Noyes v. Dobson
Noyes v. Dobson
Opinion of the Court
Defendants in error, plaintiffs below, commenced an action in the district court of Atchison county on an account for goods and merchandise sold and delivered to defendant. To this petition defendant answered, setting up certain proceedings in bankruptcy. To this defense a demurrer was interposed by plaintiffs and sustained by the court, and defendant alleges error. The only question therefore presented for our consideration, is the scope and effect of these bankruptcy proceedings. The jurisdiction of the bankrupt court over the bankrupt and his estate is unquestioned, • and the proceedings had in such court resulted in an approval and confirmation of a composition. The terms of this composition were to the effect that the bankrupt was to pay twenty-five cents on the dollar, in three and six months, and to give his promissory notes, without security, for such amounts. The answer, after alleging the approval and confirmation of this composition agreement, alleges that the notes were duly tendered to the plaintiffs and by them refused. It further alleges that at the times said notes would have matured, the amounts thereof were deposited in the First National bank, at Williamsport, Pennsylvania — Williamsport being the city in which the defendant had previously resided and carried on business; that the plaintiffs were notified that the money was so deposited, and that the amount thereof would be paid to them at such time and place; and that in response to such notice plaintiffs informed defendant that they would not re- ° ceive the amount, nor at any time a less amount than fifty per cent, of their claim. Now the contention of plaintiffs is that the bankrupt act declares that “every such composition shall provide for the pro rata payment or satisfaction in money to the creditors of such debtor;” that the limit of the authority of the bankrupt court is an order for composition by payment in money; that the notes of the bankrupt are not equivalent to money; and that when it attempts to approve a composition upon the giving of notes of the bankrupt, it ex
We do not agree with counsel for the defendants in error fully in his construction of the composition order, and we think that under the facts as alleged the ruling of the district court cannot be sustained. The proposition of the bankrupt, which was approved by the bankrupt court, was as follows: “ The defendant proposed to them to pay twenty-five cents on the dollar of his indebtedness, in three and six months, and to give his promissory notes without security for the said amount, and in payment of the same; the said amount to be paid in money and to be evidenced by notes dated June 15, 1877, signed by the defendant, who was trading and who was proceeded against as A. B. Noyes & Co.”
Now we understand this to mean a proposition to pay in money in three and six months; that the notes were merely to be evidences of the amounts to be paid, and not to be of themselves payment and the creditors left to a subsequent action on the notes. In the case of Smith v. Engle, 44 Iowa, 265, where the composition approved was a payment of fifteen cents on the dollar in cash, fifteen cents in notes due in five months, and fifteen cents in notes due in ten months, and where a like objection to that we are now considering was presented to the validity of such composition, the supreme court of Iowa held that if the bankrupt court erred in its ruling as to the manner of payment, the proper remedy was to have thq ruling reversed by the circuit court, and that its determination could not be questioned in a collateral proceeding. See also as to the jurisdiction of the bankrupt court, the case of Deford v. Hewlett, 49 Md. 51.
• It is unnecessary in the case at bar to go to the extent of
We think the district court erred; that its judgment must «be reversed, and the case remanded with instructions to overrule the demurrer.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- A. B. Noyes v. John Dobson
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