Stokes v. Hardy
Stokes v. Hardy
Opinion of the Court
The prosecutors, creditors of one Albert Hardy, attack the proceedings in insolvency, founded on the petition of the said Hardy.
The petition appears, from an endorsement upon it, to have been filed with the judge of the Middlesex Common Pleas on the 7th of April, 1903, and by subsequent endorsements thereon, signed by the judge, continued until September 14th, 1903, on which last-mentioned day the judge made an order, reciting the presentation of the petition and appointing December 7th, 1903, at the court house- in said county, as the time and place at which the court would attend and hear what could be alleged for or against the liberation of said Hardy. Notice of this order was published once a week successively, commencing November 5 th, 1903, the last publication being December 7th, 1903, the day fixed for the hearing, and served personally on the attorney for the prosecutors on November 7th, 1903. It appears, from the endorsement on the petition, that it, with the orders fixing the time, was filed with the clerk on the 30th day of November, 1903, seven days before the time fixed for the hearing. No entry of the order in the minutes is returned with the proceedings, so we conclude none was made. On December 7th, 1903, the day fixed for the hearing, the minutes of the court show that the said Hardy was “discharged as an insolvent debtorthe minute, showing the discharge, also states that counsel appeared and objected to the discharge, on the ground that the papers had not been filed, and moved to dismiss the proceedings. This motion was denied and that the appearance was only for the purpose of objecting as aforesaid; there also appears, returned with the writ, an order, without date, reciting that the debtor was in actual confinement in the common jail upon an execution issued out of the Middlesex county Circuit Court at the suit of Thomas Stokes & Sons against said Albert Hardy, and he having made application to the court for the benefit of the insolvent laws of this state, and the court having appointed the time and place to
There is a preliminary motion to suppress certain depositions taken because of want of proper notice. A notice bf the taking of testimony January 25th, 1904, was mailed January 20th, 1904, by depositing it in the postoffice. It ■was directed to the attornejr of the debtor, who- had appeared for him in the Common Pleas. He acknowledged he had received it. Such depositions must he taken on four days’ notice, and notice may be given by mail, but proof of placing it in the postoffice in due season — the legal period prior to the day of taking the depositions — must be made in the presence of the attorney of the other party, and not repelled, in order to raise a presumption and stand for proof of the service. McCourry v. Doremus, 5 Halst. 245.
Such was not done in this case and the depositions will be suppressed.
The judge was not authorized by law to continue the hearing of the petition. The law directs that the court, to
While it is held, in State v. Stiles, 7 Halst. 296, that the assignment need not be- filed in the clerk’s office before the order of discharge is made, yet the assignment cannot be dispensed with.
The petition Avas a list of property of the debtor, consisting of considerable household furniture, but it nowhere appears that this Avas exempt from execution. The assignment Avas necessary as a foundation for the order of discharge, and the same not having been made, the discharge is ineffectual.
Eor these reasons the proceedings should be set aside, with costs.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.