95 F. 267 | D. Ind. | 1899
The sole question raised by the exceptions to the several answers of the defendants is whether money paid by a debtor to his creditor on a valid pre-existing debt, when the creditor at the time he received such payment had no reasonable cause to believe that it was thereby intended to give a preference, may be recovered for the benefit of the bankrupt’s estate on the ground that within four months after such payment the debtor was adjudged a bankrupt, and in making such payment the debtor intended to cheat, hinder, and delay his other creditors; or, in other words, whether money paid upon a debt under the circumstances above stated may be recovered by the trustee of the bankrupt, under clause e of section 67 of ike bankruptcy act.
The present bankruptcy act contains no express provision prohibiting the payment of money upon a debt under any circumstances. The law of 1867 (Rev. St. § 5128) provides that if any person, being insolvent, makes any payment, (lie person receiving such payment having reasonable cause to believe such person insolvent, the money so paid may be recovered for the benefit of the bankrupt’s estate. Another section of that act (Id. § 5021) provides that any debtor who is insolvent, or in contemplation of insolvency, who shall make any payment with intent to give a preference, shall be deemed to have
“All conveyances, transfers, assignments or encumbrances of bis property, or any part thereof,- made or given by a person adjudged a bankrupt under the provisions of this act, subsequent to the passage of this act and within four months prior to the filing of the petition, with the intent and purpose on his part to hinder, delay or defraud his creditors, or any of them, shall be null and void as against the creditors of such debtor, except as to purchasers in good faith and for a present, fair consideration.”
If a payment of money upon a pre-existing debt may be avoided under the foregoing clause, then all that is necessary to be shown in order to justify a recovery would be that the debtor making such payment had been adjudged a bankrupt within four months after such payment was made, and that the bankrupt, in making such payment, intended to cheat, hinder, or delay his other creditors. It is insisted that the payment of money upon a pre-existing debt is a transfer of property, within the meaning of section 67. In my opinion, the meaning of the word “transfer,” in clause e, is to be determined by the application of the maxim, “Noscitur a sociis,” and that the words “conveyance, transfer, assignment or encumbrance” apply to a transfer or incumbrance of property real or personal, rather than to the payment of money upon a pre-existing debt. The creditor receiving the conveyance, transfer, assignment or incumbrance of property is designated in the clause in question as a purchaser, and not as a payee. If section 60, cl. b, as is conceded by counsel on both sides, furnishes a remedy for the recovery of money paid upon a pre-existing debt, there would seem to be no reason why congress should have provided for the accomplishment of the same purpose, and upon wholly different grounds, in section 67, cl. e. Sued a construction would make section 67 include the same class of transactions as those expressed in section 60, and there would be no reason whatever for the enactment of clause b of section 60. It certainly is a more reasonable construction to hold that every part of the statute should be given effect, and that section 60, cl. b, should be limited to judgments and preferences, including preferential payments made where the payee had reasonable cause to believe that a preference was thereby intended, and that section 67, cl. e, should be held to apply to conveyances, transfers, assignments, or incumbrances of property, other than money, which were not made in good faith, and supported by a present, fair