12 Blatchf. 322 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Connecticut | 1874
On the 7th of June, 1873, George King, a creditor of the copartnership firm of Lacey. Downs & Co., filed against them, in the district court, his petition, alleging certain acts of bankruptcy, and praying that the said firm, and the co-partners therein, be adjudged bankrupt. Upon filing the said petition the usual order was made by the court, requiring the alleged bankrupts to show cause why such adjudication should not be made, which order was returnable on the lGth of the- said month of June; and. at the same time, a warrant was issued to the marshal, directing him to take possession of their property, in virtue of which the marshal did fake such possession. Upon the lGth of June, the return day of the order to show cause, the parties, the said King (the petitioner), and the alleged bank-rapts. appeared, and the latter denied the acts of bankruptcy alleged, and demanded a Irinl by jury, whereupon the court ordered that such trial by jury be had at the then next term of the district court, to be held on the 4th Tuesday of August following. At the said August term, neither of the parties, petitioner nor respondents, appeared for trial, but the cause was duly entered on the dobkef of the said court, and the parties respectively duly entered their appearance thereon. The said cause was thereupon formally continued to the next term of the said court, to be holden on tlie 4th Tuesday of November, 1S73. In this stage of the proceedings in bankruptcy, and after the lapse of four months from the levy of the attachment to be presently mentioned, the National Pahquio-que Bank purchased from the petitioning creditor, King, all his claims against the alleged bankrupts, including the debt mentioned in his petition, amounting to upwards of $2.300, and it was agreed between the said bank and King that his said petition and proceedings in bankruptcy should be withdrawn and discontinued. The motive to this purchase and agreement appears in the fact, that the Pahquioque Bank were creditors of Lacey, Downs & Co., to an amount of about twenty-five thousand dollars, and, to secure the collection thereof, they had. on the 2d day of June — five days before the petition in bankruptcy was filed — caused all, or nearly all, of the property of the debtors, a mounting in value to about $30,000, to be seized on a writ of attachment, which attachment would, by virtue of the fourteenth section of the bankrupt law, as was believed, be dissolved by the proceedings in bankruptcy, and any preference secured thereby be defeated, should Lacey, Downs & Co. be adjudged bankrupt, and an assignee be appointed, ufider proceedings so begun in the bankruptcy court by the said King, whereas, on the other hand, such attachment was deemed valid and effectual, as a security to the said bank, as against any proceedings in bankruptcy begun after the lapse of four months from the levy of such attachment. The debts owing by Lacey, Downs & Co. were about $70,000, and the question whether the bank should hold their said attachment in full force, and collect thereby their full claim of about $25.000, or should lose the benefit of their attachment, and come in with the other creditors, and receive, probably little, if anything, over 40 per cent, of such claim, was of much interest, and made the motive to their purchase of the claim of the petitioning creditor quite obvious. If. at that time, the proceedings instituted by King could be effectually- terminated and disposed of, no creditor could file a new and original petition within four months after the levy of their attachment, as that period had already elapsed. The bank, therefore, with the said King, and with the assent and consent of the alleged bankrupts, without waiting until the November term of the court, to which the proceedings had been formally continued for trial, as above stated, made application to the judge in vacation, and, on the 20th day of October, 1S73, obtained an order that the petition of the said George King “be withdrawn by the said petitioner, and dismissed,
The right of a creditor other than the petitioning creditor to intervene and ask an adjudication upon the original petition, is claimed under the 42d section of the bankrupt law, which — after the direction in the previous sections, that, on filing the petition for an adjudication, the court shall direct the entry of an order on the alleged bankrupt to show cause, on a day named, why he should not be so adjudicated — provides, that, “if the petitioning creditor shall not appear and proceed on the return day, or adjourned day, the court may, upon the petition of any other creditor, to the required amount, proceed to adjudicate on such petition, without requiring a new service or publication of notice to the debtor.” But, in behalf of the alleged bankrupts, and of the original petitioner, and especially on behalf of the Pahqui-oque Bank, it is insisted, that, at any time prior to an actual adjudication that the debtors are bankrupt, and before any other creditor does in fact intervene, the proceedings are strictly inter partes, and completely subject to withdrawal and discontinuance by the petitioning creditor, with the consent of the debtor; also, that such withdrawal and discontinuance are matter of right, which the court cannot refuse or make conditional upon the payment of clerk’s or marshal’s fees; also, that the order made in this case was not, so far as discontinuance or withdrawal, made conditional, but only that the discharge of the provisional warrant was conditioned on the payment of such fees, and that, therefore, however ttue it be that the appellants could not claim the restoration of the property by the marshal until such fees were paid, the proceedings for an adjudication of bankruptcy were legally terminated by the order of the 20th of October; and, finally, that, before the intervention of such other creditor, (Crofut,) the condition of the order was complied with and satisfied by the appellants, by authorizing the clerk to take his fees from the money actually- in his hands, and by readiness to pay, and offering to pay, to the marshal, his bill for fees, charges and disbursements, so soon as the amount could be ascertained and determined, and that the delay therein was not through any fault or remissness on their part; that, upon these grounds, the proceedings were, in law, terminated and discontinued before any other creditor inter
