217 F. 3 | 2d Cir. | 1914
(after stating the facts as above). The discharge of the bankrupts has been refused, and we are asked to determine on this appeal whether error was committed in denying them their discharge. The granting of a discharge is not a matter which is optional or discretionary with the court. The statute provides that the judge shall hear the application for a discharge and shall discharge the applicant unless statutory cause for refusing the discharge is shown. It is made the duty of the court to refuse to discharge a bankrupt if it appears that he has “at any time subsequent to the first day of the four months immediately preceding the filing of the petition, transferred, removed, destroyed or concealed or permitted to be removed, destroyed or concealed, any of his property with intent to hinder, delay, or defraud his creditors.” Bankr. Act 1898, § 14b, as amended by Act Cong. Feb. S, 1903, 32 Stat. 797.
It is necessary, therefore, to consider whether the bankrupts did within four months of> the filing of the petition in bankruptcy make a
In all that was done we have no reason to doubt the entire good faith of these bankrupts, and of their counsel, throughout the whole of this unfortunate difficulty. The bankrupts apparently made an honest failure, and acting under the advice of a committee of their creditors and a lawyer, who represented them and the majority of the creditors jointly they attempted, in order to save expense, to adjust their trouble through a common-law composition agreement. But unhappily a few of the creditors declined to agree to it. In all such cases a single creditor is in a position where he can make a good deal of trouble, if so disposed.
The other creditors, when they knew all the circumstances connected with the failure, were willing to accept 25 cents on the dollar and to settle their claims on that basis. The record shows that while the matter was pending Mr. Herzog, an attorney acting for certain credv itors, went to see the attorney who was acting for the bankrupts, and stated to him that he would not consent to the proposed terms “unless he was going to get something in addition for his client” — that “whenever he got into a bankruptcy matter his client ought to be treated upon a separate basis or a better basis than anybody else, because when they, represented creditors they were treated that way.” He was informed that what he sought he could not obtain, that no one creditor would be given more than another, and that the settlement “was going through in the right way or it was not going through at all.” To this Herzog is said to have replied that “he had to make a showing, and that the only showing he could make was to show dollar's and cents, and by getting his clients a better settlement than anybody else.” He was informed that there was money deposited for him “which would be available to him the same as anybody else.” To this he replied that, he would not take it, “but would fight the thing through the court, and made various threats.” The record also discloses that one of the objecting creditors stated to the attorney for the creditors’ committee that he would sign the composition agreement of 25 cents “cash extra, on the side.” The proposal was indignantly rejected.
Instead of coming into the bankruptcy court and offering a composi
The creditors’ committee had reported that “everything was worth about $1,250,” but “they wanted to malee it a round sum, and they thought, if we could pay 25 cents on the dollar cash, all the creditors would come in, and that is how the sum of 25 cents cash was arrived at. That was the way that was arrived at, and that amounted to $1,-550.” The consideration, therefore, amounted to a few hundred dollars in excess of what the creditors’ committee thought the assets were worth at the time. Four individuals, none of them creditors, but each a friend of the bankrupts, furnished this money and received in return stock representing that amount in the new corporation.
(1) That these persons had transferred their property with intent to hinder, delay, or defraud their creditors.
(2) That while insolvent they transferred their property with intent to prefer creditors.
Julius Bros, did not appear or intérpose any defense, and they were accordingly duly adjudicated bankrupts. From that decree no appeal was ever taken, and it must be taken as having conclusively established their status as bankrupts; the court having had jurisdiction. But the rule is that if the petition charges different acts of bankruptcy, as it did in this case, and the adjudication does not show upon which one of them it proceeded, and that is the case here, it does not render either charge res judicata in the further proceedings. In re Letson, 157 Fed. 78, 84 C. C. A. 582 (1907).
When the bankrupts subsequently and in due course asked for their discharge, it was refused, on the ground that they had made a transfer of their'property with intent to hinder, delay, and defraud creditors; and from this order the appeal has been taken, and that question is therefore properly before this court, and is now to be determined.
