Northwestern Pulp & Paper Co. v. Finish Luth Book Concern

51 F.2d 340, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 2908
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJuly 13, 1931
Docket6414
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 51 F.2d 340 (Northwestern Pulp & Paper Co. v. Finish Luth Book Concern) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Northwestern Pulp & Paper Co. v. Finish Luth Book Concern, 51 F.2d 340, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 2908 (9th Cir. 1931).

Opinion

SAWTELLE, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from an order of adjudication in bankruptcy.

The original petition of involuntary bankruptcy was filed on August 18, 1930. It set forth that the alleged bankrupt, while insolvent, “suffered and permitted * * * one of its creditors to obtain a preference through legal proceedings and not having at least five days before a sale or final disposition of its property affected by such preference vacated or discharged such preference.”

The preference complained of is alleged to be that the respondent allowed Thomas and Meservy, one of its creditors, holding a claim of $1,000 against the respondent, to secure a judgment by default in the circuit court of Multnomah county, Ore.; allowed said creditor to secure an execution on the judgment on all of the respondent’s timber lands, of the approximate value of $50,000; and further allowed said property to be advertised and sold by the sheriff of said county for the amount of the judgment and costs, and a sheriff’s certificate to issue thereon to said Thomas and Meservy for the amount of their claim and costs.

The petition further alleges that all these acts were committed within four months pri- or to the filing of the petition. There was no demurrer or motion filed by the alleged bankrupt to test the legal sufficiency of this pleading.

The only act of bankruptcy alleged refers specifically to the judgment obtained by Thomas and Meservy and the failure to discharge the preference arising thereunder within five days before the sale. If the dates of the rendition of the judgment or the docketing thereof, the sale of the property, and the issuance of the sheriff’s certificate, had been properly set forth in the original petition, undoubtedly the latter would have been held by the court to have been insufficient to allege an act of bankruptcy.

Leave to amend was granted to the petitioning creditors, however, and thereafter, to-wit, on October 14, 1930, an amended petition was filed, setting forth in detail the entry of the judgment above referred to. There it was stated that the Thomas and Meservy judgment was taken on August 27,1929, was entered on the judgment docket in Multno-mah county the same day, and a transcript thereof was entered on the judgment docket of the circuit court of Clatsop county, Ore., on August 30, 1929; that such judgment was a lien on the respondent’s property in the amount of $1,181.60; that respondent did not vaeate the same within 30 days from the date of its entry or docketing, nor at any time thereafter, and suffered a large amount of its real property to be sold under execution on December 19, 1929, which was also the date of the sheriff’s certificate of sale. (In a stipulation filed by counsel on both sides on the same day as that on which the amended petition was filed — October 14, 1930 — the date of the sale is given as December 24,1929.)

It is clear that the facte alleged in connection with the above judgment and sale of property did not constitute an act of bankruptcy.

In the amended petition, however, the creditors attempted to set forth an additional act of bankruptcy. They alleged, in substance, that the respondent suffered judgment to be entered against it in favor of the Pacific Coast Credit Association on September 21,1929; that said judgment was entered on *342 the docket of the circuit court of Clatsop county on September 23, 1929; and that a sale under execution out of said court was had September 3,1939.

It should be noticed in passing that the amended petition fails to specify that the alleged bankrupt was insolvent on the date when the alleged preference in the ease of the Pacific Coast Credit Association was obtained, i. e., when the judgment was docketed. Furthermore, the stipulation of counsel, the opinion of the court below, and the narrative statement of evidence all fail to specify the alleged bankrupt’s insolvency at the time that either of the two judgments was obtained.

While the omission of this statutory element of the act of bankruptcy complained of would itself render the amended petition fatally defective, there are additional grounds for reversing the judgment in this case These grounds are to be taken up hereafter.

It is seriously questioned whether the amendment should have been allowed at all, since it was subject to the same objection as .the original petition, in that it failed to allege an act of bankruptcy.

But, as we regard this case, neither the original nor the amended petition sets forth an act of bankruptcy. Therefore we pass to the main question in this controversy.

It will be seen that both judgments against the alleged bankrupt were docketed and therefore, according to the law of Oregon, became valid liens, long before the four-month period had commenced to run. Section 2-1691, Oregon Laws, 1939 Compilation. The two judgments, therefore, can be regarded as governed by the same legal principles, regardless of the dates when subsequent steps, looking to the enforcement of the liens thereunder, were taken.

It is worthy of note that, under the ap-pellee’s theory, the “sale” under the Thomas and Meservy judgments was not to be “completed” until December 24, 1939, and the Pacific Coast Credit Association “sale,” not before September 3, 1931. The respective periods for the exereise of rights under the equity of redemption were to expire on those dates. In other words, no act of bankruptcy whatever had been consummated at the time of the filing of either the original or the amended petition, if we accept the appellee’s theory with its full implications.

The controlling question presented in this ease is whether or not an act of bankruptcy is committed by an insolvent debtor’s failure to vacate a judgment that gave rise to a lien at a date prior to the commencement of the four-month period, within at least five days before the date of sale or other disposition of property affected by the judgment, said sale taking place within the four-month period.

If we apply to this definite problem certain fundamental principles of law, as set forth in the statute itself and expounded by numerous courts, we shall find that many of the apparent difficulties of the case will disappear.

The appellees invoke four clauses of section 3(a) of the Bankruptcy Act, as amended by the Act of May 27,1926, § 3 (11 USCA § 21(a) as follows: “Acts of bankruptcy by a person shall consist of his having (1) conveyed, transferred, concealed, or removed, or permitted to be concealed or removed, any part of his property with intent to hinder, delay, or defraud his creditors, or any of them; or (2) transferred, while insolvent, any portion of his property to one or more of his creditors with intent to prefer such creditors over his other creditors; or (3) suffered or permitted, while insolvent, any creditor to obtain a preference through legal proceedings, and not having at least five days before a sale or other disposition of any property affected by such preference vacated or discharged such preference; or (4) suffered, or permitted, while insolvent, any creditor to obtain through legal proceedings any levy, attachment, judgment, or other lien, and not having vacated or discharged the same within thirty days from the date such levy, attachment, judgment, or other lien was obtained.

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Bluebook (online)
51 F.2d 340, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 2908, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northwestern-pulp-paper-co-v-finish-luth-book-concern-ca9-1931.