In re Taylor

188 F. 479, 1911 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 252
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Alabama
DecidedMay 8, 1911
DocketNo. 196
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 188 F. 479 (In re Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Taylor, 188 F. 479, 1911 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 252 (N.D. Ala. 1911).

Opinion

GRUBB, District Judge.

This matter comes on for hearing upon the application of the bankrupt for his discharge. The bankrupt was adjudicated on November 10, 1906. The case was closed by the referee June 7, 1907. On December 28, 1906, an application was filed by the bankrupt with the referee, to whom the case was referred, for [481]*481his discharge. On this application notice was given and proceedings were had before the referee pursuant to District Court Rule No. 7. The application for discharge was never filed with the clerk, nor was it called to the attention of the judge until early in the year 1911. The question presented on the threshold is as to whether the application was made within the 12 months during which, alone,.the court has jurisdiction to entertain and act upon the application.

[1] Section 14 of the Act of 1898 provides that the application for a discharge shall be filed “in the court of bankruptcy in which the proceedings are pending.” Courts of bankruptcy are defined by the act (section 1, subd. 7) as the courts in which the proceedings are pending and “may include the referee.” “Clerk” is defined as “the clerk of a court of bankruptcy.” Section 1, subd. 5. The referee ha> no jurisdiction to hear applications for discharge except upon reference to him, as special master, Section 38, subd. 4, and General Order 12, subd. 3 (89 Fed. vii, 32 C. C. A. xvi).

[2] Applications -for discharge are in the nature of a separate proceeding from the original cause which is closed upon the final distribution of the assets of the estate. Over them the reference to the referee of the original cause confers no jurisdiction, since the act itself excepts from the jurisdiction of the referee the matter of hearing and granting discharges. The cases in which the court “may include the referee” are not inclusive of the matter of discharges.

[3] The act requiring the application to be filed in the court, and the court so far as discharges are concerned being exclusive of the ret cree, a filing with the referee is not a filing with the court, and docs not confer on it jurisdiction. The application should be filed with the clerk in order to be filed with the court. Appearance of the objecting creditor before the referee, in reference to an application with him filed, might be a waiver of the improper filing, but consent cannot confer jurisdiction, after the expiration of the 12 months, without action on the part of the court, for after that period the court loses jurisdiction of the subject-matter of the discharge. Collier on Bankruptcy, p. 260 (8th Ed.), says:

•'All petitions (for discharge) should be filed with the clerk. and not with the judge or referee” — -citing In re Sykes (D. C.) 6 Am. Banliri Rep. 264, 106 Fed. 660.

In the case of In re Pincus (D. C.) 17 Am. Bankr. Rep. 331, 147 Fed. 621, the court said:

“These bankrupts filed with the referee in charge, and about five months afror adjudication, the petition under review. No action by the court was taken thereon, until more than a year aftc-r adjudication, and the objecting creditors 'now contend that the filing with the referee was insufficient to confer jurisdiction and the petition should be dismissed as not having been preferred within the statutory year. It is true that the referee as ‘referee’ has no power to consider the petition. But within this district and by force of District Court Rule ii in bankruptcy the office of the referee is the office of the court.”

In this district no such rule is in force. The clerk’s office is the office of the bankrupt court in this district. Rule 3 of this district limits the jurisdiction of the referee over referred cases, as does the [482]*482act, excepting from it “granting discharges, as to which the jurisdiction of the judge is exclusive.” Rule 7 provides that upon the filing of a petition for discharge the referee shall perform certain preliminary acts looking to the preparation of the application for hearing before the judge, and operates to dispense with a special reference in each case so far as authority to perform such preliminaries is conferred on the referee by the rule. It does not authorize the filing of the petition for discharge with the referee, but makes his jurisdiction to do the acts specified conditional upon a proper filing, viz., a filing in the bankruptcy court, i. e., with the clerk. The application, not having-been filed with the clerk or called to the attention of the judge, until more than four years from the date of adjudication, came too late.

The application should be denied for the additional reason that it is a pleading, required by General Order xxxi to “state concisely in accordance with the provisions of the act and the orders of the court the proceedings in the case and the acts of the bankrupt,” and therefore is a pleading setting up matters of fact, which section 18, subd. “c” requires to be verified. The case of In re Brown, 7 Am. Bankr. Rep. 252, 112 Fed. 49, 50 C. C. A. 118, decided by the Circuit Court of Appeals for this circuit, is in point. It is important that the bankrupt should be required to state under oath that he has surrendered all his property to his trustee and has complied with fully the act (Form 57 [89 Fed. Ivii, 32 C. C. A. lxxxi]) as a condition to obtaining his discharge, especially as his discharge follows as a matter of course and without the offer of proof of these facts by him, unless objecting creditors enter appearances and file specifications of objections.

The application for discharge is for these reasons denied at the cost of the bankrupt.

On Application for Rehearing.

[4] Upon application for rehearing, the court’s attention has been called to the fact that the application for discharge, together with all proceedings thereon before the referee, was filed with the clerk of the court on June 11, 1907, and within a year of the adjudication. No objection to the original filing with the referee was interposed by the objecting creditor. On the contrary, he joined in the proceedings before the referee and first made the point on this hearing. As the filing with the clerk within the 12 months was in time to preserve the court’s jurisdiction of the application, the acquiescence of the objecting creditor in the proceedings under the petition filed with the referee was a waiver of any irregularity in the filing.

[5] The only requirement of verification is section 18c, which requires that “all pleadings setting up matters of fact shall be verified under oath.” If the application for discharge is a pleading setting up matters of fact it should be verified, otherwise not. It seems to be settled by authority that specifications of objection to discharge are pleadings setting up matters of fact and are required to be verified. In re Brown, 112 Fed. 49, 50 C. C. A. 118; In re Glass (D. C.) 119 Fed. 509; Collier (8th Ed.) p. 622. It is said that the application is not [483]*483a pleading- but a mere motion because the bankrupt is called upon to answer the objecting creditor’s specifications of objection, and this is his first pleading of fact. The law is in a state of uncertainty in this respect. Collier intimates that a verification is necessary; Eoveland that none is required; and Remington that it is a matter of doubt. Collier (8th Ed.) p. 260; Loveland (3d Ed.) § 273, p. 788; Remington, § 2430, p. 1468.

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Bluebook (online)
188 F. 479, 1911 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-taylor-alnd-1911.