101 F. 807 | D. Kan. | 1900
This is a proceeding in involuntary bankruptcy, brought on January 9, 1900, by a number of mercantile firms
The bankrupt act provides that “any natural person except a wage earner or a person chiefly engaged in farming or the tillage of the soil * * * may he adjudged an involuntary bankrupt,” etc. Section 4b. The act is remedial in its nature and purposes, and is, therefore, not to receive a strict interpretation, but is rather to he construed reasonably, and with a view to effect its objects and to promote justice. The exemption from involuntary proceedings in favor of wage earners and persons engaged chiefly in farming or the tillage of the soil is not intended as a means of escape for insolvents whose property was acquired and whose debts were incurred in other occupations recently engaged in. If the right of the creditors to institute involuntary proceedings may be thus defeated by the debtors within the period, allowed for the commencement of such proceedings, it could be defeated by a change of occupation made coincidently with the commission of an act of bankruptcy, and an insolvent debtor would thus be permitted to dispose of his stock of merchandise or other property, distribute the proceeds thereof in such manner as pleased him, immediately become for the time being a tiller of the soil, or a wage earner “at a rate of compensation not exceeding $1,500 per year,” and so avoid the operation of the bankrupt act. Such a result is not in accord with the purpose nor within the spirit of the law. A petition in an involuntary proceeding must he filed within four months after the commission of the act of bankruptcy relied on, and if an insolvent, who is engaged in an occupation which is within the purview of the law, has committed an act rendering him amenable to its provisions, and desires within such period to adopt one of the callings favored by the law, and exempted from its operation in respect of involuntary proceedings, he should not be permitted to carry with him the properly previously accumulated, to the defrauding of pre-existing creditors. The excepted occupations are not designed as a refuge for insolvent debtors laden