L. B. Frankel & Co. v. Creditors

14 P. 776, 20 Nev. 49
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 5, 1887
DocketNo. 1262.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 14 P. 776 (L. B. Frankel & Co. v. Creditors) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
L. B. Frankel & Co. v. Creditors, 14 P. 776, 20 Nev. 49 (Neb. 1887).

Opinion

By the Court,

Belknap, J.:

This is an appeal from orders of the district court, adjudging L. B. Frankel & Co.- insolvents, appointing an assignee and staying proceedings. Numerous reasons are assigned for the reversal of the orders', the prominent one being that “ the court had no jurisdiction in the premises, because it appeared that L. B. Frankel & Co. were brokers, and the debts and liabilities from which they petition to be discharged were contracted by them in a fiduciary capacity and character.” The determination of this point • involves an examination of the statute concerning proceedings in insolvency. The act entitled “An act for the relief of insolvent debtors and protection of creditors,” approved March 3, 1881, (Gen. Stat. 3845, et seq.,) under which the proceedings were taken, is substantially a copy of the California insolvency la.w of 1852; but after copying this law, which provides only for voluntary insolvency, provision was made in succeeding sections for cases in which creditors could institute proceedings to have their debtors adjudged insolvent and their estates administered. At section 30, which was a part of the California law, it declares: “All insolvent debtors owing, or accountable in any manner, for public funds or property, of whatever nature or kind; all unfaithful depositaries; all such as refuse or neglect to pay up all funds received *55 by them as bankers, brokers, commission merchants, or for money, goods, or effects received by them in a fiduciary capacity, shall be denied the benefits of this act.”

Before the adoption of this section by the legislature of this state, the supreme court of California had construed it as excluding bankers and brokers from the jurisdiction of the insolvency court. (Cohen v. Barrett, 5 Cal. 195.) It is claimed, under a familiar rule of statutory construction, 'that-the interpretation was adopted as well as the terms of the statute. The views of the California court with reference to the general purpose of the law of 1852 deserve attention. Upon this subject it was said in Cohen, v. Barrett, 5 Cal. 212: “If the power to discharge the insolvent is denied in this class of cases, (bankers,) jurisdiction for any other purpose would seem inharmonious to the general scheme or policy of the act, which looks to the final discharge as the object to be worked out, and cannot be said in these cases to be of any protection to the creditor, by simply permitting the debtor to throw his assets into insolvency for distribution, if he thinks proper to do so; for it must be borne in mind that the act makes’no provision for an involuntary surrender, and the mere permission of an exercise of volition on the part of an insolvent debtor will be found to amount to no protection at all; particularly where the benefits of the act are denied, and the real incentive to an honest surrender of all his assets is thus removed.”

In Sanborn v. His Creditors, 37 Cal. 610, the court said: “The statute, as its title imports, was intended for the relief of insolvent debtors and the protection of creditors. The ‘ relief ’ and the ‘ protection ’ for which it provides, proceed pari passu. If the debtor, for any cause, is entitled to no ‘ relief,’ the creditors are entitled to no ‘protection,’ for they stand in need of none, except such as is afforded by the general laws for the collection of debts. Hence - if, upon the trial of an accusation of fraud, the -debtor is found guilty, the final judgment is that his discharge be denied, and that he be forever denied the benefit of the laws passed for the relief of insolvent debtors in this state. (Section 23.) With this judgment the entire proceedings terminate, and the relation of the petitioner and his creditors in respect to each other, and to the estate of the former, remain as at the commencement, except that the petitioner becomes liable to the pains and penalties provided in *56 the twenty-fifth section.” Appel v. His Creditors, 57 Cal. 211, was an appeal from an order made in an insolvency proceeding under the law of 1852. The assignee had received from the sheriff certain moneys belonging to the insolvent. After a trial of issues, the debtor was denied the benefit of the insolvent law. Thereupon the court directed the assignee to return the money to the sheriff. The order was affirmed.

These decisions show the purpose of the California law to have been the discharge of the insolvent debtor; and it was accordingly held that if he could not have the benefit of the law he was excluded from its jurisdiction. The insolvency law of this state proceeds upon a different principle. It provides various cases in which creditors may have their debtor adjudged insolvent, and his estate ratably distributed, while under the California law the debtor alone could inaugurate the proceeding. This feature distinguishes the principle upon which the laws are founded. One has for its object the final discharge of the insolvent; the main purpose of the other is a ratable distribution of his property.

Our statute differs in many respects from the national bankrupt law of 1867, but its purpose is in the main similar. In construing certain provisions of that law, the supreme court of the United States in Wilson v. City Bank took occasion to consider its general spirit and purpose, employing language applicable in the present case. The court said: “In both classes of cases (voluntary and involuntary bankruptcy) undoubtedly the primary object is to secure a just distribution of the bankrupt’s property among his creditors, and in both the secondary object is the release of the bankrupt from the obligation to pay the debts of those creditors. But, in case of voluntary bankruptcy, the aid of the law is invoked by the bankrupt himself, with the purpose of being discharged from his debts as his principal motive; and in the other the movement is made by his creditors with the purpose of securing the appropriation of his property to their payment, the discharge being with them a matter of no weight, and often contested.” (17 Wall. 480.)

And that jurisdiction does not depend upon the right of the debtor to receive the benefits of the bankrupt law, we quote from Van Nostrand v. Carr, 30 Md. 128: “ The jurisdiction of the bankrupt court does not depend upon the right of the party ultimately to obtain his discharge. This may be denied him *57 for various causes enumerated in the law, and can be determined only by facts and circumstances disclosed in the progress of the cause, after the jurisdiction has attached. It is not essential to the jurisdiction that the party shall appear to be entitled to a discharge without the consent of his creditors.”

If the objection urged to the jurisdiction be valid in the present case and the California decisions followed, the objection would be good in every case where an insolvent would be denied a discharge, and the great purpose of the law — the distribution of the property of a debtor among, his creditors — would thereby be defeated. The.

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Bluebook (online)
14 P. 776, 20 Nev. 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/l-b-frankel-co-v-creditors-nev-1887.