To this it is answered, in behalf of such other creditor, (the respondent,) that his right to intervene at the November term, to which the proceedings had been formally, adjourned or continued, was absolute, if the original petitioning creditor declined to appear and prosecute; that no order of discontinuance could legally be made by the court in the interval, which should cut off that right, and the order of the 20th of October was, therefore, properly revoked and vacated, as improvidently made; and further, it is answered, that the court, if it had power to allow a discontinuance before the November term, was not bound to do so, and did not, in fact, make such order of discontinuance absolute and unconditional; that the court had power to protect its officers by refusing a discontinuance which would defeat their right to hold the property seized, and to make such discontinuance conditional upon the payment of such fees; and that, whatever were the rights of the appellants, tbe case was, in law and in fact, still in court, by the terms of the only order which is claimed to operate as a discontinuance, and that the reasons why the conditions of the order were not complied with, though they import no fault in the appellants, cannot alter the fact that the case was still pending, and within the control and jurisdiction of the court.
I am inclined strongly to the opinion, that the order of the 20th of October, if it be conceded that the court had power, or that the judge of the court, in vacation, had the power, to make it, was not a final discontinuance of the cause; and that, as a strict legal question, the proceedings were actually pending until the conditions of the order were complied with, whatever hindrances arose to delay such compliance. If such hindrances were without the fault of the appellants, a further application to the court might produce a modification of the conditions, or an entire release therefrom, but, so long as the order stood, it had effect only according to its conditions, and the case was. therefore, still in court, when the other creditor (the respondent) intervened. I should incline to the same opinion even if the right to a better order was conceded, (which I do not, however, at all concede.) A right to have a cause discontinued does not, per se, operate as a discontinuance or divest the court of jurisdiction. Such jurisdiction continues until there is an actual discontinuance. Even if a court refusing a discontinuance commits an error in such refusal, that does not operate as a discontinuance. The order actually made can, therefore, at most, only operate according to its terms. It is not claimed that the Connecticut statute authorizing plaintiffs in civil actions to withdraw their suits without any order of the court and in vacation, has any application to proceedings in bankruptcy in the United States courts; nor could such a claim be successfully maintained.
Without placing my conclusion upon the grounds above intimated, I prefer to rest upon the proper construction of the provision in section 42 of the bankrupt law (14 Stat. 537). That section plainly, I think, contemplates the possibility that parties holding liens or titles acquired within four months next before the filing of a petition in bankruptcy against their debtor will be under a temptation to defeat proceedings thereupon, in order to save the preference they have acquired. In cases like the present, where an attachment on mesne process sweeps almost, and, perhaps, quite, the entire estate into the hands of the attaching creditor, to the exclusion of other creditors, the temptation is very strong; and it was to be expected, that, in such cases, negotiation with the petitioning creditor would often result in his abandonment of the proceeding, when thereby such lien would be preserved. The four months’ limitation would expire, and no petition subsequently filed by another creditor, or an adjudication thereon, would operate to prevent the whole estate from being taken by the creditor who had obtained an advantage by such attachment, or other lien or preference. There is, therefore, a great advantage to creditors at large, in pursuing proceedings had upon the first petition which shall be filed against a debtor. If he has, in fact, committed acts of bankruptcy, it is the policy and purpose of the bankrupt act to give the right of equal distribution among the creditors, in spite of preferences and attachment liens acquired within four months before petition filed. It is not contemplated that every creditor will file a petition. If, perchance, more than one be filed, the proceedings to adjudication are to be had. in general, upon the one first filed; and this is manifestly because that most nearly secures to all creditors the equal distribution contemplated. Such considerations prompted the provisions of the 42d section, and may properly assist in its interpretation; and that interpretation will be further assisted, by bearing in mind, that, after an actual adjudication, there is no need of special authority to another creditor or other creditors to appear and prosecute. Upon the adjudication, the rights of all creditors having debts provable against the estate become fixed and certain. The petitioning creditor cannot, after that, withdraw the proceeding,
