Love v. Love

15 F. Cas. 996, 21 Pitts L.J. 101, 1874 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 223
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 10, 1874
StatusPublished

This text of 15 F. Cas. 996 (Love v. Love) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Love v. Love, 15 F. Cas. 996, 21 Pitts L.J. 101, 1874 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 223 (W.D. Pa. 1874).

Opinion

Before the note in question matured, the cashier notified John Love when it became due, which, according to our calculation, was the 18th of December, 1S72. After that there was no communication between the parties, and the bank, after waiting until the 0th of January, 1S73, which they deemed a reasonable time for the payment of the same, sent the note to their attorney in Kittanning, with orders to enter it up and collect it. This, with proper diligence, he proceeded to do, and, by execution issued in Clarion county, levied upon personal property of the defendant at Monterey, amounting in value to thirteen thousand dollars. At the time the execution was issued, there is no evidence either that the financial condition of John [997]*997Love bad changed for the worse, or that the Fairview Deposit Bank knew or suspected that he was in failing circumstances or that he was contemplating bankruptcy or insolvency. On the contrary, the evidence of all the witnesses shows that they believed him to be solvent. On the first day of February, A. D. 1S73, proceedings were instituted by Charles J. Love in the United States district court to force John Love into involuntary bankruptcy. Upon this, an order to show cause why he should not be adjudicated a bankrupt was allowed, returnable to February 15, 1S73; and February 4th, 1873, an injunction was granted against the Fairview Deposit Bank enjoining them in meantime from proceeding further with .their execution. In obedience to this command, the attorney of the 'bank stayed the execution. He did not, however, abandon his claim thereunder, but twice notified the assignee that he should insist upon the lien of the bank, which, excepting eight hundred dollars for labor under the act of 1S72 [17 Stat. 334], was the first upon the property; and on October 31. 1S73, the bank filed its petition to be paid by the assignee the full amount contained in their proof of claim. The petition was referred to the register for examination and report. Upon the day appointed for a hearing (October 29th, 1873), it appearing that the assignee had not sold the property, an agreement was made by the assignee and the attorney of the bank, whereby it was agreed that evidence might be taken upon said petition, notwithstanding the assignee had not sold the property; and if the court should be of the opinion that the petitioners were entitled to hold under the execution in that event the sheriff of Clarion county should be allowed to sell upon said execution, or the assignee should proceed to sell the property, and pay the proceeds to said petitioner to the extent of the amount due them, as should be deemed advisable by the court.

1. Are the petitioners now in a situation to demand the redress sought for? ■ The adjudication in bankruptcy was res inter alios acta, in which the petitioners were neither bound nor had the right to interpose exceptions to prevent the injunction against them. Karr v. Whitaker [Case No. 7,613]; Bump, Bankr. 620; In re Dunkle [Case No. 7,160]; In re Bush [Id. 2,222]. The adjudication was merely temporary, and intended to restrain the disposition of the goods and property of the debtors until an order of adjudication could be passed. Bump, Bankr. 41; Bankrupt Act, § 40 [14 Stat. 536]; In re Moses [Case No. 9,869). Being thus intended to secure the property for the creditors and prevent irreparable injury thereto before the as-signee could act, it could work no injury to the claimant. “Actus curiae neminem grava-bit. Actus legis nemini facit injuriam.” The register is therefore of the opinion that no right of the claimant has been lost through the proceedings that have heretofore taken place, and that, the claimants having stayed their execution in obedience to the injunction of the bankrupt court, the assignee took the property subject to actual valid subsisting liens on the same. Bump, Bankr. 150; In re Schueppf [Case No. 12,471]; In re Campbell [Id. 2,349]; Ex parte Hambright [Id. 5,973]; Armstrong v. Richey [Id. 546].

2. Did the claimant have at the time of the filing of the petition in bankruptcy a valid subsisting lien, unaffected by the provisions of the 'bankrupt act? The answer to this involves some of the most abstruse questions connected with the bankrupt law (section 39; declares that any person who, “being bankrupt or insolvent, or in contemplation of bankruptcy or insolvency, * * * shall give any warrant to confess judgment, or procure or suffer his' property to be taken on legal process, with intent to give a preference to one or more of his creditors, * * * or with intent by such disposition of his property to defeat or delay the operation of this act, or who, being a banker, a merchant or trader, has fraudulently stopped and not resumed payment of his commercial paper within a period of fourteen days, shall be deemed to have committed an act of bankruptcy”: “provided said petition is brought within six months after the act of bankruptcy is committed.” There is no question that the petition -was filed in time; and the register is therefore required to decide the following questions: First. Did the defendant, when in a bankrupt -or insolvent condition, or in contemplation of bankruptcy or insolvency, give the warrant to confess judgment with intent to give a preference? Second. Did he procure or suffer his property to be taken on legal process with intent to give a preference? Third. Being a banker, merchant or trader, did he fraudulently stop or suspend and not resume payment of her commercial paper for the period of fourteen days?

As to the first question, we find there was not only no evidence of bankruptcy or insolvency ■ or contemplation thereof at the time the warrant was given, but the evidence tends to show that the defendant was actually solvent. It is true that, upon the. date of the transaction his account was overdrawn; but the evidence is positive that he “borrowed” the money, and that he paid a discount upon the whole amount of the sum loaned, instead of only the part which he had overdrawn. Nor are we to presume that, if the defendant were insolvent and about to give a preference, the bank would undergo the risk of losing twelve hundred dollars, in order to obtain a preference on eight hundred dollars. We therefore have no hesitation in deciding that the transaction was not a preference under the law.

Second. Did he, being insolvent or bankrupt, or being in contemplation thereof, pro[998]*998cure or suffer his property to be taken on legal process with intent to give a preference? There is no evidence that he was insolvent when the execution was issued. It is true that the note in question had been due a few days, and that he had overdrawn his account one hundred and twenty-one dollars, but such an overdraft would be of slight moment in view of the fact that his deposits in two months had aggregated thirteen thousand dollars, and that in the large business between the defendant and the bank such overdrafts had occurred several times before, and the fact that he owed twenty-two hundred dollars would hardly be sufficient to prove the insolvency of a man who was reputed to worth thirty-three thousand dollars. If it did have such a result, we fear that a large portion of the business men of the country would be in an insolvent condition. The testimony shows no change in his condition except in the debts referred to; and all the witnesses concur in their belief-of his solvency at the time. They also concur in proving the fact that the proceedings taken to collect the note were instituted and carried on without his knowledge or consent. JBven if he were insolvent, we do not think his right to proceed in the usual way to collect his claim would be affected.

It is true in the Case of Black [Case No.

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Bluebook (online)
15 F. Cas. 996, 21 Pitts L.J. 101, 1874 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/love-v-love-pawd-1874.