Singer v. Sloan

22 F. Cas. 202, 11 Nat. Bank. Reg. 433
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Missouri
DecidedFebruary 15, 1875
StatusPublished

This text of 22 F. Cas. 202 (Singer v. Sloan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Singer v. Sloan, 22 F. Cas. 202, 11 Nat. Bank. Reg. 433 (E.D. Mo. 1875).

Opinion

TREAT, District Judge.

On the 21st day of January, 1874, a petition in bankruptcy was filed against Towle by some of his creditors, and on the following 3d of February he was adjudged a bankrupt. The plaintiff is his assignee. On the 18th of December, 1873, said Towle and wife executed a deed of trust to secure the defendant, Sloan, for alleged antecedent indebtedness. This bill was filed December 9, 1874, to have said deed set aside as in contravention of the bankrupt act, on the ground that Towle, at the date of its execution and delivery, was insolvent, and that Sloan had reasonable cause to believe, etc. The defendant demurs to the bill on the theory that the allegations should conform to the amendatory act of June 22, •1874, and charge that the defendant knew a fraud on the act was intended. Whether the construction put upon the latter act in the case of Hamlin v. Pettibone [Case No. 5,995], be correct or not, it evidently does not cover this case; although the views of Judge Deady, in Brooke v. McCracken [Id. 1,932], go far enough, if sustained, to defeat this demurrer. In both of those cases it was asserted, or at least very strongly intimated, that the insertion of the words “know,” etc., in sections 35 and 39, does not vary the requirements or force of the statute as it previously stood; for those learned judges intimate that a man is to be presumed in law to know what he had reasonable cause to believe.

The broad distinction, however, between “knowledge” and “reasonable cause to believe,” if not apparent on a simple repetition of the terms, has been too well recognized by many decisions, even of the United States supreme court, to be ignored. See Foster v. Hackley [Case No. 4,971]; Graham v. Stark [Id. 5,676]; In re Wright [Id. 18,071]; In re Arnold [Id. 551]; In re McDonough [Id. 8,775]; Merchants’ Nat. Bank v. Truax [Id. 9,451]; Forbes v. Howe, 102 Mass. 427; Seammon v. Cole [Case No. 12,433]; Darby v. Lucas [Id. 3,573]; Id., 15 Wall. [82 U. S.] 410; Buchanan v. Smith, 16 Wall. [83 U. S.] 277; Walbrun v. Babbit, Id. 577; Toof v. Martin, 13 Wall. [80 U. S.] 40. Indeed, the marked distinction runs through nearly every case; and generally has been the point on which the case turned. Besides, the amendment is supposed to effect a needed change, and in the light of the then existing decisions, the change made is serious and important. It will, in cases at law, devolve on the jurors the duty to find that knowledge existed, and not merely reasonable cause to believe a fact' to be ascertained by them. It cannot be held that a man knows a fact, when there exists only suspicious or surrounding circumstances, which, if thoroughly investigated, might discover the truth. Courts have repeatedly held, concerning the phrase “reasonable cause to believe,” that the preferred creditor could not escape by willfully shutting his eyes to what would have been discovered had he made the inquiry which a prudent man would have done —that the mere existence of such suspicious circumstances as should have induced inquiry, would, if seen, or called to the attention of the creditor, bring him within the force of the statute. It is apprehended that far more is now required. The rule, as it previously stood, was somewhat vague and uncertain. Often it occurred that, on precisely the same testimony, two jurors would reach directly opposite' conclusions, even when the court carefully defined the meaning of the phrase. Congress, being aware of the stringency of the legal construction given, and desiring to remove so stringent and somewhat.arbitrary a rule, amended the law in order to affect only such transactions as [204]*204are evidently mala fide — that is, such as are tainted with actual knowledge.

The next important question presented by the demurrer,- is, what class of cases is affected by the amendments of June 22, 1874? In compulsory cases, actually commenced, though not determined, prior to December 1,1873, Judge Hopkins held — Hamlin v. Petti-bone [supra] — that the amendments do not apply. The amended section, 39, by its terms, covers all compulsory cases from December 1, 1873, and in that opinion, although the point is not decided, perhaps, yet it is strongly intimated that a distinction exists between two cases brought by assignees of voluntary and involuntary bankrupts. The case before him required for this decision this important point, viz.: whether, in an involuntary case, where an adjudication had been had, and a suit by the assignee was pending against a preferred creditor, prior to December 1, 1S73, the amendment had any application. That point he decided in the negative. The opinion of Judge Deady, however, is, that the amendments of section 35 are entirely prospective, so that no case brought before, or act done before, June 22, 1874, is within the purview of the latter act, but is to be considered as falling within the provisions of section 35, as it previously stood. If the opinions in those two cases are correctly understood, such seems to be their scope. It is evident that the terms of the act of June 22, 1S74, leave many questions open to judicial construction. Section 9 embraces both compulsory and voluntary cases, and does not in terms state when that section shall take effect — whether it shall be retroactive or prospective, whether it shall apply to pending cases, or, if to pending cases, to what classes. At the last term of the United States circuit court, Justice Miller held that ‘the first clause of said section applied to all pending, as well as to all future cases. In re King [Case No. 7,781]. Hence, if a compulsory bankrupt is to be discharged of his indebtedness, irrespective of the percentage paid, or of the assent of any of his creditors, whether the petition was filed before or after the said act of June 22, it is obvious that glaring frauds upon the whole system might be perpetrated, unless some mode of practice is adopted to prevent such mischief. If a debtor, adjudicated a bankrupt — say in 1868, on the petition of a creditor, can now — some six years after the meeting of his creditors, called to show cause why he should not be discharged, at which meeting no one appeared to make opposition, receive his discharge on the simple ground that, no opposition having been made, and said act of June 22 being retroactive, he is entitled to his certificate; then, despite the most glaring frauds, he can have the benefits intended by the act solely for the benefit of honest debtors.

It follows by no means that when a meet•ing in a compulsory case was called to show cause, prior to June 22, 1S74, and no opposition was formally interposed to the discharge, that the bankrupt was entitled to the same. It might be that the creditors knew full well that his estate had not been equal to the percentage then required, and that he had not, and could not, obtain the assent of the then requisite number of his creditors. So knowing, none of his creditors interposed on the ground of fraud; because all creditors knew, that, under the law as it then was, the bankrupt could not be discharged, whether a fraud on the act had been perpetrated or not. If the ninth section of the amendatory act is retroactive in compulsory cases, as Justice Miller holds, shall an adjudicated bankrupt' in 1868 receive his certificate of discharge now, because no creditor entered opposition thereto in 1868, at the meeting then held pursuant to the statute as it then existed? As the bankrupt could not, in 1868, procure his discharge without the prescribed percentage or assent, even if no fraud was alleged, the creditors did not undertake the unnecessary labor of appearing and averring fraud.

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Related

Forbes v. Howe
102 Mass. 427 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1869)

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Bluebook (online)
22 F. Cas. 202, 11 Nat. Bank. Reg. 433, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/singer-v-sloan-moed-1875.