The words used in the act, “with intent to hinder, delay or defraud his creditors,” have been borrowed from the statute of 13 Eliz. c. 5, relating to fraudulent conveyances, and have no doubt the same meaning in the Bankruptcy Act that the courts have given to them when used in the statute of Elizabeth. It is noteworthy that the old English statute, after enacting that transfers made with intent to hinder, delay, or defraud creditors should be “utterly void,” went on to provide that this rule should not apply to bona fide transfers for a good consideration, and the courts have construed “a good consideration” in this connection to mean one founded on value. In the case at bar the transfer was made in entire good faith and for a valuable consideration.
The intent to defraud is something distinct from the mere intent to delay or hinder. But there is no distinction between delaying and hindering. The statute must he construed according to its reasonable intent and object, “and by a reasonable construction only such hindrance and delay as will operate as a fraud come within its operation.” Bump on Fraudulent Conveyances (3d Ed.) p. 20. This author, after stating that the presence of intent is essential, goes on to explain that:
“Tlie transfer must also be devised and contrived of malice, fraud, covin, collusion, or guile.” Id. p. 22.
There are two classes of transfers under the act:
(1) Those which have been entered into with actual fraudulent intent.
(2) Those where, from the terms of the agreement or the nature of the transaction itself, the fraudulent intent is presumed to exist as an inference of law.
In the one class the fraudulent intent is always a question of fact, and in the other it is a question of law. Thus if one who is insolvent makes a voluntary transfer of his property, receiving no valuable consideration therefor, the law will infer the intent, even though he may have made the transfer with an honest motive. In such cases no evidence of intention can he received to change that presumption. Such a conveyance necessarily operates to hinder, delay, or defraud the creditors, and the grantor will in such a case be presumed to intend the natural and necessary consequences of his acts.
The law applicable to the facts of the case now before us may be found correctly laid down in the following statement:
“One in debt may sell his property, although the effect of the sale is to hinder creditors, if the sole is not made for that purpose, and a debtor, although in failing circumstances or insolvent, may dispose of his property in good faith to obtain money to meet his obligations, although such sale may in fact hinder and delay his creditors.” 20 Oyc. 464, 465, and cases cited.
“We do not think that the contract between Smith and his creditors,can be construed to have been made with an intent to defeat or delay his creditors.”
In the course of the opinion the court made the following statement, . which we adopt and apply to the case now before us:
“There was certainly nothing wrong, when Smith found himself in in-1 solvent circumstances, to disclose his situation to his creditors, and to propose to pay them, in equal proportion, as far as his ability extended, and to •obtain therefor a discharge from his debts. On the part of his creditors .. there was nothing iniquitous in acceding to such a proposal. And if there were any of Smith’s creditors, who disliked the terms which were offered, and preferred the chance of obtaining satisfaction by other means, it was competent and right for them to refuse. But there seerhs no good reason why such refusal should prevent Smith and the other creditors from executing an accommodation, which appears so humane and just. Still, however, if any of the reasons, offered on the part of the plaintiff, are available to the pur- ' pose, for which they were intended — to show that the contract is void, as it ' respects the creditors who are not parties to it — the plaintiff must prevail, and the persons summoned as trustees adjudged to be so.”
The learned District Judge seems to have relied upon South Danvers National Bank v. Stevens, 5 App. Div. 392, 39 N. Y. Supp. 298 (1896), r where the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of. New York said :
“In addition, we think, with the learned trial judge, that the assignment 'was fraudulent in fact. There is no doubt as to a debtor’s right to go to ‘ creditors with a view of effecting an amicable settlement, and in the course thereof informing such creditors that a failure to compromise will necessitate • an assignment. ’But this is quite another thing from doing what was done here, namely, formally executing an assignment and then using it as a weapon ’ for the purpose of coercing a creditor into an agreement by which he gives ' to the committee having charge of carrying out a composition the right to j discharge the debt, and thus foregoing the right which the creditor has, not only to receive a distributive share of his debtor’s property, but also to proceed for the balance against such debtor.”
