Insurance Co. v. Comstock

83 U.S. 258, 21 L. Ed. 493, 16 Wall. 258, 1872 U.S. LEXIS 1156
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 18, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by62 cases

This text of 83 U.S. 258 (Insurance Co. v. Comstock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Insurance Co. v. Comstock, 83 U.S. 258, 21 L. Ed. 493, 16 Wall. 258, 1872 U.S. LEXIS 1156 (1873).

Opinion

Mr. Justice CLIFFORD

delivered the opinion of the court.

Moneyed, business, and commercial' corporations, are as much within the provisions of the Bankrupt Act as unincorporated individuals or associations, and all the provisions of the act forbidding preferences and fraudulent conveyances are as applicable to such debtors, if insolvent, as to any other insolvent debtors falling within.those provisions, and the saíne acts which render individual debtors liable to be adjudged bankrupts on the petition of their creditors, if committed by such a corporation which is insolvent, will warrant the creditors of the same to institute proceedings for that *265 purpose against such debtors, and to claim that they be adjudged bankrupts for the same reasons.

On the fifth of January, 1872, certain creditors of the Knickerbocker Insurance Company presented their petition to the District Court for the Northern District of Illinois,' representing that the company owed debts to an amount exceeding three hundred dollars, and that their respective demands against the company exceeded two hundred and fifty dollars, and that the company within six months next before the filing of the petition, being then and there insolvent or in contemplation of insolvency, made sundry payments of money to certain of their creditors in satisfaction of their claims with a view to give a preference to such creditors having such claims, and well knowing that the said company was insolvent. They also represented that the said company within the said six months, being then and there bankrupt or in contemplation of bankruptcy, made divers payments of money, sales, conveyances, and assignments of property, mortgages, and other effects to various persons within the district, withJntent and- for the purpose of giving such persona a fraudulent preference over other creditors of the company, and for the purpose of preventing the assets of the company from being administered under the Bankrupt Act. Based ou these representations the prayer of the petitioii is that the company may be declared a .bankrupt, and that a warrant may issue to take possession of the estate of the company. On the return day for hearing the petition, the corporation respondents appeared and denied that they had committed the acts of bankruptcy set forth in the petition, and demanded in writing a trial by jury pursuant to the provision in such case made and provided. * Subsequently other creditors were permitted to appear, as petitioners, and the pleadings having been concluded the parties went to trial, and the jury, under the instructions of the court, found the respondents guilty *266 as alleged in the petition. Exceptions were duly filed by the respondents to the rulings and instructions of the court, and they sued, out a writ of error and removed the cause into the Circuit Court for the same district. Suffice it to say, in respect to the exceptions, that they embrace not only material rulings and the instructions of the court given to the jury, but also the decisions of the court in refusing-to instruct the jury as requested by the respondents. Errors were duly assigned by the respondents in the Circuit Court, but the Circuit Court dismissed the writ of error for want of jurisdiction, holding that a writ of error will not lie in such a case to remove the record from the District Court into, the Circuit Court for re-examination. Jurisdiction, it was insisted by the respondents, did exist in the Circuit Court to re-examine such a case under a writ of error to the District Court which rendered the judgment, and they sued out a writ of error to the Circuit Court and removed the ■cause into this court.

Writs of error may be allowed from the Circuit Courts to the District Courts in cases at law, and appeals may be taken from the District Courts to the Circuit Courts in certain cases, under the jurisdiction created by the Bankrupt Act, when the debt or damages claimed amount to more than $500, but the provision is that no appeal shall be allowed from the District to the Circuit Court unless it is'claimed and the required notices are given within ten days-after the entry of the decree or decision from which the appeal is taken, and that no writ of error shall be allowed unless the party claiming it shall comply with the statutes regulating the granting of such writs Applicants for an appeal must give bond as required under the act “to amend the judicial system,” and the party claiming a writ of error must also give good and sufficient security to prosecute the writ to effect, and must comply with the regulations contained in the Judiciary Act as to the service of the writ and the required notice to the adverse party.

Taken literally, the'ten days’ limitation does not extend to *267 writs of error, but the better opinion is, in view of the fact that writs of error and appeals are associated together in the first clause of the section, that the word appeal at the commencement of the second clause means the same 'as review or revision, and that it was intended to include the writ of error as well as appéal, as the. whole section seems-to contemplate a more expeditious disposition of the cause in the appellate court than that prescribéd in the Judiciary Act or the act to .amend the judiciary system. *

Grant all that, and still it is insisted that a writ of error from the Circuit Court to the District Court will not lie in a.case like the present, as neither thepi-oeess nor proceeding-is in form an action at law or a suit in equity, which must be admitted* confining t'he admission strictly to the matter - of- form. Even, when so confined it may be doubtful 'whether the admission ought not- to be further .qualified, as'the first, pleading of the moving party is quite as analogous to the writ and declaration at common law as the petition now employed as a . substitute for the common-law'declaration in more than half i>f the State courts, and which, uhder the recent act to .further, the administration of justice, may be employed in the Federal courts. -,

Support to that -view is also derived from the first pleads ing of the respondents, which is i,n feubstanee and effect the same as the first pleading of the claimant in án information based upon a seizure on land, where it is required that the case ¡shall be tried by jury, unless the right isjwaived by the consent of the claimaut. •

Power and jurisdiction in all matters and proceedings.in bankruptcy are conferred upon the District Courts, but tlie forty-first section of the Bankrupt Acf expressly provides that the court shall, if the debtor, on the return day, or day of hearing, “so demand in writing,” order a trial by jury, at the first term-of the court at which a jury shall be in attendance, to ascertain the alleged fact of such alleged *268 bankruptcy.

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

Related

In Re: Richard Drummond
Fifth Circuit, 2018
In Re United States Ex Rel. Drummond
886 F.3d 448 (Fifth Circuit, 2018)
Yi v. Principi
15 Vet. App. 265 (Veterans Claims, 2001)
In re the Fee Agreement of Cox
10 Vet. App. 361 (Veterans Claims, 1997)
Johnson v. Rogers
917 F.2d 1283 (Tenth Circuit, 1990)
In Re Adele Halkin
598 F.2d 176 (D.C. Circuit, 1979)
Will v. Calvert Fire Insurance
437 U.S. 655 (Supreme Court, 1978)
Thermtron Products, Inc. v. Hermansdorfer
423 U.S. 336 (Supreme Court, 1976)
Jacobson v. Yoon
41 Haw. 181 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1955)
Safeway Stores v. Brown
138 F.2d 278 (Emergency Court of Appeals, 1943)
Roche v. Evaporated Milk Assn.
319 U.S. 21 (Supreme Court, 1943)
United States v. Fixico
115 F.2d 389 (Tenth Circuit, 1940)
State Ex Rel. Gallegos v. District Court, Ninth Judicial Dist.
59 P.2d 893 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1936)
Travelers' Protective Ass'n of America v. Smith
71 F.2d 511 (Fourth Circuit, 1934)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
83 U.S. 258, 21 L. Ed. 493, 16 Wall. 258, 1872 U.S. LEXIS 1156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/insurance-co-v-comstock-scotus-1873.