3 F. Cas. 495 | S.D.N.Y. | 1868
The petition, in this case, was one in involuntary bankruptcy, and was filed on the 22d of June, 1867. The acts of bankruptcy alleged in the petition were, that Secor, acting for the firm of Black & Secor, composed of the debtors, procured and suffered the property of the firm to be taken on legal process in favor of Thomas P. Secor, on a judgment entered in the supreme court of New York, June 5th, 1867, for $2,879.78, in favor of Thomas P. Secor, against the debtors, and procured and suffered said judgment to be entered, and an execution to be issued thereon to the sheriff of the city and county of New York, against the property of the debtors, and such property, consisting of goods
On the filing of the petition, on the 22d of June, 1867, an order was made by the court, under section forty, that an injunction issue restraining the debtors and all other persons, and especially the sheriff of the city and county of New York, from transferring or disposing of, or interfering with, the property of the debtors. The injunction was issued and served.
On the 25th of October, 1867, an order was made by the court, on the application of Thomas P. Secor and of the sheriff, referring it to the register in charge of the case, to take proof of the facts as to whether the bankrupts, or either of them, procured or suffered the judgment referred to to be entered, and execution to be levied, with intent to give a preference to Thomas P. Se-cor, or any other person, or with intent to defeat the operation of the bankruptcy act, and whether Thomas P. Secor, or any person for whose benefit, in whole or in part, the judgment was entered, had reasonable cause to believe that a fraud on the act was intended, or that the debtors were insolvent, and also whether the judgment, execution, and levy were valid as against the assignee in bankruptcy, and to report the proofs so taken. The order also provided, that the sheriff be permitted to sell the goods levied on by him, and that he Wd the net proceeds subject to the further order of this court, to be made on the application either of the assignee or of Thomas P. Secor, on notice to the other party and to the sheriff.
The register has taken the testimony and reported it to the court. The net proceeds of sale in the hands of the sheriff are $1,957.-17, and the assignee in bankruptcy now applies to the court, on the proofs taken before the register, and on notice to Thomas P. Secor and to the sheriff, for an order that the proceeds of sale be paid over to the as-signee in bankruptcy.
It appears, from the proofs, that the judgment was obtained against the bankrupts as partners and joint debtors, on service of process on Secor alone. Such service was. made on the 15th of May, 1S67, and the judgment was entered by default, on the 5th of June, 1867, which was the earliest day on which it could be entered in due course of law. Black knew nothing of the suit or of the judgment until after the judgment was entered. Thomas P. Secor was represented by counsel on the taking of testimony before the register. The witnesses examined were Mr. Townsend (the attorney for Thomas P. Secor in obtaining the judgment), Mr. Dewhurst (a creditor of the firm), and James Black (one of the bankrupts). Neither Thomas P. Secor nor William Secor was examined. The amount of assets of the firm which has come to the hands of the assignee in bankruptcy is less than $100, the amount of the individual assets of Black which has come to his hands is less than $500, and no individual assets of Secor have come to his hands.
The testimony shows that, shortly before the-suit was brought, Thomas P. Secor and William Secor came together to Mr. Townsend. the attorney; that Thomas then, in the presence of William, said that he had I come to consult Mr. Townsend in regard to I a claim which he had against Black & Secor, and that it was due, and he wished to get his pay or be secured, and was willing to give time, but felt that he ought to be secured; that Thomas then asked Mr. Townsend how he could be secured, and Mr. Townsend told him there was great difficulty in doing it; that William then told Mr. Townsend that the affairs of the firm were sound, and they would be able to pay their creditors, and said he was willing to secure Thomas in any way it could be done, and that his debt should be paid; that, in reply to an inquiry by both of the parties as to how William could give security, Mr. Townsend told them that he knew of no way in which a security could be given that would be good to Thomas; that Mr. Townsend then told William that he wanted nothing to do with him, and did not wish to advise with him in the matter, and that, if he was to act for Thomas, he could not act for him; that Thomas then said he wanted Mr. Townsend to act for him; that Mr. Townsend then desired William to leave the office, and told him that he could not have anything to do with him or his business; that William withdrew and Thomas remained; that Mr. Townsend then told Thomas that he knew of only one course to pursue in the matter, and that was to sue the firm, and to proceed with all diligence in doing it; that he wanted nothing from the firm, but that they would take their own course, and collect the debt, if possible, according to process of law; that Thomas then asked Mr. Townsend what he would advise him to do, and Mr. Townsend told him he would advise him to sue as soon as possible; and that Mr. Townsend then took
The testimony of Black is express to the point, that the firm was insolvent at the time the judgment was obtained and the levy was made, and there appear to have been a series of efforts and propositions in regard to securing Thomas’ debt, in which both of the bankrupts and Thomas were engaged, prior to the bringing of the suit, none of which resulted in anything. The plan of bringing the suit was then adopted, under the circumstances detailed, all knowledge of it being kept from Black. The evidence is also entirely satisfactory, that Thomas had reasonable cause to believe the firm to be insolvent at the time the judgment was recovered and the levy was made. Upon the question of insolvency and of Thomas’ knowledge of it, the absence of any testimony from either Thomas or William is a very strong circumstance unfavorable to the bona tides of the transaction.
