92 F. 510 | D. Mass. | 1899
This case raises several interesting questions concerning the right of certain alleged creditors of the respondents to file a petition in involuntary bankruptcy against them. The act of bankruptcy alleged is a general assignment made October 4, 1898. One or more of the petitioners assented to this assignment, and the respondents object that persons so assenting cannot be parties to the petition. The objection is valid. By accepting the assignment, the creditors released their claims against the respondents, and, in place ihereof, accepted claims under the assignment. Though the assignment is an act of bankruptcy, and is avoided by the adjudication, yet if is not a void instrument, but only a voidable one. Until the adjudication it is valid, and the assenting creditors are bound by iheir assent thereto. Hence it follows that, until adjudication, the persons who had assented to the assignment had ceased to be creditors of the respondents, if this argument be thought too technical, then it may be said that those who have become voluntary parties, to the assignment, and have thus agreed to a settlement of the respondents’ affairs thereunder, cannot equitably repudiate their agreement. This view was taken in the only ease bearing upon the subject which T have been able to And, — Perry v. Langley, 19 Fed. Cas. 282. 283 (No. 11,006):
“If the proof was that Perry had advised the malting of the assignment, or after its execution had expressly given his assent to it, as a creditor of Langley, he would have been precluded from insisting on it as an act of bankruptcy, and could not have maintained a standing in this court as a petitioning creditor.”
The petition was liled January 28, 1899. On February 14th, Breit-stein, a creditor of the respondents, appeared and sought to join in the petition. The resjmndents object that he cannot be counted in making up the necessary number of creditors required by section 59 of the bankrupt act. Paragraph f of that section reads as follows:
“Creditors other than original petitioners may, at any time, enter their appearance, and join in the petition, or flic an answer, and be heard in opposition to the prayer of the petitioners.”
Those who are permitted to “join in” a petition, by so doing commonly become parties to it; and the words “join in the petition,” as used in paragraph e and paragraph b of the same section, plainly carry that implication. It is urged by the respondents that, if this construction be given to paragraph f, an insufficient number of creditors, or creditors having an insnfiicient amount of claims, may file a petition against a debtor, and obtain an adjudication by subsequently procuring other creditors to join with them, such joindei* being possible at any time before the petition is dismissed. This practice, it is said, would permit a petition, at the time of its filing insufficient in substance as well as in form, to he made good by subsequent acts. It must be admitted that there is weight in this argument, but the language of the act is clear; and the inconvenience, if inconvenience there be, was not deemed by congress a controlling
The respondents further object that Breitstein’s appearance was entered more than four months after the act of bankruptcy complained of; but this seems immaterial. Section 8b provides that the petition may be filed within four months of the act of bankruptcy. The petition was filed on January 29th, and that remains the date of its filing, though some petitioners have joined in it subsequently thereto. For instance, the date of bankruptcy is defined by section 1, subd. 10, to be the date when the petition was filed. If an adjudication is made in this case, the date of bankruptcy will be January 29th, though the adjudication be made upon the petition of one or more creditors who joined therein in the month of February. Respondents adjudged bankrupt.