11 F. Cas. 446 | S.D.N.Y. | 1876
The bankrupt having applied for his discharge, his discharge was opposed by two creditors, on specifications of objection filed, and, on the ■29th of June, 1876, by an order made by this court, his discharge was refused. See [Case No. 6,032], He had been adjudged a bankrupt on the 3rd of August, 1875, on the petition of his creditors. The grounds on which a discharge was refused were, that he had, in contemplation of becoming bankrupt, made certain conveyances of property to creditors for the purpose of preferring them, and that he had failed to keep proper books of account. On the 11th of July, 1876, the bankrupt presented a petition to this court, which sets forth, “that no assets have come into the hands of the assignee appointed herein;” that the bankrupt “has no assets or property of any kind or description;” that his “friends have offered to advance a sum of money to enable him to propose a composition to his creditors;” that his “creditors have almost unanimously expressed a desire” that
I cannot regard this composition as for the best interest of all concerned. It is not for the best interest of the two creditors who opposed and defeated the discharge of the bankrupt, and it is unjust to them. They were at the trouble and expense of opposing the discharge. They were successful. The order refusing the discharge was acquiesced in by the bankrupt. These two creditors had a right to suppose they had prevented a discharge of the bankrupt from the debts he owed them, and now they are sought to be coerced by friendly creditors, who shared no part of the burden of opposing a discharge, into accepting, in full satisfaction of their debts, the nominal sum of one-half of one per centum on the debts. If this proposal of composition had been made before a discharge was applied for, the case would not have presented the features it now does. As was said by this court in Re Reiman [Case No 11,673]: “The rights and interests of the dissenting or non-assenting creditors are under the protection of the court, and the affirmative votes of the assenting creditors are of no avail to affect such rights and interests, if the composition be not for the best interest of the other creditors, or be unjust towards them.” The object of the assenting creditors is stated by the bankrupt and himself, in his petition, to be, to enable the bankrupt to obtain a discharge from his debts; and this is quite apparent from the nominal amount of the composition offered and from the fact that the bankrupt represents that they would accept even a smaller composition than that offered, by saying that they have stated their willingness to accept any composition which should accomplish that result. In view of the fact that the bankrupt has no assets whatever, and has been refused a discharge on the opposition of the creditors who now oppose the proposed composition, such composition loses all the features of a composition, and becomes merely an attempt by friendly creditors to force upon the opposing creditors a discharge, when it has been held, in a formal proceeding, that the bankrupt is not entitled to a discharge. Under like circumstances in England, in a liquidation by arrangement, the confirmation of a resolution is refused. In Re Russell, 10 Ch. App. 255, 263, it appeared that the assets were so trifling that practically there would be no dividend, and the creditors had resolved on a liquidation by arrangement whereby the debtor was at once to receive his discharge without there being any security that the creditors would ever receive anything. There were dissentient
I do not pass on the question of jurisdiction raised, as the foregoing considerations suffice to show that the composition ought not to be confirmed.