73 Ind. 29 | Ind. | 1880
— In this case, Andrew L. Robinson, the plaintiff, complained of Converse Clement, the defendant,, and said that on the 24th day of December, 1874, be recovered a judgment, in the Vanderburgh Circuit Court, against the defendant for three thousand and five hundred dollars, with costs of suit; that afterward, on the 2(>th day of the same month, the defendant began certain proceedings in bankruptcy in the District Court of the United States for the District of Indiana, at Evansville, by means whereof he was, on the same day, adjudged to be a bankrupt; that on the 4th day of February, 1875, the-claim of the plaintiff
The defendant demurred to the complaint, and his demurrer was sustained. The plaintiff refusing to plead, further, final judgment was rendered against him upon demurrer.
Only one question is therefore presented, and that is, did. the court err in sustaining a demurrer to the complaint?
The appellee urges two objections to the sufficiency of the-complaint:
First. That, if the appellant was entitled to an execution on his judgment, he could have procured the issuance of' such an execution by a proper application to the clerk, without the necessity of filing such a complaint, and that this, proceeding was both unnecessary and unauthorized.
Second. That the facts alleged showed the condition upon which the $85.64 was paid to the deputy clerk of the United States District Court to have been an utterly impracticable, and hence a void, condition, thereby rendering the-payment an absolute one, and conferring upon the appellant a right of action against the deputy clerk instead of the appellee.
In the first place, we think the facts averred in the com
As to the effect which results from the failure of a bankrupt debtor to pay the amount agreed to be paid on a compromise with his creditors, Blumenstiel on Bankruptcy, at page 451, sajes: “The creditor, in the event of non-pay-
ment of the composition according to its terms, is remitted to the rights which he possessed at the time the proceedings, were initiated, so that if he had taken legal steps for the recovery of his debt and the suit had been suspended by the' composition, he is to be placed in the same position as he occupied before the settlement was made, and can resume the proceedings, from the further prosecution of which he had been previously restrained.”
The rule thus stated by Blumenstiel is well supported by the Aveight of authority, and appears to us to be decisive of the ease in hearing in favor of the appellant. There are cases apparently conflicting Avith this rule, but, so far as our attention has been called to them, they are based upon a condition of facts different from those presented in this case.
Reason and justice concur in support of the doctrine, that a creditor ought not to be bound by an agreement of composition, Avhich the debtor has failed to perform on his part.
Upon the facts stated in the complaint, we think the appellant is entitled to execution on his judgment for the unsecured balance due upon it.
The judgment is reversed, with costs, and the cause remanded for further proceedings.