81 Me. 164 | Me. | 1889
The defendant went into voluntary insolvency, obtaining his discharge under a composition with creditors. The plaintiffs were parties to the composition, accepting the dividend on their debt. They afterwards sued for, and claim to recover, the balance of their debt, by virtue of § 62 of the insolvency statute. That section provides that a creditor may maintain such an action as the present, when the signature of any creditor to the composition has been obtained by fraud, or when the debtor has knowingly made any false statement of a material character in the affidavit or schedules required of him by such section.
The plaintiffs claim a right to sustain this action for the fraud of the defendant. It must be for such frauds as are described in the section, and can be for no other. It is not constructive fraud
The counsel for plaintiffs next contends that there are defects in the proceedings, on which the composition was grounded, which will allow the action to be maintained under § 62. We do not concur in the proposition. The statute neither expresses nor implies such a tiring. Unless the defects prove fraud, they are not noticeable under that section. It plainly declares just what will sustain an action, and mistakes and defects are not in the enumeration.
But the learned counsel, going further in the proposition, contends that, if the suit be not maintainable under § 62, it may be maintained for the reason that the defects in the proceedings ' are so radical as to deprive the insolvency court of jurisdiction in the casé and render its action void. There is no doubt that if the court had not jurisdiction of the case, its decree would be void. If it had not jurisdiction to grant a discharge, the discharge is void. But it would be otherwise, if the defective proceedings were merely irregular. Void proceedings would destroy jurisdiction in a court of inferior powers, but merely irregular proceedings would not.
The difference is not always readily perceivable. Generally speaking, it is the difference between substance and form, between void and voidable, or between void action and imperfect action. Error or nullity goes to the foundations, and discovers that the proceedings have nothing to stand upon, while irregularity denotes that the court was acting within its jurisdiction, but failed to consummate its work in all respects according to the required forms. The one applies to matters which are contrary to law, the other to matters which are contrary to the practice authorized by the law. One relates more to the act, and the other more to the manner of it. It may be stated as a general rule, that in doubtful cases the courts incline to treat defects in legal proceedings as irregularities
Section 49, ch. 70, It. S., was designed to prevent the judgments of insolvency courts being subverted for any irregularity in their proceedings. It provides that the certificate given to the insolvent, “shall be conclusive evidence,” in his favor, “of the fact and regularity of such discharge.” The plaintiffs’ counsel contends that this provision applies only to a certificate obtained in regular insolvency proceedings, and not to one under a composition. We think it applies to all certificates, and can see no reason why it should not. Protection against the mistakes of the court or its officers, is as desirable in the one case as in the other. The section has both a general and special application. Its provisions apply generally as far as appropriate and consistent with other sections. The only provision in the chapter in relation to the manner of pleading a discharge is contained in this section, and certainly that simple and useful provision applies to all cases. And so, too, other sections, relating to the effect of a discharge, have relation to discharges generally; as § 48, which provides that a discharge shall not release a partner, joint contractor, indorser or surety, and § 47, which excludes from the operations of a discharge liabilities for embezzlement or defalcations.
There is much reason for assuming that the same rule would have been implied, had it not been expressed in the insolvency statute, in relation to the inconsequence of judicial or clerical mistakes which are not vital on the question of the jurisdiction of the court. The probate court is invested with more dignity and powers than it formerly possessed. Our general statutes denominate it a court of record, and § 5 of the insolvency chapter declares that proceedings in courts of insolvency shall be deemed matters of record. As courts of record they may amend and correct their records according to the truth, as other courts may. Marsh v. McKenzie, 99 Mass. 64.
We are next to consider whether there are the alleged defects, and, if so, what consequences shall attach to them, in view of the discussion which we have already indulged in. Section 62 of chapter 70, K. S., directs that, to effect a compositiotr the debtor is to
A schedule of assets and a list of creditors, each signed by the insolvent, were produced at a meeting of creditors, an affidavit in due form was sworn to before the judge, and a discharge was decreed to the insolvent, but from the inadvertence of either judge, register or party, the schedules and affidavit were filed away without being fastened together. The judge testifies as a witness, that the debtor swore to the schedules or lists, that he (the judge) held them-at the time in his hands, calling the debtor’s attention to them as the oath was administered, and that he informed the debtor’s attorney at the same time that the papers should be annexed to the affidavit. The form of the affidavit calls for annexation. The recorded degree of the judge recognizes annexation. The work would have been perfectly done had the schedules and'affidavit been fastened together.
It is contended that the debtor knowingly swore to a falsehood when he asserted in his affidavit that the papers were annexed. It would seem strange that he should commit such a crime, without any possible motive to do so, and stranger still that he should have been allowed to do so in the presumed presence of many creditors, when the error was avoidable by so little trouble. That point certainly fails.
