(after stating the facts as above).
That the petition as it stood on June 26, 1922, was insufficient both sides must agree. In re Nelson (D. C.)
In the ease at bar it is quite true that the bill of particulars will not introduce an independent act of bankruptcy, because the original petition specified none, and therefore the doctrine of In re Haff will not apply. On the other hand, the language of the original petition is such as makes it in the nature of things impossible to identify any preference which may be laid in the bill of particulars as among those originally alleged. How is Stoneham to know whether the particular payments with which he will be charged were among those “various moneys to various creditors,” of which the petition spoke? And, if he cannot, how can he avail himself of the statute, which protects him from any preference not complained of within four months of its payment? A petitioning creditor must show that he has challenged the act of bankruptcy in season, and it is impossible to know whether he has, until he identifies what act he means. To allow him to say that those which he subsequently selects are those which he originally intended is either to compel the bankrupt to accept his word, or to try out as an issue the unexpressed meaning of his pleading, legally a monstrosity. Nor is this merely a matter of form; the statute condones all preferences after four months, and the petitioning creditor may not by equivocation imperil a right so secured. .
In Re Condon,
In Bradley v. Huntington,
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In other circuits we can find no ease to the contrary. In International Silver Co. v. N. Y. Jewelry Co.,
On the other hand, in Hovland v. Farmers’ State Bank,
We must, however, concede that our decision in Re Nesbitt (C. C. A.) 285 F. 1019, is to the contrary. There, though the objection was taken in limine and overruled, we affirmed the order on the authority of Bradley v. Huntington. No opinion was written, and we inadvertently failed to observe that the bankrupt had not, as in Bradley v. Huntington, abandoned the objection, either by answering or by answering and going to trial.
As the case is presented, we do not know what the bill of particulars will contain, except that it must be limited to preferences. However, the time had long since passed within which any such could be in season unless, under the last clause of section 60a (Comp. St. § 9644), they depended for their validity upon some public record. We assume that like petitioning creditors cannot mean to rely on any such. However, the order to be entered will, if they choose, merely amend the order of November 13, 1925, by limiting the bill of particulars to such preferences as require record for their validity and were recorded within four months before the service of the bill of particulars. If, as we suppose, the petitioning creditors have no use for this provision, the order will be reversed, and the petition for adjudication dismissed as against Stoneham.
Nor is Stoneham estopped to assert the invalidity of the petition. When the interveners moved to bring him into the proceeding, it was already too late to plead any preference, and their effort for its success depended upon his waiving the defect expressly or by conduct. It is impossible, therefore, to see how they could have been misled by anything which he did thereafter. Their position must be that it was ineumbent upon him as a dormant partner to intervene and object to the original petition before their time to correct it had .expired. Perhaps it would be desirable if the law imposed upon parties so high a measure of initiative in cases where they are in fact liable, but a defendant may safely maintain a more passive position, and is not obliged to defend until he has been assailed.
Order reversed.
