102 F. 687 | W.D. Ark. | 1900
This is a case of involuntary bankrupts. The petition is filed by a single creditor, II. L. Htroud, and ¡he Rogers Milling Company is a private corporation organized under die Jaws of the state of Arkansas. The undisputed evidence in tlie case shows that the Rogers Milling Company within lour months ' xi before the filing of the petition herein paid a note of $1,500 to the petitioning creditor. Nothing appears either in the petition or die answer of the payment of this note. It was developed by the proof, however, and the fact of the payment is undisputed. The debt upon which the petition is based is a separate and distinct debt from the note which was paid, but they were both promissory notes, and both in existence at the time the payment of the $1,500 note
It would seem, therefore, that under the section of the bankrupt act of 1898, as quoted above, a petitioning creditor, having accepted an unlawful preference in respect of any claim which he may have held against the bankrupt’s estate, cannot maintain the petition so long as he does mot surrender such preference, — in other words, His claim must be a provable claim; for by section 59b of the bankrupt act of 1898 it is provided that:
“Three or more creditors who have provable claims against any persons which amount in the aggregate, in excess of the value of the securities held by them, if any, to five hundred dollars or over; or if all the creditors of such persons are less than 12 in number, then one of such creditors whose claims .equal such amount may file a petition to have him adjudged a bankrupt.” | ■ i
It is, therefore, only creditors who have “provable claims” who may file a petition to have one adjudged a bankrupt, and the claims