Mendenhall v. Carter

17 F. Cas. 12, 7 Nat. Bank. Reg. 320
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. North Carolina
DecidedJuly 1, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 17 F. Cas. 12 (Mendenhall v. Carter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mendenhall v. Carter, 17 F. Cas. 12, 7 Nat. Bank. Reg. 320 (W.D.N.C. 1872).

Opinion

DICK, District Judge.

I have not been able to find any case in our courts in which the precise point first presented has been considered and determined. On the argument, my attention was called to the case of Baldwin v. Wilder [Case No. 806], as deciding an analogous question, and the counsel insisted with much earnestness and force, that the principles there announced ought to govern the ease before us.. Mr. Hilliard, in his work on “Bankruptcy” (page 20), in speaking of the time when acts of bankruptcy may be committed under the English statutes, says: “An act committed before the passage of the statutes is not sufficient to support a commission,” and several cases are cited as authorities. I have not had an opportunity of examining those cases to see whether they throw any light upon the question before us. In determining this case, I will, in the first place, inquire what is the fair and reasonable construction of the clause in the statute upon which this proceeding is founded; and then consider the opinion of the learned judge in the case above mentioned. The primary rule (sometimes called the golden rule) in the construction of statutes, is to give to 'all the plain and unambiguous words of a statute their literal and ordinary meaning, unless manifest absurdity or injustice would be caused by so doing. Another rule of great practical importance is, “that a statute must in general, on principles of obvious convenience and justice, be construed as prospective and not retrospective in its operation: it must be considered as intended to regulate the future conduct of persons, and not apply to past transactions.” Broom, Com. Law, 6. This rule should be observed unless the terms of the statute plainly show a contrary legislative intent. The act of bankruptcy alleged in the petition is that the respondent “has stopped and not resumed payment of his commercial paper within a period of fourteen days.” As the promissory note mentioned in the petition was not paid at maturity, the act of stopping payment occurred one hundred and eighty-three days after date, more than three years De-fore the passage of the bankrupt law, March 2, 1867, and the non-resumption of payment continued up to the 17th day of May, 1871, just before the petition was filed. The allegation that the respondent was a trader, etc., was not denied, and is not deemed material in the construction of the statute since the amendment of the 14th July, 1870 [16 Stat. 276]; for the act of bankruptcy alleged may now be committed by any person who executes commercial paper and fails to make payment within a period of fourteen days after maturity. In re Hercules Assurance Co. [Case No. 6,402].

[13]*13To constitute this act of bankruptcy, two things must concur, and one necessarily precedes the other. 1. The debtor must fail to pay his commercial paper at maturity. 2. He must fail to resume payment within a period of fourteen days. If' payment should be made in twenty days after suspension, this will not do away with the act of bankruptcy. The active words in the statute to express these two requirements are — “stopped or suspended” and “not resumed payment.” These are plain and unambiguous words when used together, and must be separately and literally construed. The words “stopped or suspended” are sometimes used to denote not only the act of stopping, hut, also, the not resuming payment; and if they were the only words used in the statute they would express both ideas. Congress has seen proper to use both expressions, and connect them together with the ordinary conjunctive conjunction. We must take it for granted that congress in framing such an important and carefully considered statute, used the words “ex industria,” and with the purpose of conveying the different significations which they literally express.

The 39th section, as amended July 14th, 1870, after leaving out intermediate and inapplicable words and clauses, would read as follows: “That any person residing and owing debts as aforesaid, who, after the passage of this act, has stopped or suspended and not resumed payment of his commercial paper within a period of fourteen days, shall be deemed to have committed an act of bankruptcy,” etc. In construing this section according to the plain and literal meaning of the words used, we conclude that the respondent, having stopped payment before the passage of the statute, the subsequent non-resumption of payment of his commercial paper did not constitute an act of bankruptcy.

The petitioner’s counsel on the argument insisted that the non-resumption of payment by the respondent of his dishonored commercial paper subsequent to the bankrupt law was a continuous act of bankruptcy, and che case of Baldwin v. Wilder, supra, was relied on as authority, and the counsel seems to be sustained in his views by the reasoning of the learned judge in that case. We have great respect for the ability, learning, and high reputation of Judge Emmons, but we cannot adopt his opinion in the decision of the case before us. We think, as we have before indicated, that the words “stopped” and “not resumed” have distinct significations. There cannot be a condition of non-resumption without a previous stopping of payment, but the words, as used, have a different relation as to time in the transaction. A fraudulent stopping of payment is an immediate act of bankruptcy, and no subsequent resumption will free the fraudulent debtor from an adjudication of bankruptcy, if proceedings are commenced within six months. In this clause of the statute the word “stopped” refers to the time of the immediate act, and the question of non-resumption does not arise, and the words “not resumed” are not used. In the subsequent clause, where a stopping of payment which is not fraudulent is provided for, the words “stopped” and “not resumed” are both used, one with reference to the time when the paper was dishonored according to the law merchant and the other with reference to the fourteen days of grace allowed by the bankrupt law. In this cáse, stopping is an inchoate act of bankruptcy, which is completed by a failure to make payment for fourteen days. We think, therefore, that the stopping as well as non-resumption of payment of commercial paper must both have occurred after the 2d of March, 1867,. to come within the provisions of the stat ute.

“Is the suspension an indivisible act, that, once committed, is not continuing? The law is full, of analogies to the contrary.” Baldwin v. Wilder [Case No. 806]. This terse expression of judicial opinion was cited on the argument, and ably enforced by counsel, with many analogies from the law. Even were we to admit the principle announced, it would not apply to our case. There are many acts recognized in law as continuous in their nature, but the act continued is always of the same character as when it began. Thus a nuisance is continuous, but it commences a nuisance. A permanent trespass is continuous, and may be so alleged in pleading; but it was a trespass ab origine. In our case, the stopping and not resuming payment for three years before the statute was passed was not an act of bankruptcy, and the subsequent non-resumption is not declared to be such act in the statute. I cannot concur with Judge Emmons in speaking of this act of bankruptcy.

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

Related

Marble v. Jamesville Manufacturing Co.
39 N.E. 998 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1895)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 F. Cas. 12, 7 Nat. Bank. Reg. 320, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mendenhall-v-carter-ncwd-1872.