In re Southern Overalls Mfg. Co.

111 F. 518, 1901 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 94
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Georgia
DecidedOctober 19, 1901
DocketNo. 612
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 111 F. 518 (In re Southern Overalls Mfg. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Southern Overalls Mfg. Co., 111 F. 518, 1901 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 94 (N.D. Ga. 1901).

Opinion

NEWMAN, District Judge.

The question presented by the exceptions to the decision of the referee is whether, as against a payment made within four months and required to be refunded before proof of claim can be allowed, under section 57g of the bankruptcy act, a creditor can set off the amount of new credit given, as provided in section 60c. The question, -stated in another way, is whether the provisions of section 60c refer only to cases covered by paragraph “b” of the same section, where the trustee is authorized to recover because the preference was knowingly received, or whether it refers also to payments made before proof can be allowed, under 57g. In the case of the present exceptor, in some instances after a pavment within four months was made by the bankrupt company, goods were sold to it to an amount in excess of the payment previously made, but the .creditor only asks to set off the value of the goods so sold, and going into the bankrupt’s estate, in an amount equal to the immediately preceding payment. On an accounting even in this way, however, a balance is left to be returned by the creditor, which he offers to pay.

There have been conflicting opinions on this question. The- cases holding that paragraph “c” of section 60 is confined to cases arising under the provisions of paragraph “b” of the same section are In re Christensen (D. C.) 101 Fed. 802, decided by District Judge Shiras, of the Northern district of Iowa; In re Arndt (D. C.) 104 Fed. 234, by District Judge Seaman, of the Eastern district of Wisconsin; In re Keller (D. C.) 109 Fed. 118, by Judge Shiras, and In re Oliver, Id. 784, by District Judge Phillips, of the Western district of [519]*519Missouri. Those which hold that the provisions of 6oc extend to cases under 57g, where repayment of amount received within four months is necessary to proof of debt, are McKey v. Lee, 45 C. C. A. 127, 105 Fed. 923, by the circuit court of appeals of the Seventh circuit; In re Ryan (D. C.) 105 Fed. 760, by District Judge Kohlsaat, of the Northern district of Illinois; and In re Seckler (D. C.) 106 Fed. 484, by District Judge Hook, of the Northern district of Kansas.

If the contention of counsel for the trustee in this case is correct, then this remarkable situation is presented: The creditor who had received a payment within four mouths would be approached by the trustee with a demand for the surrender of the preference, and with the statement that the creditor knew at the time he received it that the debtor was insolvent. The creditor might say: “Yes; I received the preference knowingly, and concede that you can recover it, and am ready to pay it back; but since I have received the payment I have in good faith sold a bill of goods to the bankrupt, which has gone into his estate, and I wish to credit the amount of that bill on the amount of the payment received.” The trustee could do nothing but accept it. The payment would clearly be one recoverable under section 60b, and in that case there would be no doubt of the right of the creditor to set off'■the amount of goods subsequently sold against the payme'nt from the insolvent debtor knowingly received within four months.

On the other hand, a creditor who had received a payment without any knowledge whatever of the debtor’s insolvency, and without anv reason to believe that he was insolvent, and who had afterwards sold goods in good faith, which had become a part of the bankrupt’s estate, could not be permitted to set off the amount of goods so sold against the payment. The creditor,. therefore, who may be called the guilty creditor, would receive a benefit which an entirely innocent creditor would not be allowed. It would require the most explicit language in the act to justify a court in concluding that congress intended any such result.

But it is said, in reply to this view, that a creditor who knowingly receives a preference cannot prove his debt against the bankrupt’s estate, and that the innocent creditor, having repaid his preference, can do so. This contention is not justified by any provision in the bankruptcy act of 1898. The most that can be said of the authorities on this subject under this act, or probably under the act of 1867, is that a creditor who knowingly receives a preference can only be prevented from proving his debt when he compels the trustee to sue the demand against him for the preference to judgment, and after judgment has been obtained against him. A large number of decisions under the old act are collated and referred to in Coll. Bankr. (3d Ed.) pp. 319, 320, and the result of these decisions seems to be that, under the act of 1867, a surrender of a preference, although knowingly received, could be made at any time before judgment.

Even the case of In re Richter’s Estate, 1 Dill. 544, Fed. Cas. No. 11,803, cited by counsel for the trustee, does not contain anything contrary to this view. The decision by Circuit Judge Dillon is made [520]*520under the act of 1867, and there is a discussion of the effect of sections 23 (Rev. St. § 5083), 35 (Rev. St. § 5128), and 39 (Rev. St. § 5021) of that act. After deciding that a creditor, who had knowingly, and in fraud of the act, received a payment, and had refused to surrender it, and had been sued to judgment, and had then paid the judgment, could not afterwards prove his claim, the part of the opinion material here is as follows:

“As a further argument in support of the opinion above expressed, it may be urged that, when section 23 is read in connection with sections 35 and 39, all being in pari materia, it will be seen that the surrender provided for in section 23 is an act to be done by the creditor before the recovery of a judgment against him, as provided by section 35. That is, the assignee may demand of the creditor the property received by him. If he surrenders it, he stands upon the same plane as the creditors, and may prove .his debt and receive his dividends. If he refuses to surrender it, the assignee may sue as provided in section 35; and if he recovers, and payment be made on an execution, this is not a surrender (which implies voluntary action on the part of the creditor), but a refusal to surrender. So that the bankrupt act says decisively to every person who, under the circumstances specified, has received a preference: ‘Surrender what you have received, and you shall lose nothing. If you refuse, and the assignee recovers the property or its value, you shall get nothing. Make your election.’ When this election may be made we are not now- required to decide, further than to hold that it is too late to make it after the recovery of judgment by the assignee.”

In the casé of Burr v. Hopkins, 12 N. B. R. 211, Fed. Cas. No. 2,192, it was held in the circuit court for the Eastern district of -Wisconsin that even after an opinion had been given by the court, and after findings of fact had been made, but before the actual entry of the judgment, a creditor might surrender his preference, and be authorized to prove his claim.

If it is true that under the act of 1867 a preference could be surrendered at any time before judgment, so as to authorize proof of the debt, it is certainly true under the present act. Therefore, in a large class of cases covered by clause “b” of section 60, the creditor would have the right to prove his debt. This is assuming that the restriction is as great against the proof of claims in this respect under the act of 1898 as it was under the act of 1867, which is not at all clear.

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

Related

Dunson v. S. Lowman & Co.
125 F. 1005 (Fifth Circuit, 1903)
Kahn v. Cone Export & Commission Co.
115 F. 290 (Fifth Circuit, 1902)
In re Thompson
112 F. 651 (E.D. Pennsylvania, 1902)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
111 F. 518, 1901 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-southern-overalls-mfg-co-gand-1901.