140 F. 758 | D.S.C. | 1905
This is a review of the decision of the referee disallowing the claim of the People’s Bank of Greenville against the estate of the bankrupt, the said claim having been presented more than a year after the adjudication in bankruptcy; the réferee holding that the terms of section 57n (Act July i, 1898, c. 541, 30 Stat. 561 [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 3444]) were mandatory, and prohibit the allowance of any claim after the expiration of a year from the adjudication, citing numerous authorities which hold that this provision is an absolute prohibition against proof and allowance of claims when presented after the expiration- of one year. The terms of the section are as follows :
“Claims shall not be proved against a bankrupt estate subsequent to one year after the adjudication, or if they are liquidated by litigation and the final judgment therein-is rendered within 30 days before or after the expiration of such time, then within 60 days after the rendition of such judgment.”
The language is unqualified, and there is a uniformity of decisions in the District Courts holding that creditors who have negligently failed to make proof of their claims within one year after the adjudication are barred. The only question is whether these cases should govern in a case like this, where the circumstances are peculiar. They rest upon the general principle that the whole scheme of the bankrupt act contemplates a speedy winding up of the estates of bankrupts, and tardy creditors ought not to be allowed to defeat the object of the act by a negligent delay in the proof of their claims.
Fagan had been adjudged a bankrupt in involuntary proceedings in 1902. He was a merchant doing business in Greenville, and within four months of the commencement of the proceedings in bankruptcy against him had sold out-liis stock of goods, upon which the People’s Bank had a mortgage for something over $2,000, to one Stradley for about $3,500, and out of the purchase money the debt of the People’s Bank was paid. Oscar Hodges, the trustee of the bankrupt, commenced a suit in the state court against the People’s Bank to recover the money so paid, on the ground that it was a preferential payment and in violation of the bankruptcy law. The case was referred to a referee, who held that the payment was not in fraud of the act, but upon exceptions to his report the same was reversed by the Circuit Judge. The bank was ordered to pay over the money to the trustee, and this judgment was subsequently affirmed by the Supreme Court of the state. The bank paid over to the trustee the amount theretofore received by it, and within 30 days filed its proof of claim with the referee to share with other creditors in the bankrupt estate. It appears that the whole estate of the bankrupt in the hands of the trustee for distribution consists of the money so paid. No question is made as to the bona fides of the indebtedness to the bank; but the referee, suo motu, refused to allow the claim to be proved, for the reasons already stated.
The fundamental principle of the bankruptcy law is that creditors are entitled to share equally in the bankrupt estate, and in construing its various provisions courts cannot ignore this principle. The provisions for winding up estates within one year are all made in the interest of creditors, and, as stated, there is a uniformity of decisions that creditors lose their rights by laches in failing to prove their claim within the year allowed for administration. The Supreme Court of the United States has lately held, in Keppel v. Tiffin Savings Bank, 197 U. S. 356, 25 Sup. Ct. 443, 49 L. Ed. 790, that:
The “creditor of a bankrupt who has received a merely voidable preference, and who has in good faith retained such preference until deprived thereof by the judgment of a court upon a suit of the trustee, can thereafter prove the debt so voidably preferred.”
Under that decision there can be no doubt, therefore, that the bank can lawfully prove its debt. Can this right be lost within one year after the adjudication in bankruptcy, as the referee has decided? Has the administration of the estate been hindered or delayed by its laches ? Clearly not, because there was no estate in the hands of the trustee for distribution prior to the final judgment of the Supreme Court, and within 30 days thereafter its claim was submitted to the referee in due form. Prior to that judgment the bank had no claim which it could prove. Its debt had been paid, and it had no claim against the bankrupt estate. Shall it therefore be barred from any participation in the. estate of the bankrupt because it has not done what it was impossible 'for it to do, to wit, prove a claim which did not exist? To refuse to allow the bank to prove its claim will be in effect to hold that it has forfeited all right to participate in the estate of the bankrupt, because it has litigated its rights to uphold the payment of its debt made prior to the adjudication. This the Supreme Court, in the Keppel Case, has held cannot be done; that it is the privilege of a citizen to submit his claims to judicial tribunals without subjecting himself to penalties of an extraordinary character; and that the right to prove its lawful claim against the bankrupt estate was not forfeited simply because it elected to put the trustee to proof in a court of the existence of the facts made essential by the law to an invalidation of the preference. That the debt due the bank is bona fide, and that it is a lawful claim against the bankrupt estate is undisputed, nor is it questioned that its litigation was in good faith.
Such being the case, it seems to me that under the well-settled rule that so long as a fund is undistributed a court may allow a just claim to participate in the distribution, notwithstanding the fact that by its previ
The judgment of the referee is reversed, and the case remanded to him, with instructions to proceed in accordance with this opinion.