The next position taken is, that the want of annexation of the papers deprived the judge of jurisdiction to adjudge the composition good, that annexing the papers was a matter conditional to his right to act, and that his decree is absolutely void. We do not concede such fatal consequences to the alleged defect. The weight of the argument against the validity of the proceeding, consists in the assumption that, for want of attachment
We are impressed with a different view of the transaction.
In the first place, the papers can now be affixed together by order of the court, as an amendment of its proceedings. The act should have been done at the time under the intimation of the court. The judge virtually ordered it to be done. The words of the oath, “hereunto annexed,” imply that it is an act to be done at the time of the administration of the oath. The omission may fairly be considered as much a mistake of the court as of the party, if it be a mistake.
Further, there can be no object in any requirement to annex the papers, except to establish what papers were sworn to. The statute does not declare expressly that the papers shall be annexed. It is not named as a condition upon which a discharge is grant-able. Is not the identity sufficient to deprive the defendant of a defense in the present action, should it appear that there was a wilful and false statement in either of the schedules ? The papers are on file together, presumably with filings noted thereon, are evidenced by descriptive headings and by the signature of the debtor, and are proved by the testimony of the judge to be the identical papers sworn to before him. In the late U. S. bankruptcy act, only filing, not annexing, was required.
It may, we think, well be considered, in view of the facts disclosed, that there was an annexing of the schedules to the affidavit. The word is not necessarily to be confined to a narrow and strict sense. Things may be annexed without remaining in actual contact with each other. In Savage v. Birckhead, 20 Pick. 167, it was held that a deposition, taken under a commission, but not annexed to it or to the interrogatories, was sufficiently connected by the envelope and official seal, and as much so as if attached by a ribbon. “In either case,” says the court, “there may be fraud or mistake, but in the absence of any suggestion of it, the objection cannot prevail.” A similar question arose in the case of Shaw v. McGregory, 105 Mass. 96, 100, when a deponent swore to the genuineness of some hotel registers. The books and the deposition were together inclosed and sealed up, and directed to the clerk of
In Smith v. Engel, decided by the supreme court of Iowa, reported in 14 Nat. Bank. Reg. 481, winch was an action to recover a debt that was covered by a composition resolution, the objection was made that the bankrupts and certain of their creditors signed a separate paper, not attached to the resolution itself, as was required. The objection was disposed of in these words: ‘•‘The objection is purely technical. Clearly the spirit of the provision is complied with when the bankrupt and a requisite number of creditors sign a paper agreeing to the terms of the composition. The signing of this paper, instead of the resolution, is at most a mere irregularity, and does not affect the jurisdiction of the court.”
It is objected, that the schedule of assets, wMch was returned to the messenger, was amended by leave of court, and used as a schedule in the composition proceeding, instead of the debtor furnisMng a new schedule. We see no objection to it. It was as correct as a new one or a copy would be. Such a practice has been held to be permissible. In re Haskell, 11 Nat. Bank. Reg. 164; Home Nat. Bank v. Carpenter, 129 Mass. 1, 5.
It is contended in behalf of the plaintiffs, that the creditors’ agreement, when the claims are properly sifted and corrected, will turn out in reality not to contain the signatures of a majority in number of the creditors holding three-fourths of all the indebtedness, and that therefore the agreement did not confer jurisdiction on the court, and that jurisdiction is not acquired by the court deciding wrongfully that it has jurisdiction. And on this point, as well as on other points discussed, much reliance seems to be placed on the case of Stanton v. Ellis, 12 N. Y. 575. There appears to us to be a clear distinction between that case and this. In that case the list presented to a magistrate, under the then two-thirds act in that state, did not show on its face that
In the case before us the lists show completeness and correctness on their face, and therefore confer jurisdiction. Jurisdiction having attached, it continues through all the steps of the procedure. There is no authority but in the insolvent court to adjudge the questions incident to the investigation. It is the court that is to “be satisfied that such agreement is signed by such proportion of the creditors,” and that certain other things have been properly done. The judge decides whether the apparent correctness is a real correctness or not, or, in other words, whether the allegations are proved. The composition takes effect, not from the mere contract of the parties, but from the judgment and decree of the court. Mudge v. Wilmot, 124 Mass. 493.
Objection is made to the terms of the certificate of discharge, that it contains too much. It is sufficient for this case that it contains enough.
The question of the constitutionality of the composition clause is elaborately discussed by plaintiffs’ counsel. With due respect for the argument, we think it too late in the day to expect the argument to prevail. There is too much authority against it.
It is said that it is unjust that compositions can be carried by majorities who are the insolvent’s relatives and family friends. The remedy for that must be with the legislature. The best of laws do not always operate equitably.
Judgment for the defendant.