What, then, does the act provide, and how is it to be construed? By section 40, on the filing of a petition by a creditor, the court must direct the entry of an order on the debtor, to show cause why the prayer of the petition should not be granted. Such order is made returnable on a day named. Such order must be served. If not served five days before the return day, the court must adjourn the proceedings and direct service forthwith. If the debtor appears on the said return day, or on the day to which, forthe purpose of such service, the matter was adjourned, he may deny the acts of bankruptcy charged, and the •court is required to proceed summarily to hear the allegations, and may adjourn the proceedings from time to time, on good cause shown; and, if the debtor demands a trial by jury, the court shall order a trial by jury at the next term of the court. After these and other detailed regulations, the 42d section provides, that, “if the petitioning creditor shall not appear and proceed on the return day, or adjourned day. the court may, upon the petition of any other creditor, to the required amount, proceed to adjudicate on such petition, without requiring a new service or publication of notice to the debtor." This last-named clause of the statute contemplates two possible exigencies — one. that the petitioning creditor, abandoning the proceedings, may not appear; the other, that the petitioning creditor may not proceed with the prosecution. In either event, any other creditor may intervene, and, on his application, the court may proceed to an adjudication. This right of intervention it is not in the power of the petitioning creditor or of the bankrupt to cut oil or defeat by any arrangement between themselves; and any action of the court which prevented or defeated such right of intervention, is erroneous and in violation of the statute. The vital inquiry is, therefore — at what precise stage in the proceeding does the right of intervention exist? and this is another form of enquiring, — what is meant, in the statute, by “on the return day or adjourned day,” when the original petitioning creditor does not appear and proceed? Does it mean, that, if the petitioning creditor appears on the return day, and so far proceeds in the matter that an adjournment or continuance of the proceeding to a future time is had, the right of other creditors to intervene is lost or defeated, and that the petitioning creditor may then abandon or discontinue the proceedings? Does the expression “on the return day or adjourned day” mean, only, on the return day or on the day to which, for the purpose of service on the debtor, the proceedings may be adjourned; or does it mean, on the return day, or on any day thereafter to which the proceedings may, for any cause, be adjourned, down to the time of adjudication? If the right of intervention was limited to the return day, or to the day to which, for the purpose of service on the debtor, the cause was adjourned, the right of intervention given to other creditors would be of little practical value. It could be defeated at the will of the petitioning creditor, by his appearance and taking any step in the proceeding, and, on procuring a further adjournment, he could, by then abandoning the proceedings, deprive all other creditors of the opportunity to come in and prosecute the original petition. By this means, a scheme devised in collusion with attaching or preferred creditors would be completely successful.
In my opinion, the adjourned day. on which, if the petitioning creditor does not appear and proceed to an adjudication, another creditor may appear and prosecute, is any day to which the proceeding on the order to show cause may be adjourned for the purpose of inquiring into the allegation of the acts of bankruptcy. Where the order to show cause has been duly served, and, as in the present case, both the petitioning creditor and the debtors do appear on the return day, the act contemplates probable summary enquiry into the matters alleged; and if, in the taking of proofs, or for the trial by a jury, or for the requisite consideration of the court, postponement becomes necessary, the proceeding is, nevertheless, a proceeding as of the return day of the order to show cause, and, for all
It is insisted, on behalf of the appellants, that, if the right of intervention existed notwithstanding the order of the 20th . of October. the order under review was, nevertheless. erroneous, in this, that, according to the terms of the 42d section, the court are to proceed to adjudicate not upon the petition originally filed by King, but upon the new petition of the intervening creditor; that the only purpose of the clause cited from the 42d section was to treat the alleged bankrupts as in court, by virtue of the former order to show cause and sendee thereof, and to dispense with any further service of notice, but in court only to submit to a proceeding on the new petition: and that it was. therefore. erroneous for the court to permit the intervening creditor “to prosecute the original petition of King in the same way and manner and to the like effect as the said King might or could do” if the previous order for discontinuance had not been made. It is obvious, that this suggestion refuses any recognition of the reasons above assumed to have induced the provision under consideration, and denies that congress had any such object or purpose of benefit or advantage to creditors as in the discussion thus far we have stated. Iso such object or purpose, or benefit to other creditors, is promoted by the provision, if such be its true meaning. If so construed, it simply authorizes other creditors to present a new petition and treat the alleged bankrupt as in