The thirty-ninth section of the bankruptcy act provides that, if any person residing within the jurisdiction of the United States, owing debts, provable under the act, exceeding the amount of three hundred dollars, shall, after the passage of the act, being bankrupt or insolvent, or in contemplation of bankruptcy or insolvency, make any transfer of property, or procure or suffer his property to be taken on legal process, with intent to give a preference to one or more of his creditors, he shall be deemed to have committed an act of bankruptcy, and, subject to the conditions thereinafter prescribed, shall be adjudged a bankrupt. The section then goes on to provide, that, if such person shall be adjudged a bankrupt, the as-signee may recover back the property so transferred contrary to the act, provided the person receiving such conveyance had reasonable cause to believe that the debtor was insolvent. These provisions of the thirty-ninth section, as applied to the facts of the present case, are simply to the effect, that, if William Secor, when the firm of Black & Secor was insolvent, or in contemplation of its insolvency, made a transfer of the property of Black & Secor, or suffered it to be taken on legal process, with intent to give a preference to Thomas P. Secor, as a creditor of the firin, the assignee in bankruptcy of the members of the firm (they having been adjudged bankrupt as such members, and the firm being thus adjudged bankrupt) may recover back the property so transferred contrary to the act, provided Thomas P. Secor had reasonable cause to believe that the firm was insolvent.
Now, it clearly appears, from the evidence, (1.) That the firm of Black & Secor was insolvent; (2.) That William Secor, a member of the firm, suffered the property of the firm to be taken on legal process; (3.) That he did so with intent to give a preference to Thomas P. Secor, as a creditor of the firm; (4.) That Thomas P. Secor had reasonable cause to believe that the firm was insolvent.
(1.) In regard to the question of insolvency, the- provisions of the bankruptcy act of 1841 were very different from those which are found in the act of 1867. The second section of the act of 1841 declared void all transfers of property made by the bankrupt in contemplation of bankruptcy, and for the purpose of giving a preference to any person over general creditors, and all transfers of property made by the bankrupt in contemplation of bankruptcy, to any person not a bona fide creditor, or a purchaser for a valuable consideration without notice, and authorized the assignee in bankruptcy to recover the property transferred; but it expressly provided, that all dealings and transactions by and with any bankrupt bona fide, made and entered into more than two months before the fifing of the petition in bankruptcy, should not be invalidated or affected by the act, provided that the other party to any such dealings or transactions had no notice of a prior act of bankruptcy, or of the intention of the bankrupt to take the benefit of the act It was decided by the supreme court, in Buckingham v. McLean, 13 How. [54 U. S.] 150, 167, that the words “contemplation of bankruptcy,” in the second section of the act of 1841, did not mean contemplation of insolvency — of a simple inability to pay, as debts-, should become payable, whereby the business, of the debtor would be broken up — but meant that the debtor must have contemplated the-commission of what was declared by the act to be an act of bankruptcy, or must have-contemplated an application by himself to be-decreed a bankrupt. The view of the court was, that, under the act of 1841, something; more than the insolvency of the debtor was: required to render void a security given to a bona fide creditor more than two months before the fifing of the petition, and notice to the creditor of something more than such insolvency; that the word “bankruptcy,” as used in the act, meant a particular legal status, to be ascertained and declared by a judicial decree; that a person might contemplate insolvency and the breaking up of his; business, and yet not contemplate bankruptcy; and that, as the contemplation of insolvency was not in fact the contemplation of bankruptcy, the phrase, “contemplation of bankruptcy,” did not include the contemplation of mere insolvency. In these particulars, the thirty-ninth section of the act of 1867 differs widely, and with a manifest purpose, from the act of 1841. The words of the-
(2.) So, also, in regard to the question of suffering property to be taken on legal process, the language of the thirty-ninth section Is, “procure or suffer his property to be taken on legal process.” There was no such language in the act of 1841. It was, by the first section of that act, made an act of ¡ bankruptcy for a person to willingly or fraudulently procure his goods to be taken in execution. The word “suffer,” in this connection, was not used in the act of 1841. , There is a clearly, recognized legal distinction between “procuring” and “suffering.” The act of 6 Geo. IV. c. 16, § 3, provided, that if any trader should suffer himself to be arrested for any debt not due, or suffer himself to be outlawed, or procure himself to be arrested, or his goods, money, or chattels to be attached, sequestered, or taken in execution, he might be brought into bankruptcy. In Gibson v. King, 1 Car. & M. 458, a creditor had brought an action against the bankrupt for a debt, and judgment had been suffered to go by default, and an execution had been issued on it, on which the bankrupt’s goods had been taken, and the question arose, whether suffering the judgment to go by default in the action, and suffering the goods to be taken on the execution on the judgment, was procuring the goods to be taken in execution, within the statute. The court held, that the bankrupt had suffered the goods to be taken in execution, but had not procux-ed them to be so taken. The same view of the distinction between the two words in the English act was taken in Gore v. Lloyd, 12 Mees. & W. 463. The distinction there maintained by Baron Alderson was, that the bankrupt procured his goods to be taken in execution, when the initiation of the proceeding came from him, when he was the person who began to procure, when he caused the thing to be done, in the ordinary sense of the word; but that the signing reluctantly, and under strong pressure from a creditor, of a warrant to confess a judgment, under a stipulation that the warrant should not be unnecessarily put in force, was suffering, and not procuring, goods to be taken in execution, ! which were taken on an execution issued on a judgment entered up on the warrant. The English and other decisions as to pressure by a creditor, and as to what it is to procure, have no application to the question of suffering. Denny v. Dana, 2 Cush. 160, 170.
