Latrobe v. J. H. Cross Co.

29 F.2d 210, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1586
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 21, 1928
Docket4421
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 29 F.2d 210 (Latrobe v. J. H. Cross Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Latrobe v. J. H. Cross Co., 29 F.2d 210, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1586 (E.D. Pa. 1928).

Opinion

The Pleadings.

DICKINSON, District Judge.

This action was brought to recover from the defendant payments made within four months of bankruptcy by a debtor on a pre-existing debt. This cause of action is based on clause (b) of section 60 of the Bankruptcy Act (11 USCA § 96).

The defense is a denial of all fact aver-ments upon which the right of recovery is based other than the fact of the payments; a denial that some of the payments were within the four months period; an averment that a $4,000 payment was not a payment on a past-due indebtedness, but a current cash payment; and the averment of a stipulation that a credit should be allowed for a 25 per cent, proportionate payment, which was made to all creditors.

The Law of the Case.

The broad question of a preference has three aspects:

*211 (1) The definition of what is a preference in the sense of a basis for an adjudication in a bankruptcy proceeding.
(2) What is a preference, which will be an obstacle to the enforcement by a creditor of a lien upon or a pledge of bankruptcy assets in the hands of the trustee?
(3) What is a preference, in the sense of a payment of money to the creditor which he must return to the bankruptcy estate at the suit of the trustee?

The last-mentioned kind of a preference is that with which we are here concerned, and is dealt with in clause (b) of section 60 in these words:

Any debt payment made within the four months period is voidable by the trustee in bankruptcy if “the bankrupt be insolvent and the * * * transfer then operate as a preference, and the person receiving it * * * shall then have reasonable cause to believe * * * such * * * transfer would effect a preference.”

There may be another question (with which we are not here concerned) very much akin to that of a preference. This may arise in determining the dividend share of a creditor claimant in the bankruptcy assets.

The Fact Situation.

This divides into four branches:

(1) What payments were in faet made within the four months period?
(2) What payments were on an indebtedness before existing?
(3) The stipulated deduction to be made from any sum which the trustee should otherwise recover.
(4) The fact findings called for by section 60, clause (b), of the Bankruptcy Act.

Pact Discussion.

The parties to any fact controversy are usually so intent upon the ultimate faet inference which each wishes to have drawn as not to develop clearly the evidentiary facts from which the ultimate facts are to be deduced. These might, for illustration, be an existing indebtedness, a demand by the creditor for payment, and the payment of the debt directly to the creditor. There might likewise be a like indebtedness, the closing of the account by a note, the transfer of the note by discount or otherwise to a bank or other endorsee, and the payment of the note in whole or in part to the holder. The difference in the fact situation might bear upon the conclusion of law of whether the money received was recoverable by the trustee in bankruptcy.

In the instant case the payments made have been treated as made to the defendant as creditor, and (with the exception of a $4,000 payment) to have been made on account of a debt then due. We have accordingly so viewed them, but the lack of definiteness in the presentation of the evidentiary facts has a bearing upon the broad finding of a recoverable “preference,” to which we will later recur.

1. The first braneh of the fact situation above outlined grows out of the circumstance that the payments sought to be recovered were made by checks, some of which were given before the filing of .the petition in bankruptcy, but were charged up to the drawer’s account by the bank on which drawn within the four months period. We are concerned here with an act. The aet was a payment. The payment was made in that form of currency known as a check drawn against an account in a bank of deposit. The payee was under no requirement of law to accept payment in this form of currency, but, if it did accept it, we see no escape from the finding that the transaction was complete and ended at that time. There was nothing more for it to do. In strictness, the debt which the check paid was paid when the cheek was accepted in payment. It is true that there is an implied condition imposed upon such an acceptance that the cheek is what is called “good,” but this condition is really nothing more than a legal fiction, raised to work out equities which may arise. As between debtor and creditor, the implied condition is of little, if any, value when it makes no practical difference whether the original debt or the debt evidenced by the unpaid check is owing. H the check is not presented for payment in “due course,” and the bank fails, the payment stands, and the loss, if there be any, falls upon the payee.

We think the finding should be made that the payments sought to be recovered, which are represented by the cheek payments made under dates prior to December 20, 1925, were not made within the four months period, and should be deducted from plaintiff’s claim.

2. The $4,000 payment was a current cash payment, and not one made on a pre-existing debt.

3. We interpret the brief submitted on behalf of plaintiff to mean that it is conceded that the 25 per cent, payment made to all creditors should be deducted from the plaintiff’s claim. This concession is doubtless due to a recognition of the truth that no creditor could be found to know that a like percentage payment made to all creditors would work a preference.

*212 4. This brings us to tbe remaining fact issues, which may be cast into the form of the following questions, which paraphrase section 60, clause (b), of the Bankruptcy Law:

(a) Was the debtor “insolvent” at the time the several payments were made respectively?
(b) Did the payment “then operate as a preference” ?
(e) Did the defendant “then have reasonable cause to believe that [the payment] would effect a preference”?

These questions, to some extent, overlap. Our attention may.be confined to the third, as embracing the whole gist of the inquiry. The fact that there are three is doubtless due to that curious trinity of phrases to which the legal profession is addicted. It is of the “grant, bargain, and sell” and “assign, transfer, and set over” type of expression. It is true, of course, that there are shades of meaning expressed. A debtor may be insolvent, and yet a payment made (being less than the creditor’s dividend share) may not work a preference. A payment may work a preference, and yet the payee “have no reasonable cause to believe” that it will. It would be difficult, however, to conceive of a situation when the paid creditor knew he was getting a preference unless the debtor was insolvent and the payment did “then operate as a preference.”

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29 F.2d 210, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1586, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/latrobe-v-j-h-cross-co-paed-1928.