231 F. 87 | 9th Cir. | 1916
John H. Martin, as trustee in bankruptcy of the Imperial Copper Company, a corporation, bankrupt, asks review of an order of the District Court for the District of Arizona made in the matter of the Southern Arizona Smelting Company, a corporation, bankrupt.
The Imperial Copper Company was adjudged a bankrupt upon an involuntary petition on July 25, 1911. Upon August 21, 1911, M. P. Freeman was elected trjistee in bankruptcy of the Imperial Copper Company; but about July 2, 1914, he resigned, and Martin, the petitioner herein, was elected to succeed him. When the Imperial Copper Company was adjudged a bankrupt, it was a creditor of the Southern Arizona Smelting Company in the sum of $28,887.71. On January 23,1912, Freeman, as trustee of the copper company, brought action in the territorial court in Arizona against the Southern Arizona Smelting Company to recover upon this debt. About June 17, 1914, upon application of certain creditors of the copper company, the District Court directed that the trustee should cause an attachment to-issue in the action then pending before it, and that a levy should be made upon the property of the smelting company. Thereafter, on-September 29, 1914, and within four months of the date of the levy of the attachment referred to, the Southern Arizona Smelting Company filed its voluntary petition in bankruptcy in the United States-District Court for the District of Arizona, and upon the same day was adjudicated a bankrupt; and on October 31, 1914, M. P. Free
Petitioner, through his counsel, concedes that if an involuntary petition in bankruptcy had been filed against tlie Arizona Smelting Company within four months from the time of the levy of the writ of attachment, and that if the attaching creditor, the trustee of the Imperial Copper Company, had not appeared in the bankruptcy proceedings and resisted the adjudication, such adjudication would have been res adjudicata against petitioner as to the insolvency of the smelting company. But he asks the court to distinguish between the consequences of such a concession and those to follow in this case, because, here, the bankruptcy adjudication was had upon a voluntary petition, without notice to petitioner or other creditors.
Section 1-of the Bankruptcy Act of 1898 explicitly gives us the definitions of words and phrases used in the act which control. Among them are these:
“(1) ‘A person against whom a petition has been filed’ shall include a person who has filed a voluntary petition; * * * (4) ‘bankrupt’ shall Include*90 a person against whom an involuntary petition * * * has been filed, or who has filed a voluntary petition, or who has been adjudged a bankrupt; (19; ‘persons’ shall include corporations, except where otherwise specified.”
Section 3, providing what shall constitute acts of bankruptcy, includes as an act having:
“(5) Admitted in writing his inability to pay his debts and his willingness to be adjudged a bankrupt on that ground.”
The act of bankruptcy upon which voluntary bankruptcy is based is the written admission contained in the petition itself that the petitioner is unable to pay its debts and is willing to be adjudged a bankrupt on that ground.
The averments of the petition establish those facts so far as a decree of bankruptcy is concerned, and the corporation has committed an act of bankruptcy in filing the petition. These facts are not issuable, nor is notice necessary unless dismissal is sought. Hanover National Bank v. Moyses, 186 U. S. 181, 22 Sup. Ct. 857, 46 L. Ed. 1113. In that case Chief Justice Fuller quoted Judge Lowell, in Re Fowler, 1 Low. 161, Fed. Cas. No. 4,998, holding that the voluntary petitioner might be in fact fraudulent and able and unwilling to pay his debts, but that the law “takes him at his word and makes effectual provision, nQt only by civil but even by criminal process to effectuate his alleged intent of giving up all his property.” Jurisdiction may always be inquired into, but adjudication usually follows as matter of course and brings the bankrupt’s property into the custody of the court; it is only after adjudication that the law requires that notice be given by publication and by mail of the first meeting of creditors and of each of the various áubsequent steps in administration.
The petition of the Arizona Smelting Company to be adjudged a bankrupt, upon which adjudication was had, sets forth in full the resolution of fhe board of directors reciting that their company was then largely indebted and wholly unable to pay any of its indebtedness, all of which was long overdue, that it was involved in litigation and without funds with which to pay the necessary expense thereof, that it had “exhausted its ability to borrow money to procure funds for the care and preservation of its property,” and declared that it was willing to be adjudged a bankrupt under the laws of the United States, and to surrender all of its property for the benefit of its creditors.
The Supreme Court, in First Nat. Bank v. Staake, 202 U. S. 141, 26 Sup. Ct. 580, 50 L. Ed. 967, holding that attachments were annulled by the filing of a petition in bankruptcy within four months after the attachments were levied, said that to what extent liens obtained by prior judicial proceedings should be recognized was a matter wholly within the discretion of Congress. That was not a voluntary bankruptcy, but in giving the meaning of section 67 of the act no distinctions were made between the attitude of one adjudged a bankrupt in involuntary proceedings and one who voluntarily seeks adjudication. We think there should be none when it is kept in mind that it was the intention of Congress to prevent creditors of a bankrupt from gaining .preferences over other creditors through legal proceedings had within four months prior to the filing of the petition. As held by the court in Re Kenney, 105 Fed. 897, 45 C. C. A. 113, the property of the bankrupt is “safeguarded” against all such proceedings. Metcalf v. Barker, 187 U. S. 165, 23 Sup. Ct. 67, 47 L. Ed. 122. This purpose might often not be carried out if the debtor could by voluntary proceedings legalize transactions which would be nullified upon involuntary proceedings. Strong confirmation of the view that one who has filed a voluntary petition is in no better position than one who is declared a bankrupt involuntarily is found in the provisions of the first section of the act, heretofore quoted, that “ ‘a person against whom a petition has been filed’ shall include a person who has filed a voluntary petition.” The Court of Appeals of the Seventh Circuit, in Richard’s Case, 96 Fed. 935, 37 C. C. A. 634, had the question here involved under examination and construed section 67f as applicable to all cases where a voluntary petition is filed where such provisions are pertinent. Judge Brown, in Re Vaughan (D. C.) 97 Fed. 560, also ruled to like effect, and well reasoned that the relation of the execution creditor to other creditors, to the bankrupt, and to his estate, is the same where levy is made in voluntary as in involuntary proceedings, and that the preference obtained by the creditor if the levy is not annulled operates to the harm of other creditors and so violates the policy of the act just as much in the one instance as in the other.
The order of the District Court is affirmed.