(3.) As to the question of intent on the part of the debtor to give a preference to the creditor. The intent to prefer is essential; but every person is to be presumed to intend the natural and probable consequences of his own acts, and, if such acts do, in fact, give a preference, it is competent to infer the intent. Denny v. Dana, 2 Cush. 160, 172; Beals v. Clark, 13 Gray, 18, 21.
Where the act which is made the act of bankruptcy is a passive act, such as that of suffering property to be taken on legal process, when the debtor is insolvent or in contemplation of insolvency, with intent to give a preference to a creditor, if the natural and probable consequence of the act of sufferance is to give the preference to the creditor, it will be inferred that the debtor had. such intent, unless he shows the contrary; and
(4.) As to the question whether Thomas P. Secor had reasonable cause to believe that the firm was insolvent, the evidence leaves no fair ground for doubt on the subject.
The same results that follow from the application of the provisions of the thirty-ninth section of the act to this case, follow also under the thirty-fifth section. The two sections are in pari materia, and must be construed together. There is, however, no conflict between them, and they are of the same purport and tenor. Under the thirty-fifth section, if William Secor, his firm being insolvent, did, within four months before the filing of the petition against his firm, make any transfer of any part of the property of the firm to Thomas P. Secor, he being a creditor of the firm, with a. view to give a preference to him, and if Thomas P. Secor, being the person receiving the transfer, or to be benefited by it, had reasonable cause to believe the firm to be insolvent, and that the transfer was made in fraud of the provisions of the act, the transfer was void, and the assignee may recover the property, or its value, from Thomas P. Secor. The thirty-fifth section also provides, that, if the transfer was not made in the usual, or ordinary, course of business of the debtor, the fact shall be prima facie evidence of fraud. The act of suffering the creditor to take the property of the firm on legal process, the firm being insolvent, when such taking could have been prevented* by an application in voluntary bankruptcy, was a fraud on the provisions of the act, and was a transfer of the property of the firm to the creditor, within the meaning of the thirty-fifth section, and must be held to have been a transfer made by the debtors, and with a view to give a preference to the creditor. The creditor was to be benefited by the transfer, and had reasonable cause to believe the firm to be insolvent, and that the transfer was made in fraud of the provisions of the act. The transfer was not made in the usual, or ordinary, course of business of the debtors. Therefore, it was void, and the assignee in bankruptcy is entitled to recover from Thomas P. Secor the property transferred, or its value. There is no need of a new action for such purpose. Thomas P. Secor has submitted himself to the jurisdiction of this court in the premises. It was on his application that the order was made, referring the matter to take testimony as to the facts involved, and directing the proceeds of the property transferred to be held by the sheriff, subject to tne runner oruer of this court, to be made on the application of either party, on notice to the other.
The act of 18G7 is much more extensive and far-reaching, in its provisions respecting transactions by a debtor with his creditors, than the act of 1841 was. In respect to the act of 1841, the supreme court, in Shawhan v. Wherritt, 7 How. [48 U. S.] 627, 644, said: “The policy and aim of bankrupt laws are, to compel an equal distribution of the assets of the bankrupt among all his creditors. Hence, when a merchant or trader, by any of these tests of insolvency,” that is, the acts which are made, by the statute, acts of bankruptcy, “has shown his inability to meet his engagements, one creditor cannot, by collusion with him, or by a race of diligence, obtain a preference, to the injury of others. Such conduct is considered a fraud on the act, whose aim is to divide the assets equally, and, therefore, equitably.” These doctrines, thus held to be applicable to the act of 1841, are much more applicable to the act of 3867. And congress, in view of the provisions of the act of 1841, and of the decisions of the supreme court under it, in regard to the meaning of the words “bankruptcy” and “contemplation of bankruptcy,” and of the decisions of the courts in the United States and in Ungland in regard to the meaning of the words “procure” and “suffer,” and in regard to the effect of pressure or suit by a creditor upon the question as to whether the debtor procures to be done the act which secures the preference to the creditor, must be regarded as having intended, by the use of the words “insolvent,” and “contemplation of insolvency,” and “suffer,” in the connection in which they are found in the act of 1867, to strike at the root of all preferences obtained by a creditor, where his debtor is insolvent, or in contemplation of insolvency, by the taking of the debtor’s property on legal process, whether the taking be by an act of procurement, or an act of sufferance, on the part of the debtor, where there is an intent on the part of the debtor to give such preference, and the creditor has reasonable cause to believe that the debtor is insolvent.
An order must be entered, that the sheriff pay over to the assignee in bankruptcy the net proceeds of the sale of the property in question.