Metcalf v. Officer

17 F. Cas. 174, 5 Dill. 565
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Iowa
DecidedJuly 1, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 17 F. Cas. 174 (Metcalf v. Officer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Metcalf v. Officer, 17 F. Cas. 174, 5 Dill. 565 (circtdia 1879).

Opinion

LOVE, District Judge.

This case is before the court upon the demurrer of the defendants to the plaintiff’s petition. The plaintiff, who sues as assignee in bankruptcy, shows that the petition in bankruptcy was filed on the 1st of May, 1877, by certain creditors of A. Bernard & Co., against A.' Bernard and John G. Mead as the members composing that firm, and that on the 13th day of May, 1877, they were duly adjudged bankrupts; that on the 5th day of May, 1S77, the plaintiff was elected assignee of said estate of A. Bernard & Co., and received a conveyance of the same from the register under the order of the court; that thereafter, on the 12th day of October, 1877, a supplemental petition was filed in the court of bankruptcy by said creditors, alleging that M. E. Mead was a partner in said firm of A. Bernard & Co., and praying that she might be made a party and adjudged a bankrupt upon the original petition, and that such proceedings were had that she was, on the 19th day of November, 1S77, made a party thereto and adjudged a bankrupt on said original petition as a member of said firm; that on the 24th day of January, 1878, an assignment was duly made, by order of the court, of all the estate that the bankrupts, or either of them, possessed on said 1st day of May, 1877. The plaintiff further states that about the 5th day of April, 1877, said firm of A. Bernard & Co. made a payment to defendants in the sum of $3,500, defendants being then creditors of said A. Bernard & Co. in said sum, and that said sum was paid under circumstances which made it a fraudulent preference under the bankrupt law.

The court having caused the papers in the original case to be certified for its inspection, finds it to be alleged in the supplemental petition, among other things, that the petitioning creditors were informed by both A. Bernard and John G. Mead, at the time of the purchasing of the goods which formed the basis of their claims, that said A. Bernard and John G. Mead were the persons composing said firm of A. Bernard & Co.; that they filed their petition in bankruptcy to put said partnership into bankruptcy under that belief; that, at the time of filing said creditors’ petition, each of said petitioning creditors had been informed and believed that said firm of A. Bernard & Co., then carrying on business in Council Bluffs, Iowa, was composed of A. Bernard and John G. Mead; that each of said petitioning creditors continued in the belief that said A. Bernard and John G. Mead composed said firm until about the 27th day of September, 1S77, when, upon the trial of a certain action brought by this plaintiff to recover assets claimed to belong to said estate, A. Bernard testified that Mrs. M. E. Mead, the wife of said John G. Mead, was a partner in said firm of A. Bernard & [175]*175Co., and that, until it so appeared by the testimony of said A. Bernard, each of said petitioning. creditors was ignorant of the fact that Mrs. M. E. Mead was a member of said firm. It .also appears by the original petition that the acts of bankruptcy were committed in the month of April, 1877, to-wit, on the 21st day of April, 1877, and at other times within the same month.

It is clear that the foregoing statements, taken together, amount to an allegation that Mrs. M. E. Mead was a dormant or secret partner of said firm, and that A. Bernard and John G. Mead were the ostensible partners; and this court will presume, after judgment, at least, that the district court, in which said supplemental petition was heard and determined, so found.

The object of the present suit is to compel Officer & Pusey, the defendants, to restore to the assignee the sum of money which they received from A. Bernard & Co., the- bankrupts, in payment of the bankrupts’ debt to them. It is claimed that the payment was an illegal preference, in fraud of the bankrupt law.

In support of this demurrer the defendants contend: (1) That a partnership can be put in bankruptcy only by proceedings against all the partners. (2) That the fact that there was a- secret or unknown partner does not affect the question. (3) That the proceeding by supplemental petition was absolutely void, since common law governs proceedings in bankruptcy, and amendments are not allowed. (4) That the limitation prescribed by the bankrupt law ran till the amendment or supplemental petition was filed, which was after the expiration of the two months fixed by the amendment to that statute, and that, inasmuch as the amendment or supplemental petition was not filed until more than two months after the alleged acts of bankruptcy were committed, this action cannot be maintained.

Thus the question is whether or not it is essential to the validity of an adjudication of bankruptcy against a partnership that a secret or dormant member of the firm should be made a defendant. The adjudication ordinarily brings the individual as well as the partnership property, debts, and assets into bankruptcy to be administered, but this result follows the adjudication only where the individual members whose property is to be affected are served with process or duly notified by publication. But may not the partnership property, debts, and assets be brought into bankruptcy and bound by the adjudication by serving the ostensible partners only? Is it absolutely necessary that the petitioning creditors should, in order to reach the partnership property, bring before the court an unknown member of the firm, whose existence as such is kept a secret by the ostensible members? If so, the most serious inconvenience and confusion would follow as a consequence.

The petitioning creditors cannot, in the first instance, do what to them is impossible. They cannot make members of the firm who keep themselves out of view, and with whom they have made no contract, parties defendant to the petition; and this is by no fault of the petitioning creditors, but rather by that of the members of the firm, both secret and ostensible. The cause against the ostensible members proceeds to adjudication; the creditors meet, choose an assignee, and by the order of the court all of the partnership property, and all of the individual property of the ostensible members who are served, is conveyed to the assignee; the assignee takes possession of the property and assets, collects and pays debts, adjusts liens, sells and conveys property, and makes dividends. After all this, it turns out that there was a secret partner, whom the petitioning creditors, not knowing, did not serve. What follows, according to the doctrine of this demurrer? The adjudication was an absolute nullity. The adjudication was the sole fountain of authority for all that has been done in pursuance of it. The counsel for the defendants contend that there is no remedy but to set aside the adjudication and serve the secret members of the firm; and I suppose that if at some future stage of the proceedings another secret member should be discovered, it would be necessary to set aside the adjudication again and begin de novo. But how, in the meantime, are the confusion and mischief arising from the sale and conveyance of the property of the bankrupt by the assignee, and the administration generally by that officer, to be remedied? Upon this point the counsel have given us no light. It cannot, of course, be denied that the resulting mischief is the direct consequence of the misconduct of the ostensible partners, in first keeping the fact of there being another partner concealed, and in not, in the second place, pleading the existence of the secret partner in abatement.

Counsel, in order to justify a doctrine leading to such consequences, appeal to the analogies of the common law.

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Related

In re Fuller
9 F.2d 553 (Second Circuit, 1925)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 F. Cas. 174, 5 Dill. 565, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/metcalf-v-officer-circtdia-1879.