24 F. 137 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1885
The bankrupts applied for a discharge and were opposed by some of their creditors under the provisions of section 5110, and their discharge was refused. Thereafter they proposed a com'-posiiion, and the majority of the creditors resolved to accept it. The district court approved the terms, and ordered the recording of the resolution. The creditor who opposed the composition has petitioned for a review of the order of the district court, and now' insists that the application of the bankrupts for their discharge, and the denial thereof by the court, was a bar to the proceedings for a composition. An adjudication that a bankrupt is not entitled to a discharge may conclude him from obtaining a discharge upon a subsequent application-in tlie same proceeding. Re Brockway, 21 Blatchf. 136; S. C. 23
The bankrupt act provides two modes by which a bankrupt maybe discharged from his debts: one by an application to the court showing that he has complied with the requirements of the law, and that all the conditions exist which entitle him to a discharge; and another by effecting a composition with his creditors. If he pursues the first mode, the opposition of a single creditor may defeat a discharge, although all the other creditors consent. If he adopts the second', a majority of his creditors, in a proper ease and with the approval of the court, may determine that all his debts shall be satisfied-upon specified conditions, and the proceedings in bankruptcy be practically terminated, against the objections of a minority of creditors. There is nothing in the language of the act, or indicated by its general scheme and policy, which compels him to elect between adopting the one or the other of these two modes of obtaining a release from his debts, or which precludes him, if he adopts one and fails, from adopting the other afterwards. Even if he has obtained his discharge by the first mode, there is nothing in the act which prevents him from offering terms to his creditors and effecting a statutory payment of his debts by a composition.
The provisions which authorize a composition are highly beneficial to creditors. They allow the majority, under proper circumstances, to close the bankruptcy proceedings without waiting the often slow processes of official administration, and they offer an incentive- to the bankrupt to co-operate by putting it out of the power of a single creditor, or a minority of creditors, to defeat his discharge. In the absence of -any expressed restrictions in the law, it should not be held that any act or omission of a bankrupt can operate to prejudice the creditors from entering into a composition whenever they deem it best to do so.
No other specific objection is urged against the composition. Although the percentage offered by the bankrupt, and Accepted by the creditors, was very small, the question whether it was expedient to accept it was primarily one for the creditors to determine; «-«nd after they have determined it, and their action has been approved by the district court, this court upon review will not interfere. Re Wronkow, 15 Blatchf. 38; Be Wilson, 16 Blatchf. 112. It has been assumed
The order of the district court is affirmed.