12 N.M. 192 | N.M. | 1904
OPINION OF COURT.
The complaint in this case was filed on July 25, 1898, and was brought under chapter 67, Session Laws of 1889, which is entitled “An act to prevent debtors in contemplation of insolvency from preferring one or more creditors to the exclusion in whole or in part of others.” This law has been compiled as sections 2818 to 2826, inclusive, of the Compiled Laws of 1897.
The principal grounds set up in the several demurrers are that the complaint does not allege (1), that the defendant D. R. Brownell is not possessed of and -does not own property enough to satisfy plaintiff’s claim, and (2), because plaintiffs are not judgment creditors of the defendant D. R. Brownell.
The power is undoubtedly vested in Congress to enact national bankruptcy laws, and is given by section 8 of article 1, of the Constitution, which provides that “Congress shall have power ... to establish . . . uniform laws on the subject of bankruptcies throughout the United States.”
No State legislature can establish bankruptcy laws which are binding in the other States of the Union, but they can and frequently do pass laws relating to insolvency proceedings in their several jurisdictions .
As stated by Chief Justice Marshall in Sturges v. Crowninshield, 4 Wheaton 122, it is exceedingly difficult to distinguish with any accuracy between insolvent and bankruptcy laws as a bankrupt law may contain those regulations which are generally found in insolvent laws; and insolvent laws may contain those which are common to bankrupt laws.
The best definition which we have been able to find of a bankrupt law, is in 5 Cyc. 237, which is, “A bankrupt law, in modern legal significance means a statutory system under which an insolvent debtor may either on his own petition or that of his creditors be adjudged bankrupt by a court of competent jurisdiction, which thereupon takes possession of his property, distributes it equally among his creditors, and discharges the bankrupt and his after-acquired property from debts existing at the initiation of the bankruptcy proceedings.”
The statutes of this Territory on which this suit is based are not in the nature of an act of bankruptcy. It is only what its heading in the original act discloses it to be, which heading is quoted at the beginning of this opinion. The act does not release any debtor or his after-acquired property from his debts, but only seeks to prevent preferences being given to some creditors to the exclusion of others.
It is an undoubted fact that when Congress has passed a bankruptcy law, the insolvent laws of the several States and Territories, which are in conflict with it, are suspended, whenever the national bankruptcy law is invoked. The reason for this is that in many cases they can not go on together without collision, and whenever there might be such collision the bankruptcy act is paramount and the State and Territorial laws are suspended.
No one can contend that the passage of a bankruptcy act by Congress would render void a general common law deed of assignment made by a debtor conveying all of his property for the benefit of his creditors ratably according to their claims, but not providing for the release of the debtor. It would be perfectly valid as to all men unless they seasonably took proceedings under the bankruptcy act, to set aside as an act of bankruptcy. Boese v. King, 108 U. S. 379; In re Romanow, 92 Fed. 510; In re Sievers, 91 Fed. 366; In re Gutwilling, 90 Fed. 475.
The national bankrupt act was passed on July 1, 1898, and took effect on its, passage, and it provides that a petition in involuntary bankruptcy may be filed only within four months after the commission of an act in bankruptcy, and it further provides that no petition for involuntary bankruptcy shall be filed until four months after the passage of the act. It is apparent that it was' the intention of Congress, that the law should not be retroactive, so that a person could be forced into bankruptcy courts for any act done by him prior to July 1, 1898. It was only intended to act in the future, and to take cognizance of such acts of bankruptcy as were Committed after its passage. As to acts committed before its passage, there could be no collision between the bankrupt laws and the law of this Territory which we are now considering, because the bankrupt law was not and could not under its express terms be operative as to acts committed before its passage. We can see no reason for not permitting- proceedings brought under the Territorial statutes to proceed, if they are founded on acts of insolvency committed before-the date when the national law could take cognizance of them. Unless this construction is held, it is obvious that the bankruptcy law might act as a shield to protect fraudulent debtors in the successful consummation of schemes forbidden both by the National and Territorial laws.
Going back to one of the earliest cases, Chief Justice Marshall says: “The States are not forbidden to pass a bankruptcy law, provided it contains no principle which violates the tenth section of the first article of the Constitution of the United States.” Sturges v. Crowninshield, 4 Wheaton 196.
As the bankruptcy law of 1898 does not reach any act of bankruptcy committed prior to July 1, 1898, it is unreasonable to hold that Congress intended to deprive creditors of any vested right of property, or right of action which they had, by reason of the passage of this act. This view is set out in numerous cases in the discussion of the question arising under an amendment in 1874, to the then, existing bankrupt law. This amendment which was passed on June 22, 1874, changed the time from- four to two months when the transfers of property by an insolvent should be void.
The Supreme Court of the United States says: “The rights of the parties were therefore fixed before the new law was passed. The assignee had a vested right to the securities or to their value. The defendants were under legal obligation to return these securities or to pay their value to the assignee. To hold that Congress intended by this amendatory statute to take away that right of action, is to hold that it intended by a retrospective statute to destroy a vested right of property or an existing right of action. If it be conceded that Congress could do this, the principle is too well established to need the citation of authorities, that no law will be construed to act retrospectively unless its language imperatively requires such a construction.” Auffmordt v. Rason, 102 U. S. 622.
In referring to the bankrupt act of 1867, Mr. Justice Gray says:
“Under the existing bankrupt law of the United States, no judicial proceedings for the sequestration and distribution of the debtor’s property, or for granting him a discharge, could be instituted until the first of June, 1867; for by the express terms of the proviso at the end of the last section, which qualifies the whole statute, ‘no petition or other proceeding under this act shall be filed, received or commenced before’ that day.
“It would require very explicit language to satisfy us that Congress intended to abolish or supersede all local bankrupt or insolvent laws four months before it established any general system of judicial proceedings in their place.” Day v. Bardwell, 97 Mass. 250, and the same doctrine is held in Martin v. Berry, 37 Cal. 214; Chamberlain v. Parkins, 51 N. H. 340, and in numerous other cases.
In California and Illinois it is held that the State laws will remain operative in all cases which are not covered by the provisions of the bankruptcy laws. Herron Co. v. Court, 136 Cal. 282; Harbaugh v. Costello, 181 Ill. 112.
In conclusion we will say that we do not regard the Territorial act we are now considering as being a bankruptcy law, but even if it was we bold that it was not suspended by the National law, and could not be as to any act of insolvency which occurred prior to July 1, 1898.
There is no error in the proceedings of the court below, and the same is therefore affirmed and the cause is remanded to the district court for further proceedings; and it is so ordered.