignee; but it was insisted that the commissioner had no authority to take proof of such debt, inasmuch as the creditor was, at the time, a resident of this judicial district.

The question thus presented is not free from doubt. The 22d section of the bankrupt act declares “that all proofs of debts against the estate of the bankrupt, by, or in behalf of, the creditors residing within the judicial district where the proceedings in bankruptcy are pending, shall be made before oue of the registers of tlio court in said district, and by. or in behalf of, non-resident creditors before any register in bankruptcy in the judicial district where such creditors, or either of them, reside, or before any commissioner of the circuit court authorized to administer oaths in any district.” There is, in the language of this provision, no clear indication that congress intended that the right to prove their debts before a commissioner should be confined to creditors not residing within the judicial district in which the proceedings were pending. The sentence is punctuated by commas 'Only, so that we have not even the indication of that intention, which would have been given if a semicolon, instead of a comma, liad been inserted after the words, “said district;” but on the other hand there is not the indication of a different intention which would have been given if a semicolon, instead of a comma, had been inserted after the word “reside.” 8o far as the punctuation, [1251]*1251the particular language, or the grammatical construction of the sentence furnish any evidence of the intention of congress in respect to this question, it is more favorable to the construction -which would sustain the authority of the commissioners in this case than to the opposite construction; for the concluding portion of the sentence is, in these respects, as closely connected with the first portion of tlie sentence as with the second or middle portion. It is true that the concluding iiortion of the sentence is separated from the portion of it which provides for the proof of debts by resident creditors, but this separation furnishes no reliable evidence that congress intended to deny to resident creditors the right to prove their debts before a commissioner, for the connection of the three provisions in one sentence necessarily required that those placed first and last should be separated by the interposition of the other. The intent to require all proofs made before registers to be taken before a register of the judicial district in which the creditor resides, is clearly expressed; and it is probable that the concluding lines of the sentence, which authorize proof before commissioners, were added by way of amendment, — perhaps by another hand, — without a careful consideration of their import when connected with the preceding provisions. The difference between the concluding provision and the two preceding ones is strongly marked. In the first two of these provisions the authority of the registers is expressly limited by the words, -‘in said district.” in the one case, and by the words “in the judicial district where such creditors.. or either of them, reside,” in the other; but no words of limitation are found in this concluding provision. On the contrary. there are very clear indications that this provision was intended to be more general and comprehensive: for the unlimited term any is twice used, first in reference to the commissioner, and again in reference to the district. If it was not intended to give a creditor residing in the judicial district where the proceedings are pending the right to prove his debt before1 a commissioner, it would seem that the. right would have been limited by the use of the words “in said district” at the conclusion of this sentence, as had been done in the first clause; but instead of this tlie general words “in any district." are used. And these words, which conclude the sentence, can have no legal effect unless they are held to give the alternative right to resident as well as to non-resident creditors. If the words “in any district” had been omitted, this right would still have been clear as to non-resident creditors, though more doubtful than it now is in respect to creditors residing within tlie judicial district where the proceedings are pending. This alternative right to prove debts before a com- j missioner was doubtless conceded for tlie 1 convenience of creditors: and the reasons of I convenience which required it to be extend- ¡ i ¡ ; i ; ! | i i | ed to non-resident creditors, equally required its extension to resident creditors also. So far as the convenience of the creditor is concerned, it is immaterial whether the debtor’s petition is pending in the judicial district in which the creditor resides, or in another district.

If it be suggested that congress may have desired to secure to tlie registers, rather than to the commissioners, the fees for taking such proofs, the ready answer is, that if such a desire was allowed to influence the action of congress in respect to resident creditors, it is impossible to assign any satisfactory reason for limiting its influence to the case of resident creditors, instead of extending it to both resident and non-resident creditors. These considerations seem to require that the provisions of the statute should be so construed as to give this alternative right to resident as well as to non-resident creditors. And I adopt this construction more willingly, as a different construction would invalidate the proof of many debts taken in good faith before commissioners, when the creditors were residents of the district in which the proceedings were pending; for tlie more liberal construction has been frequently, if not generally given to this provision, by registers and commissioners, as well as by practitioners in bankruptcy. Indeed, in the present case, it was shown by affidavit that the proof was made before a commissioner, under the advice of the register having the case in charge, that tlie creditor, though resident in this district, might make proof of his debt before a commissioner as well as before the register. The proof referred to will be held sufficient' and the creditor regarded as one who has proved his debt and is entitled to oppose the discharge.

Before reaching the conclusion just stated, I have necessarily considered the objection that the debts of tlie opposing creditors were barred by the New York statute of limitations.

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Bluebook (online)
21 F. Cas. 1250, 1 Nat. Bank. Reg. 439, 1868 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-shepard-nynd-1868.