264 F. 836 | 8th Cir. | 1920
On May 29, 1919, the court below, after a final hearing upon pleadings and evidence in a suit upon an involuntary petition of three alleged creditors of the Nu-Gold Ring Company, a corporation, that it be adjudged bankrupt, rendered a decree that the adjudication prayed be denied, and that the suit be dismissed. The alleged creditors, Harry Cutler, William Cardin, and George C. Harrison, have appealed from this decree, and they make two complaints thereof: First, that the court found that William Cardin was not a creditor of the Nu-Gold Company at the time the petition was filed or thereafter; and, second, that Harry Cutler was estopped from acting as a petitioner in bankruptcy against the company, because he approved and induced that company to make the general assignment of its property for the benefit of its creditors, which is the act of bankruptcy upon which the petitioners rely for an adjudication.
The second question is: Was there any error of law or mistake of fact in the finding of the court that the petitioner Cutler was estopped from acting as a petitioner for an adjudication of bankruptcy on the ground that the company made a general assignment because he assented to and assisted to induce the company so to do? The conclusion already reached, however, renders the determination of this question immaterial, and its discussion and decision would be useless. As Cardin was not a creditor of the company, as three petitioning creditors were indispensable to an adjudication of the company a bankrupt upon the involuntary petition, and there were but two petitioning creditors, the decree below must be affirmed; and it is so ordered.