In Sargent v. Blake, 160 Fed. 57, 61, 87 C. C. A. 213, 217 (17 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1040, 15 Ann. Cas. 58 (1908), an insolvent partner conveyed his interest in the partnership property to his- partner, and the latter immediately thereafter paid to the mother of the insolvent $3,*? 731.90 for the money which she had loaned to the son to put into the partnership business. There was no intent on the part of either partner to hinder, delay, or defraud creditors to any greater extent than the payment to the mother would necessarily hinder or’ prevent them from collecting their debts. The Circuit .Court of Appeals in the Eighth Circuit held that the transfer was not illegal, as having been made with intent to hinder or defraud the creditors, and said, through Judge Sanborn:
“The only evidence that Maxwell intended to hinder or defraud the creditors of the partnership is that, while the firm and the partners were insolvent, King conveyed his interest to Maxwell, and the latter paid his mother in preference to his other creditors. The only way in which Maxwell could have made this payment in had faith would have been to have made it in whole or in part in secret trust for himself, or with the actual intent 1o hinder or defraud the creditors of the company more than the mere payment of the debt to his mother out of the property of the former partt nership, in preference to the claims of the partnership creditors, must necessarily have delayed or prevented their collection of their claims, and there was no evidence of any such trust or intent. The evidence was that he intended to pay his mother in preference to the partnership and to other creditors, that Ms mother had loaned him the money to engage in and conduct the partnership business, that he had purchased the interest of his partner, and that, as soon as the business and the property became his, he paid her the debt which he owed her. The facts that the payment to Mrs. Sargent had the inevitable effect to deprive the creditors of the partnership of an opportunity which they would otherwise have had to collect their claims in whole or in part, and that Maxwell knew that this would be its effect, and hence must have intended that result, do not establish the fact that he intended to hinder, delay, or defraud those creditors within the meaning of*10 section 67e. It is every intent to hinder, delay, and defraud creditors unlawfully only, not every intent to hinder or delay them in collecting, or to prevent them from collecting, their claims, that avails to avoid a transfer under that section. An insolvent debtor has the jus disponendi of his property until the commencement of proceedings in bankruptcy against him. 1-Ie has the legal right to secure and pay his debts with it, provided always the security or the payment is not violative of any of the acts of Congress or any of the laws of the land. A preference of one creditor over others by such a payment or by such security, which is free from actual or constructive fraud, and from any purpose to affect other creditors injuriously beyond the necessary effect of the security or preference, is valid and lawful, and it cannot evidence such intent to hinder, delay, or defraud creditors as will make it void or voidable under section 67e. Coder v. Arts, 152 Fed. 943, 947, 82 C. C. A. 91 [15 L. R. A. (N. S.) 372]; Sabin v. Columbia River Lbr. & Fuel Co., 25 Or. 15, 34 Pac. 692, 695, 42 Am. St. Rep. 756; Lampson & Powers v. Arnold, 19 Iowa, 479, 484; Stewart v. Dunham, 115 U. S. 61, 66, 5 Sup. Ct. 1163, 29 L. Ed. 329.”
So in the case at bar we regard it as a matter of no consequence, as far as the precise question now under consideration is concerned, that the sale of the assets at their full value may have hindered or delayed the protesting creditors.’ There was no intention to defraud the creditors; neither was there any intention to hinder or delay them, or to force them to a settlement. If as a result they have been hindered and delayed, it is nothing more than the inevitable result which follows from the sale by an insolvent, where the proceeds are used to pay certain creditors in preference to others. Such sales under certain circumstances can be set aside on the ground of the preference, but in the absence of the fraudulent intent they do not warrant the court in refusing to discharge the bankrupts. The insolvents had the jus disponendi of the partnership property at the time, and they transferred it to pay partnership debts. The plan to form the corporation and t'o purchase the assets for $1,550 and to pay all the creditors 25 cents on the dollar, including the two objecting creditors, was conceived before the interview with the attorney for the objecting creditors was held, at which the latter declined to consent to the settlement because his demands for a secret additional sum beyond that to be paid to the other creditors was refused, and a few days after-wards the corporation was organized in accordance with the previous understanding. The course the objecting creditors took had no influence whatever upon what was done by the insolvent partners, who were acting with the approval of the creditors’ committee.
The decree below must be reversed, and the cause remanded, with directions to grant the bankrupts their discharge; and it is so ordered.