Weiner v. Farnum

2 Pa. 146, 1845 Pa. LEXIS 295
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 29, 1845
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Pa. 146 (Weiner v. Farnum) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weiner v. Farnum, 2 Pa. 146, 1845 Pa. LEXIS 295 (Pa. 1845).

Opinion

Kennedy, J.,

after stating the case.' — In regard to the point raised by the first error assigned, we are not fully prepared, at [150]*150this moment, to express an opinion on it; nor is it necessary, to the final determination of this case, that we should, as we have come to the conclusion that the court was right in its instruction given to the jury on the point involved in the second error assigned. This, of itself, negatives all right, on the part of the plaintiff, to claim or have the money in dispute, and necessarily goes to determine the case in favour of the defendant.

It is true, that this court, in Cornwell’s Appeal, 7 Watts & Serg. 305, did decide, that the word future, in the commencement of the second section of tire Bankrupt Act, applied to the date of the passage of the act, and embraced all conveyances therein mentioned, made subsequently to that date. That case, however, was not argued on behalf of the voluntary assignee, or, if it was, it was but imperfectly done; and it may be, that we were advised, before pronouncing our decree in the case, of the decisions made previously by Mr. Justice Baldwin and Mr. Justice Story, who each held that the word future referred to the date of the passage of tire act, and embraced all conveyances of the description there mentioned, made subsequently to that date. See 1 Penna. Law Journal, 326 — 328, and 5 Law Reporter, 289, 293. And if it be, that we were so apprized of these decisions, as I am rather inclined to believe that we were, it will not be thought, I presume, that, coming from judges so highly distinguished for their law learning and talents as they were, we should have decided as we did, without the benefit of an argument to awaken and call our attention to the particular consideration of the question. It is certainly true, that every act of Congress speaks from the date of its passage, and will operate as a law from that time, where there is no provision or declaration to the contrary contained in it. But it is equally true, if it be expressly provided or declared that it shall not take effect until after a future day, that it can have no effect or operation whatever until after that day has arrived and gone by. It would seem as if the minds of Mr. Justice Baldwin and Mr. Justice Story, in regard to this act, had been carried away with the idea that the general provisions of the act, as also the primary object of it, were to prevent debtors, as early as possible, from giving a preference or priority to some of their creditors over others, and that in this respect the main design of the legislature would, or at least might, be defeated in a great degree, unless the word future were to be held to apply to the date of the passage of the act. But upon full and deliberate consideration, confining ourselves to the terms and language of the act throughout, it does appear that it would be carrying the operation of it beyond what could have been intended, otherwise dif[151]*151ferent language would have been used. It is argued that the act, in some of its provisions, is made expressly to take effect from its passage, and in regard to some matters even prior to that date, so that the seventeenth section could not have been intended to limit and control the operation of the whole of the act. The parts which have been referred to in support of this argument are contained in the second and fourth sections. In the second section, where it is. declared, that the bankrupt, his application being voluntary, has, subsequently to the first day of January then last, or at any other time in contemplation of the passage of a bankrupt law, by assignment or otherwise, given any preference to one creditor over another, he shall not receive a discharge, unless the same be assented to by a majority in interest of those of his creditors who have not been so preferred.

But it is a mistake to say that this clause of the act, though retrospective, was to have any effect or operation whatever, before the first of February following the passage of the act, when it was to be regarded by the court as excluding those voluntary bankrupts, there described, from a discharge, unless assented to by a majority in interest of the non-preferred creditors. It is, at most, only a condition or qualification annexed to the right on the part of such voluntary bankrupt, to obtain his discharge under the act. Had Congress intended to confine the word future to the date of passing the act, why should they not have declared “that all payments, securities, &c., made or given after the passing of this ad, by any bankrupt in contemplation of bankrupty,” &c., as they have done in the fourth section, where it is declared, that no person, being a merchant, banker, &c., shall be entitled to any such discharge or certificate, who shall become a bankrupt, and who shall not have kept proper books of account, after the passing of this act: nor any person who, after the passing of this act, shall apply trust funds to his own use. These two latter clauses show very clearly, that Congress, wdien they intended to confine any particular provision to the date of passing the act, did so in express terms, and were not content with using the word future, or with speaking simply in the future tense, which, perhaps, is little different from, if any thing more or less than the w7ord future in meaning. These latter clauses in the fourth section, like the clause noticed in the second section, do not go to annul or render any act of the party illegal, that should be done before the first of February then next following the passing of the act, but merely go to exclude him from obtaining a certificate of discharge, a privilege that otherwise he would or might have been entitled to. That Congress had the power to discriminate and exclude in this respect, as they did, cannot be questioned; and I [152]*152am rather disposed to think that no one had just cause to complain on account of their having done so, for it was the duty of those persons mentioned in the first of these two clauses, to keep proper books of account, independent of the act; and that such a person as is mentioned in the second of these two latter clauses, who has the charge of trust funds, ought not to apply them to his own use, all, I think, will admit; so that they.may be said to have excluded themselves from the benefit of a discharge under the act, because they had acted improperly, and failed to perform duties resting upon them independent of the bankrupt law. Congress, doubtless, intended to introduce into the Union a general system of bankruptcy, and wras also desirous that it should be known generally throughout the same, before that it should come into operation; and therefore allowed upwards of five months for that purpose, after the passing of the law; intending to leave the citizens of the several states and territories of the United States, to regulate their dealings and intercourse with each other agreeably to the laws of the states and territories respectively, of which they were resident, in the same manner as they had done previously. But to give immediate

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Related

Cornwell's Appeal
7 Watts & Serg. 305 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1844)
In re Horton
12 F. Cas. 537 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Connecticut, 1842)
Hutchins v. Taylor
12 F. Cas. 1079 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Rhode Island, 1842)

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Bluebook (online)
2 Pa. 146, 1845 Pa. LEXIS 295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weiner-v-farnum-pa-1845.