Michaels v. Post

88 U.S. 398, 22 L. Ed. 520, 21 Wall. 398, 1874 U.S. LEXIS 1381
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 21, 1874
Docket85
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 88 U.S. 398 (Michaels v. Post) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Michaels v. Post, 88 U.S. 398, 22 L. Ed. 520, 21 Wall. 398, 1874 U.S. LEXIS 1381 (1874).

Opinion

*413 Mr. Justice CLIFFORD

delivered the opinion of the court.

Debtors, owing debts to the amount of $300, who have committed any one of the acts of bankruptcy enumerated in the thirty-ninth section of the original Bankrupt Act, may be adjudged bankrupts on the petition of one or more of their creditors, the aggregate of whose debts provable under the act amounts to $250, provided such petition is filed within the period therein prescribed.

By that section it is declared to be an act of bankruptcy if such a debtor shall make any assignment, gift, sale, conveyance, or transfer of his estate, property, rights, or credits, with intent to delay, defraud, or hinder his creditors, or if, being bankrupt or insolvent, or in contemplation of bankruptcy or insolvency, he shall make any payment, gift, grant, sale, conveyance, or transfer of money or other property, estate, or credits, with intent to give a preference to one or more of his creditors; and the provision is that if such a debtor shall he adjudged a bankrupt the assignee may recover back the money or other property so paid, conveyed, sold, assigned, or transferred contrary to that provision, provided the person receiving such payment or conveyance had reasonable cause to believe that a fraud on the Bankrupt Act was intended, or that the debtor was insolvent; and the further provision is that such creditor shall not be allowed to prove his debt in bankruptcy. *

Proof, of the most satisfactory character, is exhibited in the record that the debtors described in the bill of complaint were, on the 1st day of December, 1869, adjudged, by the District Court of the United States for the district where the debtors resided, to be bankrupts, on the petition of the creditor therein named, and that such proceedings subsequently took place that the complainant was duly appointed the assignee of their estate.

Argument to support those allegations is unnecessary, as they were admitted in opeu court, and it is equally clear that the assignee was duly qualified aud that all the estate, *414 real and personal, of the bankrupts was duly assigned and conveyed to the assignee, as required and directed by the fourteenth section of the Bankrupt Act. Nor is any discussion of those masters necessary, as they also were admitted at the hearing in the Circuit Court.

Abundant proof is also exhibited to show that the bankrupts, prior to the commencement of the proceedings in bankruptcy, were engaged in business as retail traders, and that they were largely insolvent; that the principal means they possessed, either to pay their debts or to support their families, consisted of a stock of clothing, hats, caps and other furnishing goods for gentlemen, not much exceeding in value the sum of $4000, and that they sold and conveyed the whole of their stock of goods, on the 25th of October preceding the date of the decree by which they were adjudged-bankrupts, at the instigation and for the exclusive benefit of the appellants, who were their largest creditors.

Such sale and conveyance having been made less than a month and a half before the-vendors were adjudged bankrupts, the assignee claimed that the sale and conveyance were null and void, aud that the attending circumstances were such that it became and was his duty, as such assignee, to take proper measures to cause the goods or their proceeds to be restored, as belonging to the estate of the bankrupts, and to procure, if practicable, a decree that the pur.chasing creditors should not be allowed to prove their debt against the estate of the bankrupts.

Pursuant to that view the complainant instituted the present suit, in which he alleges, among other things, that the appellants held demands against the bankrupts exceeding $4000, and that the appellants becoming fearful that they should lose their claim, and being anxious to have the same paid or. secured, they, or one of them in behalf of the firm, made a visit to the bankrupts at their place of business, and "that while there they took an inventory of their stock of goods and proposed to buy them out and leave the goods in the store'of the vendors, and permit them to continue their business and to sell the goods for the vendees at such prices *415 as they, the vendors, could get for the same, and to account to the vendees at tho prices which they, the vendees, should mark the goods at the time of the sale, with the right on the part of the vendors to keep the balance for their commissions in selling the goods; that the respondents also proposed, as the complainant alleges, in order to induce their debtors to consent to the proposed arrangement, that they, the respondents, would furnish them additional goods to sell, on the same terms, as they, the debtors, should need thereafter to keep up their stock; and the further allegation is that the respondents also suggested that, in order to have the transaction “ look all right,” it would be better to have the goods transferred to some third person, naming the one to whom the goods were subsequently conveyed for their benefit.

Objections were at first made by the debtors, but they finally acceded to the proposal, and assigned and transferred their entire stock of goods to the person named by the respondents, he, the nominal grantee, paying therefor the sum of $4000 in money, drafts, and his promissory notes, all of which were immediately handed over to the persons for ■whoso benefit the sale and purchase were made, and that they gave to their debtors a receipt in full of all demands.

Beyond all doubt the debtors expected to remain in the possession of the goods and to be permitted to sell the same on commission, but the complainant alleges that the nominal vendee in a few days thereafter, acting under the advice and instructions of the real purchasers of the goods, made a demand of the same from the debtors, and that the latter having refused to surrender the possession, the person who made the demand sued out a writ of replevin against the debtors in possession, and succeeded in recovering the goods, which, with a few outstanding accounts, constituted tho entire property of the debtors, and that the taking away the said goods from them as aforesaid left them stripped of all means of paying their other creditors, to whom they were largely indebted, and several of whom have since proved their claims against the estate of the bankrupts.

Prefaced by these allegations the complainaut charges in *416 the hill of complaint that the entire transaction of the pretended sale and transfer of.the goods and of the payment of the price by the money and notes, was but a scheme on the part of the respondents to obtain a preference over other creditors within four months before the petition in bankruptcy was filed, in violation of the express provisions of the Bankrupt Act, and that the respondents knew all about the pecuniary condition of the debtors, and knew that their assets were not equal in value to their indebtedness, and that they were insolvent.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 U.S. 398, 22 L. Ed. 520, 21 Wall. 398, 1874 U.S. LEXIS 1381, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michaels-v-post-scotus-1874.