Wilson v. City Bank

84 U.S. 473, 21 L. Ed. 723, 17 Wall. 473, 1873 U.S. LEXIS 1387
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 22, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by76 cases

This text of 84 U.S. 473 (Wilson v. City Bank) 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
Wilson v. City Bank, 84 U.S. 473, 21 L. Ed. 723, 17 Wall. 473, 1873 U.S. LEXIS 1387 (1873).

Opinion

Mr. Justice MILLER,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The questions presented to this cou-rt by the certificate of division require, for a satisfactory answer, a careful consideration and construction of sections thirty-five and thirty-nine .of the Bankrupt law, witff^ reference to the general spirit aud purpose of that law. I'h looking to these the first and most imnortant consideration which demands our attention is the discrimination made by the act between the cases of voluntary and involuntary bankruptcy. In both classes of cases undoubtedly the primary object is to secure a just distribution of the bankrupt’s property among his creditors, *481 and in both the secondary object is the release of the bankrupt from the obligation to pay the debts of those creditors.

But in case of voluntary bankruptcy the aid of the law is invoked by the bankrupt himself, with the purpose of being discharged from his debts as his principal motive, and in the other the movement is made by his creditors with the purpose of securing the appropriation of his property to their payment* the discharge being with them a matter "of no weight and often contested.

There is a corresponding difference in the facts on which the action of this court can be invoked in these different classes of bankruptcy. When the' party himself seeks the aid of the court the averment he is required to make is a vei’3’ simple one, namely, that “he is unable to pay all his debts in full, and is willing to surrender all his estate and effects for the benefit of his creditors, and desires to obtain the benefit of the act,” that is, to be discharged from the claims of his creditors. Oh filing a petition containing this request he is declared by the court a bankrupt. The allegation cannot be traversed, nor is any issue or inquiry as to its truth permitted. The- administration .of his effects proceeds thereafter under the direction of the court, and 0013' end in paying all his debts with a surplus to be returned to the bankrupt, or the result may be nothing for the creditors, and the unconditional release of the bankrupt.

But while the debtor may on this'broad basis callón the court to administer his estate, the creditor who desires to do the same thing is limited.to a few facts or circumstances, the existence of which are essential to his right to appeal to the court. And when any one of these facts is set forth in a petition to the court by the creditor, the truth of the allegation may be denied by the debtor, and on the issue thus found, he may demand the verdict of a jury.

The reason for this wide difference in the proceedings in the two cases-is obvious enough. When a man is himself w-illing to refer his embarrassed condition to the proper court with a full surrender of all his propérty, no harm can come to any one but himself, and there cau.be no solid objec *482 tion to the course he pursues. But when a person claims to take from another all control of his property, to arrest him in the exercise of his occupation, and to impair his standing as a business man, in short to place him in a position which may ruin him in the midst of a prosperous career, the precise circumstances or facts- on which he is authorizedto do1 this, should not only be well defined in the Idw,. but clearly established in the court.

It is the thi/ty-ninth section of the Bankrupt Act which lays down in nine.or ten subdivisions the facts and circumstances which give a man’s creditors the right to have him declared a bankrupt, and his property administered in a bankruptcy court. One. of them is the case of a person who being bankrupt or insolvent, or iu contemplation of insolvency, shall make any payment; gift,, grant, sale, conveyance, or transfer of money or other property, estate, rights, or credits,'or give any warrant to confess judgment Or pro-, cure or suffer his property to be taken on legal process with intent to give a preference to one or more of his creditors, or to any person or persons who may be liable for him as indorsers, bail sureties, or otherwise, or with intent by such disposition of his property to defeat or delay the operation of the act. And the same section declares that if such person shall be adjudged a bankrupt, the assignee may recover back the money of property so paid, conveyed, sold, assigned, or transferred, contrary to the act; provided, the person receiving such payment of conveyance, had reasonable cause to believe that'a fraud oh the Bankrupt Act was intended, or that the debtor was insolvent.

The case before us is one of involuntary bankruptcy-, but ithere is no question here whether the party was rightfully ■declared a bankrupt. The statement of facts shows that the (debtors were insolvent when the bank commenced its pro.ceedings in the State court, and that the bank had then reasonable cause to believe they were insolvent, and knew that they had committed an act of bankruptcy, to wit,'had permitted one of their notes to go unpaid more than fourteen days .after it was due.

*483 It is maintained that tinder these circumstances the bankrupt “ suffered his property to be taken on legal process with intent to give a preference to the bank, and to defeat or delay the operation of the'act.” Undoubtedly, the facts stated bring the bank within the proviso, as to knowledge of the debtor’s insolvency; and if the debtor suffered his property to be taken within the meaning of the statute, with intent to defeat or delay the operation of the act, then the assignee should recover the property. So that this sufferance and this intent on the part of the bankrupt are the matters to be decided. The first and principal question on which the judges became divided is, whether such intent is to be inferred from the facts stated.

The thirty-fifth, section of the act, which is designed to prevent fraudulent preferences of a person in contemplation of insolvency or bankruptcy, declares that any attachment or seizure under execution of such person’s property, procured by him with a view to give such a preference, shall be void if the act be done within four months preceding the jaliug of the petition in bankruptcy by or against him. Though the main purpose of the thirty-ninth, section is to define acts of the trader which make him a bankrupt, and that of the thirty-fifth is to prevent preferences by an insolvent debtor iu view of bankruptcy, both of them have the common purpose of making such preferences void, and enabling the assignee of the bankrupt to recover the property ; • and both of them .make this to depend on the intent with which the act was done by the bankrupt, and the knowledge of the bankrupt’s insolvent condition by the other party to the transaction. Both of them describe, substantially, the same acts of payment, transfer, or seizure of property so declared void. It is, therefore, very strongly to be inferred-that the act of suffering the debtor’s property to be taken on legal process in section thirty-nine, is precisely the same as procuring it to be attached or seized on execution in section •thirty-five. Indeed, the words procure and suffer are both used in section thirty-nine.

What, then, is the true meaning of that phrase in- the act ? *484

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Bluebook (online)
84 U.S. 473, 21 L. Ed. 723, 17 Wall. 473, 1873 U.S. LEXIS 1387, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-city-bank-scotus-1873.