72 Cal. 317 | Cal. | 1887
This is an action to set aside and annul the discharge from their debts, granted to the defendants in certain insolvency proceedings under the
1. The Insolvent Act provides (section 49) that “no discharge shall be granted, or, if granted, shall be valid, if the debtor, .... or any other person on his account or in his behalf, has influenced the action of any creditor at any stage of the proceedings by any pecuniary consideration or obligation.” It further provides (section 53) “ that any creditor of said debtor, whose debt was proved or provable against the estate in insolvency, who shall see fit to contest the validity of such discharge on the ground that it was fraudulently obtained, and who has discovered the facts constituting the fraud subsequent to the discharge, may, at any time within two years after the date thereof, apply to the court which granted it, to set aside and annul the same.”
It is urged for the appellants that the promise to pay Jansen and Sommer was verbal, and against the policy of the law and void, and therefore it did not constitute a “pecuniary consideration or obligation”; that the plaintiff should have alleged and shown that something besides a mere verbal promise was actually received by them. Whether the promise was verbal or in writing does not appear from the record; but in whichever way made, it was equally against the policy of the insolvent law, and void. The rule is, that even a promissory note or bond given by an insolvent, or any one in his behalf, to prevent opposition to his discharge, is illegal and void, and its collection cannot be enforced. (Bell v. Leggett, 7 N. Y.
A pecuniary obligation is an obligation to pay money, and, in the absence of a statute requiring it to be in writing, may be verbal. The statute controlling this case, as has been seen, does not require that the obligation be in writing, or be one that can be enforced in the courts. It provides simply that, when the action of any creditor has been influenced at any stage of the proceedings by any pecuniary consideration or obligation, the discharge shall not be valid; and any other creditor, who had no knowledge of the facts constituting the fraud when the discharge was granted, may, at any time within two years thereafter, apply to have it set aside and annulled. In our opinion, the complaint stated all the facts required by the statute to render the defendants’ discharge invalid, and the demurrer was therefore properly overruled.
2. It is claimed that the mode of proceeding adopted by the plaintiff to have the discharge set aside is not the proper one; that the remedy should have been sought by motion in the insolvency proceeding, and not by an independent action. The statute says that any creditor, having a provable debt, may apply to the court which granted the discharge to set aside and annul the same, but does not say how the application shall be made. In such a case, any suitable mode of proceeding may be adopted (Code Civil Proc., sec. 187), and we fail to see why the mode adopted here is not suitable and proper.
3. It is further claimed that the findings are not justified by the evidence. In answer to this, it is enough to say that the court found the facts to be as they are set out in the complaint, and there was testimony tending to support all of its averments. A new trial cannot therefore be granted upon this ground.
It follows that the judgment and order should be affirmed.
Foote, C., concurred.
—For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion, the judgment and order are affirmed.
Hearing in Bank denied.