In re Kollmann
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In re Kollmann
Opinion of the Court
Section 2 of our insolvent law (Laws 1881, c. 148) enacts that “when any debtor, being insolvent, shall do any act * * * whereby any one of his creditors shall obtain a preference over any other of his creditors, * * * contrary to the intent of this act,” two of his creditors may make a petition to the district court, or a judge thereof, “setting forth therein such matters and facts as may be pertinent.” And if, upon a hearing, it shall appear to the court or judge “that the debtor is insolvent, or [and] has been giving, or is about to give, a preference to any of his creditors over others,” a receiver shall be appointed, etc.
In our opinion, the words “do any act * * * whereby any one of his creditors shall obtain a preference over any other,” include any act or action on the part or behalf of, or with the co-operation of the insolvent debtor, the purpose, natural tendency, and effect of which will be to give one of his creditors a preference over others. It is not necessary that the act or action should have gone so far as actually to give and consummate the preference. It is enough if such is its purpose and natural tendency, and will be its effect.
This construction is not at all forced in itself, and it is fortified by reference to the subsequent provision of the same section, viz., that if it shall appear to the court or judge, on the hearing upon the petition, that the debtor “has been giving, or is about to give, a preference to any of his creditors over others,” a receiver shall be appointed. Evidently this embraces preferences to be given, as well as those which have been given. And as it is to be presumed that the legislature intend the several provisions of a law to be consistent with each other, it is in this instance to be presumed (if, as we think, it reasonably may) that the required allegations of the petition, and the proofs required upon the hearing, cover the same ground. It would certainly be an anomaly in legal proceedings it'allegata and probata were not to correspond, and if it were allowable, in order to make out a
Tested by our construction of the law, we think the petition in this case sufficient. Among other things as to which no exception is taken here, it in effect alleges that, at the insolvent’s instigation, and as a part of a “programme and arrangement” devised by him, one Weichers has commenced two actions against him to recover an indebtedness of about $26,000, and that these actions have been brought to compel his other creditors to accept an unjust composition, and (in case of their refusal to accept the same) to prefer said Weichers to the extent of $26,000, by permitting said actions to pass into judgment, and execution to be issued and levied upon the insolvent’s property, without any provision being made for its distribution among his creditors without preference. No argument is required to show that the purpose, natural tendency, and effect of this conduct on the part of the insolvent will be to give Weichers a preference over the other creditors, like the plaintiffs, whose demands are not in judgment or in suit. This result is not altered or affected by the condition upon which the carrying out of the threatened preference is made to depend, viz., that the creditors refuse to accept an unjust or any composition, for this is a condition upon which the insolvent has no right to insist, and to which the creditors are under no obligation to submit.
It only remains to add that the petition is more than supported by the evidence, which fully justifies the order appointing a receiver.
Order affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- In the matter of J. W. Kollmann, an Insolvent Debtor
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