The claim requires a recurrence to the precise language of the provision, viz., “if the petitioning creditor shall not appear and proceed on the return day, or adjourned day, the court may, upon the petition of any other creditor, to the required amount, proceed to adjudicate on such petition, without requiring a new service or publication of notice to the debtor.” The force of the argument is made to rest upon the words “on such petition.” On the ordinary rule, that “such” refers to the last antecedent, namely, the petition of another creditor, it is supposed that the court are to adjudicate upon the acts of bankruptcy charged in the new petition only, and with such effect as if no former petition had been filed, (new notice only being dispensed with,) the former petition, and all proceedings thus far had thereon, dropping out entirely, as if never made or taken. The rule of grammatical construction thus insisted upon is by no means conclusive. We know, by observation, that hardly any rule governing the use of language is more frequently violated. We must look at the context, consider the relation of the clause under construction to other parts of the section, and to other sections connected with the subject, and consider, also, if we can, the design and object of the clause, the conveniences or benefits it was intended to secure or confer, and the evils, if any, which it was intended to prevent, and if, upon a review of all the considerations thence arising, it appears that “such petition” was the petition which was the subject of the prior part of the section, and of the two preceding sections, viz., the petition of the original petitioning creditor, we should so hold, notwithstanding another petition is named in immediate prior connection with those' terms, and should thereupon read the clause, “the court may, upon the application of any other creditor, to the required amount, proceed to adjudicate on such petition.” This is, I think, the true meaning. The subject of the preceding sections, and of the prior portion of the 42d section, is, solely, the petition of a creditor alleging acts of bankruptcy, the preliminary proceedings to give an opportunity to the debtor to appear and submit to an adjudication, or to deny the acts of bankruptcy and make up an issue to be tried either summarily or by a jury, upon the allegations of the parties respectively, and a direction to the court to adjudicate the question whether the debtor is or is not bankrupt, according to the proofs and finding thereon whether the allegations of the petition are or are not proved. Provision is made for an adjudication if the debtor does not appear, provision is made for a dismissal of the proceeding if the proof fails to establish the allegations in the petition, and then provision is made that, if the petitioning creditor does not appear, the court may, upon the petition of any other creditor to the required amount, proceed to adjudicate on such petition. I cannot resist the conclusion, that this means that the court may proceed to adjudicate upon the allegations upon which the order to show cause was granted, and which the petitioning creditor neglects to pursue, the allegations which have been put in issue, (as the case may be,) the allegations which the court is then sitting to try and determine. Intervention by another creditor in a pending proceeding, and not institution of a new proceeding, was the intent and meaning, as, in the English statute, substitution of the intervening creditor for the petitioning creditor is provided for. The words “on the petition of another creditor” do not naturally import a new petition, charging acts of bankruptcy, to be themselves the subject of denial and trial thereupon, but a petition asking the court to proceed to an adjudication. The court is to proceed to an adjudication not of its own motion, not without a prosecuting party, but at the instance of another creditor petitioning therefor. The fact that this privilege of-intervention was limited to a creditor to the required amount rather favors than prevents this interpretation. Other sections confine the right to file an original petition to creditors to whom at least ?250 is due, and, if a new petition, to be treated as an original and independent allegation of acts of bankruptcy, was here contemplated, it was unnecessary to renew the limitation. But, it
The construction we thus give to the 42d section of the bankrupt act conforms to the view's expressed in several of the district courts. See In re Camden Rolling Mill Co. [Case No. 2,338]; In re Olmsted [Id. 10,505]; In re Mendenhall [Id. 9,424].
These views necessarily lead to the conclusion, that the order of the 20th of October, permitting a discontinuance, was improvidently made, and was properly revoked or vacated. At the November term, to which the proceedings had been adjourned or continued, other creditors had an express statute right to apply, and the court had power to permit such applying creditors to appear and prosecute the original petition. Indeed, I think it w7as the duty of the court, on such application, to proceed to an adjudication. This conclusion renders it unnecessary to express any further opinion upon the other points w’hich were argued upon the hearing of this appeal or review. The order must be affirmed, with costs.