199 F. 294 | E.D.N.C. | 1912
On the 1st day of December, 1911, Horace D. Springer was, upon his voluntary petition, duly adjudged a bankrupt by this court and filed schedules of his indebtedness and his property, as required by the act of Congress (Act July 1, 1898, c. 541, 30 Stat. 544 [LL S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 3418]) relating to bankruptcy. Having complied with the requirements of the act and the orders of the court in the premises, on the 2d of July, 1911, he Sled his petition for a discharge from all debts provable against his estate, except such as are exempt by .law from such discharge. Notice of said petition was duly given to creditors and, on the day fixed for the hearing, Powell & Campbell and Merritt, Elliott & Co. of New York, creditors, appeared and objected to the granting of said petition, filing specifications setting forth the grounds of such objection. The objection is based upon the following facts:
Prior to August, 1908, petitioner was engaged in the mercantile business in the city of Yonkers, N. Y., as copartner with one Thos. J. Mulligan, and on the 2d of September, 1908, the said Springer and Mulligan, as copartners, and individually, were, upon the petition of creditors, in involuntary proceedings, adjudged bankrupts by the District Court of the United States for the" Southern District of New York. They filed schedules of their indebtedness and property as partners, and proceedings were had in said cause in accordance with the provisions of the bankruptcy act.
Mulligan was, upon his petition filed in said proceedings, granted a discharge, both as copartner and individually.
“Tire failure to apply for a discharge within the time limited has the same effect as a denial of a discharge from the debts in the former proceeding, and the bankrupt may not thereafter institute voluntary proceedings for the purpose of securing a discharge from debts scheduled in the former proceedings.” Collier on Bankruptcy (Sth Ed. 259) 9th Ed. 318.
In Kuntz v. Young, 131 Fed. 719, 65 C. C. A. 477 (8th Circuit) Sanborn, Judge, says:
“The failure of the bankrupt to apply for a discharge from his debts in the involuntary proceedings within 12 months after the adjudication foreclosed his right to such discharge. It is only within that time that he may, under the bankruptcy law, make a lawful application to be relieved from his debts. The record of his failure to make the application in that proceeding was, in effect, a judgment by default in favor of his creditors, to the effect that he was not .entitled to a discharge from their claims. * * * The denial of an application for a discharge from debts provable in proceedings under a petition in bankruptcy under the act of 1898 renders the issue of the right to a discharge from those debts in a proceeding in a- subsequent petition res judicata. A failure to apply for a discharge within 12 months after the adjudication in the earlier proceeding has the same effect.”
The exact question presented here, unless differentiated by matters referred to later, is presented and discussed in a well-considered
“The argument is made with force, as this bankrupt is not shown to have been guilty of any offense depriving him of the right io a discharge, and as the excepted debts were provable in bankruptcy, and not comprised in any of the excluded classes, .their exclusion, in effect, ingrafts on the bankruptcy act an additional ground for denying a discharge, by implication, when the act expresses the ground for denying the bankrupt his discharge and the classes of debts excluded from its operation when granted.”
After pointing out the effect of permitting a bankrupt who has failed to apply for a discharge in one proceeding, to do so in a second proceeding, he says:
“Such a situation would make the bankruptcy law, in its practical administration, oppressive and intolerable, and has led the courts to read into the law, by implication, the common-law principle of res judicata, as a defense to an application for a discharge by a bankrupt who has already applied for a discharge from the same debt under a former petition, and been denied it, or who, having filed a former petition, has failed to apply for his discharge thereunder, until after the expiration of the time fixed by law therefor.”
He cites and quotes the language of the court in Kuntz v. looting, supra, saying:
“This case has been followed by the Circuit Court of Appeals for the First and Second circuits, as well as by numerous District Courts, and to secure uniformity of decision in the different circuits, if for no other reason, we incline to this view” — citing a long line of decided cases.
Judge Shelby writes a concurring, and Judge Pardee, a dissenting, opinion. In that case a discharge was granted, excepting from its operation such debts as were provable under the former proceeding.
In Re Silverman, 157 Fed. 675, 85 C. C. A. 224 (C. C. A. 2d Circuit), the question is treated as settled against the right of the bankrupt who has failed to apply for a discharge in the first proceeding. We may treat the law as settled by the Supreme Court in Blumenthal v. Jones, supra, that, when a discharge in one proceeding has been denied, a discharge will not be granted quoad debts then existing in another proceeding, if the fact is properly brought to the attention of the court. This decision is, of course, based upon the doctrine of res judicata, because no such provision is to be found in the statute. The act is mandatory that, unless the causes set forth are found to exist, the bankrupt shall be granted his discharge, if he file his petition therefor, within the time fixed.
I concur with counsel for petitioner that the question presented here is not presented in Blumenthal’s Case. That case is not an authority for refusing the discharge here, except in so far as it recognizes the doctrine of res judicata as applicable to a case in bankruptcy, in which the discharge has been denied in a former proceeding. To that extent it is a binding authority and concludes the contention that, unless one of the statutory reasons is shown to exist, the bankrupt is entitled to his discharge in the second proceeding. The ‘Circuit Courts of Appeal and the District Courts have uniformly held that the principle applies when the bankrupt fails to apply for
The question has not been presented in this, the Fourth, circuit. In view of the decisions of the courts of other circuits, and “to secure uniformity of decision,” I feel constrained to follow them. It appearing that no other debts than those existing at the date of adjudication, in the first proceeding, are scheduled in the present proceeding, a discharge excepting such debts would be of no value to petitioner. It is strongly insisted by counsel for petitioner that in none- of the cases cited was a bankrupt a member of a copartnership, which had been adjudged bankrupt. He insists that the bankrupt act,- and numerous decisions cited, recognize the fact that a partnership is a distinct legal entity for the purpose of proceeding in bankruptcy. This is undoubtedly true.
It is so ordered.