15 Blatchf. 467 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern New York | 1879
The application made to the district court and denied by the order of July 30th, 1878, was an application to dismiss the original petition and the amended petition, for the reasons set forth in the notice given of such application. The original creditor’s petition was filed March 29th, 1878. On the return of the order to show cause, which was issued on such petition, Rebmeister filed a preliminary answer to it, denying that sufficient creditors in number and amount had joined in it, and he also filed a verified list of his creditors, with their residences and the amount owing to each. This proceeding was taken under the provisions of section 12 of the act of June 22, 1874 (18 Stat. 180), requiring an involuntary petition to be brought by creditors constituting one-fourth, at least, in number, of the creditors of the debtor, and the aggregate of whose provable debts amounts to at least one-third of the provable debts. The statute enacts, that the court shall, if the “allegation as to the number or amount of petitioning creditors be denied by the debtor, by a statement in writing to that effect, require him to file in court forthwith a full list of his creditors, with their places of residence and the sums due them respectively, and shall ascertain, upon reasonable notice to the creditors, whether one-fourth in number and one-third in amount thereof, as aforesaid, have petitioned that the debtor be adjudged a bankrupt. * * * And if it shall appear that such number and amount have not so petitioned, the court shall grant reasonable time, not exceeding * * * ten days, within which other creditors may join in such petition. And if, at the expiration of such time so limited, the number and amount shall comply with the requirements of this section, the matter of bankruptcy may proceed; but if, at the expiration of such limited time, such number and amount shall not answer the requirements of this section, the proceedings shall be dismissed, * * * with costs.” On the 16th of April, 1878, the district court made a reference to a register, by order, “to take the testimony under the petition and preliminary answer, and report to this court whether sufficient creditors in number and amount have joined in the petition in this matter.” The court did not direct the ascertainment to be made, as the statute requires, “upon reasonable notice to the creditors.” The report of the register, made June 10th, 1878, does not set forth that any such notice
It is contended, that the statute is imperative, in directing that the proceedings shall be dismissed if the proper number and amount of creditors do not join in the petition within ten days after the court has adjudged that the requisite number and amount have not petitioned. The general power of allowing the petition to be amended or supplemented by the joining in it of further or additional creditors, is inherent in the district court, to be exercised with proper legal discretion. The statute abridges this power only under the circumstances specified in it. The whole body of the creditors of a debtor are interested in the question as to whether he is to be adjudicated an involuntary bankrupt, on a given act of bankruptcy. He must be brought in, if at all, on a petition filed within six months after the act of bankruptcy is committed. The theory of the statute is, therefore, that all the creditors shall be notified, if it is alleged by the debtor that a sufficient number and amount have not brought the petition. Hence, if the debtor makes that allegation, he is to be required to file, forthwith, a full list of his creditors, with their places of residence and the sums due them respectively, so that the court may have the means of notifying such creditors, and then the court is required to notify them of the pendency of the petition, and of the investigation that is proceeding. The object is, that they may attend on the investigation, to ascertain whether the proper number and amount of creditors have petitioned, and, perhaps, show the incorrectness of the list of creditors furnished by the debtor, either as to names or amounts. It is only when the court has made the required ascertainment, on the required notice to creditors, that its power to grant time for other creditors to join is limited by the statute. This was the view taken in Re Prisbee [Case No. 5,129], and it is the law of this circuit. In the present case, it is shown that the ascertainment by the register and the court was not made on any notice to the creditors set forth in the debt- or’s list, and that the statute was not pursued. Therefore, the discretion of the court to allow time for other creditors to join was not restrained by any thing in the statute, and there is nothing to show that such discretion was not properly exercised in this case, or that the proceedings should have been dismissed because the amended petition was not sooner filed.
Under the circumstances, the court had power, and it was a proper exercise of discretion. to extend the time for the payment of the $29 41.
The only other point made, in argument, on this review, as a ground for reversing the order complained of, and dismissing the proceedings, is, that the papers show that the claim of each one of four of the added creditors was less than $250 when the original ■petition was filed, but that each one of such