11 F. Cas. 473 | D. Mass. | 1873
I have decided that when one creditor stands by and sees a settlement made with the others, under such circumstances that his assent to the compromise is to be presumed, he is estopped to rely on that compromise as an act of bankruptcy. In re Massachusetts Brick Co. [Case No. 9,259). I shall probably adhere to that doctrine until a higher court has held it to be erroneous. But as this case was not argued nor placed upon the ground of the agreement concerning the eighty per cent, and the evidence upon that point may not have been fully developed, I must consider the important question, whether the payments made by the defendants in settlement with the great body of their creditors render them liable to be made bankrupts under the act. It was argued with great force and ability, that, after a trader is insolvent, there is nothing he can lawfully do by way of disposing of his property and settling with his creditors, excepting through the aid and intervention of the bankrupt court. Adding the qualification, hinted at above, that the acts complained of are done without the express or implied assent of all his creditors, the proposition is a sound one in a broad sense. That such a persón cannot lawfully convey his property to trustees, even with the best intentions and the most careful provision for equality among his creditors, that he cannot do this or suffer it to be done, even with the. sanction or by the decree of a state court few lawyers will be. found at. this time to deny. All such arrangements, however innocent in intent, and however probably ad-vantagéous to the creditors, are made subject to the objection of any one of them, unless, as in a late instance, congress should make a special exception by a new statute. This is because the bankrupt law [of 1867 (14 Stat. 517)], is and must be conclusively presumed to be the best and only authoritative rule, and to provide the exclusive method and machinery for the settlement of the affairs of insolvent persons.
But this case does ’ not bring up any transfer of property excepting payments of money, nor any thing to withdraw assets from creditors; no appointment of a private assignee chosen by the debtors to present to-creditors the alternative of their management or a lawsuit. It was simply a payment,, to every creditor who would accept it, of less than his whole debt. I cannot agr^e that this is necessarily a preference. It has been often ruled, and lately by the highest tribunal, that a payment by an insolvent to a creditor, both parties knowing the insolvencyr is to be presumed to be intended as a preference. Toof v. Martin, 13 Wall. [80 U. S.] 40. The presumption is not usually said lo be a conclusive one; but, if it were, the payment referred to in all these cases is a payment in full, or of a larger proportion than others will have. The definition of a preference is, a payment to one creditor which will give him an advantage over the others, or which may possibly do so. It is impossible to define it without that idea being included. Now, supposing it could be shown,-beyond any doubt, that a creditor, being anxious for his money, perhaps himself in great stress, took from a debtor, in full settlement, very much less than it was certain the others-would get, who is injured? Is the assignee to be permitted to say, I will recover back this five per cent to add to the ten per cent I am paying to those who made no settlement? The case that I have supposed is the case at bar. It is proved, without the slightest attempt at contradiction, that the great body of the creditors, knowing that the defendants could pay much more, agreed to take one-half of ■ their first demands. Their purpose was to leave the defendants solvent. In my opinion, they have succeeded. Indeed, it is not denied that the defendants are actually solvent; but the argument is pressed that they are technically bankrupt, because within six months past, they, being actually insolvent, made certain payments, and that nothing can purge this stain but the lapsc-of time. The argument is undoubtedly a strong one. If it is sound, any one of the new creditors of this firm, having a debt to-the amount of $250 or more, can put them into bankruptcy; because there is in our statute no provision that only those creditors can take advantage of an act of bankruptcy who were such when it was committed. The argument is strong; because it would not, in most.cases, be possible for the court or a jury
I do not intend to encourage any compromises but such as are full, fair, and equal. If any of the creditors who took fifty per cent were given to understand that no one should have more, or were deceived in the exhibit of assets, they might well complain. But there is no evidence of this; and the natural inference is, that any one would know there was danger that some few creditors, by refusing to come in, would be .able to make better terms than the rest. In the absence of any complaint of that sort, I do not feel bound to listen to one from the party benefited.
If I should decide this case for the petitioners, I should be obliged to say that an insolvent person cannot receive a' present of $25,000; for that is precisely what happened to the defendants. I am not prepared to go that length in support of a general formula. The proposition with which I began, that insolvents must, in general, invoke the intervention of the bankrupt courts, must be further modified to express the idea, that what they do in the way of payments they do at their own risk and that of the creditors who are paid, in case it should turn out that any one is or can be injured; but if there is no possible harm done, there is no act of bankruptcy.
I do not rest my decision on the ground that the..particular payments mentioned in the petition were not acts of bankruptcy, while some earlier payments may have been so. In my judgment, no such act has been committed at any time. No payments were made until all the creditors were understood to have assented, though a few,' like thé petitioners, were to have more than fifty per cent The agreement was to take notes; and, if notes had been given, it is perfectly evident that the effect would have been to diminish the debts one half, and leave the assets as they were, making a gift, as I have said, of about $25,000 to the firm. The agreement being completed, the firm were solvent, for the same reason; and, finding themselves able to pay the dividend in money, they made it in that way to those that wished it. Each payment was the discount of a note they had a right to insist on giving, and was a substituted payment. Not one was made until the solvency of the firm was established beyond a peradventure, by the signature or assent of all, or nearly all, the creditors to the agreement.
At the argument I expressed a doubt whether solvency could be proved, excepting by the convincing argument of a tender in court of the full amount of the petitioning creditors’ debt; but as this is not a court for the collection of debts, I do not think, when the evidence is so clear, I ought to hesitate to pronounce that the solvency is proved. Indeed, if the firm had become insolvent again by a new misfortune, my decision in this case would be the same. I do not say there might not be cases in which the debts might be required to be paid before a decree of dismissal should be entered. Nor am I sure that a somewhat larger discretion over the matter of costs might not be safely and wisely intrusted to the courts.
. Petition dismissed, with costs.