102 F. 116 | S.D. Iowa | 1900
From the record in this case it appears that on the 5th day of January, 1900, Frank Sloan was duly adjudged a bankrupt upon his own petition, and George Earheart was appointed trustee- for his estate. On the 26th of March, 1900, the bankrupt and the trustee united in a petition .filed before the referee asking that the allowance of certain claims be expunged and set aside, and that certain other claims pending for allowance be disallowed, for the reason that within four months next preceding the adjudication in bankruptcy the claimants had received payments from the bankrupt, and had not repaid the amounts to the trustee. In this petition it is averred that for a long time prior to the filing of the petition in bankruptcy the bankrupt was largely indebted to many persons; that when making the payments in question he .supposed he was in fact solvent, and so believed up to about the time when he filed his petition in bankruptcy, but it now appears that in fact he was insolvent during the period of four months next preceding the commencement of the bankruptcy proceedings, and that his estate will not pay his debts in full; and therefore it is asked that the creditors to whom these payments were made shall not be allowed to prove up. their claims or participate in the dividend to be paid, unless they shall first repay to the trustee the amounts paid them within the period of four months next preceding the filing of th!e petition in bankruptcy. According to the aver-ments of the petition, the payments to the creditors were made in cash upon account, and it is not charged that when these payments were received the creditors knew of thé actual insolvency of the debtor, or had reason to believe that thereby they were in fac⅛ being preferred over the other creditors of the bankrupt. To this petition a demurrer was interposed on behalf of the creditors named in the petition, and
In the case of In re Ft. Wayne Electric Corp., 39 C. C. A. 582, 99 Fed. 400, the circuit court of appeals for the Seventh circuit considered all the questions involved in the present case, and reached the conclusion that a payment of money is a transfer of property, within the meaning of section 60 of the bankrupt act, and that a creditor to whom a payment in money has been made by an insolvent debtor cannot prove liis claim until he has paid back the sum received, even though when he received it he did not know, or have cause to believe, that the debtor was insolvent or intended to prefer him over his other creditors. The same conclusion was reached by Judge Hanford in the case of In re Conhaim (D. C.) 97 Fed. 923. The grounds upon which these decisions are based seem well taken, and are decisive of this case. The ruling of the referee upon the demurrer is therefore set aside, and the record is returned to the referee for further proceedings.