Court Opinion

ID: 8867616
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-26 18:10:56.628026+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:06:03.452259
License: Public Domain

OOXE, District Judge.
Robert. J. Knox, the husband of the bankrupt, became embarrassed in business in the summer of 1807. There was a levy upon his property and a sale was threatened. In these circumstances the creditors signed a composition agreeing to accept 25 per centum of their claims. The creditors whose proofs have been expunged, were parties to this agreement, but they consented to sign only after they had negotiated a secret convention with Knox that their claims should be paid in full. Thereafter the property of Knox was sold at public auction to his wife who managed'the business with her husband as agent until on or about February 23, 1899, when she was adjudicated a bankrupt upon her own petition. During the time Knox was carrying on the business as agent he paid these creditors in full, using his principal’s money for that purpose. After the transfer of the business to the bankrupt these creditors continued to deal with her and at the time of her bank*586ruptcy she was indebted to them in the sums for which they have proved their claims. In each instance the sum proved is less than the amount which the creditor has received from the bankrupt’s estate. It is the theory and contention of the trustee that the bankrupt and her other creditors are entitled to have the money thus illegally taken from the bankrupt applied towards the payment of her debts.
The referee has written no opinion and has made no special findings of fact, but he could hardly have reached the general conclusion expunging the proofs without finding the following facts: First. That Robert J. Knox made a secret and unlawful agreement to pay these creditors in full, his other creditors receiving but twenty-five cents on a dollar. Second. That the creditors whose claims were expunged received full payment of their claims against Robert J. Knox, the bankrupt’s property being converted without her knowledge for that purpose. Third. That these creditors had actual or constructive knowdedge of .the facts at the time the present indebtedness was contracted. The evidence warrants these findings. As an abstract proposition it would seem inequitable that these creditors should receive 100 per cent, where the other creditors of Robert J. Knox received but 25, the additional 75 per cent, being paid out of the property of this bankrupt and that in addition they should receive the same dividend as her other creditors. Subdivision “c” of section 60 is as follows:
“If a creditor has been preferred, and afterwards in good faith gives the debtor further credit without security of any kind for property which becomes a part of the debtor’s estate, the amount of such new credit remaining unpaid at the time of the adjudication in bankruptcy may be set off against the amount which would otherwise be recoverable from him.”
This paragraph is inapplicable to the case at bar in several particulars and is quoted only for the purpose of showing that it was evidently the intention of the lawmakers that such controversies may be settled upon the principle of set-off in this informal manner without subjecting the parties to the expense and delay of a lawsuit. Such a disposition is, of course, much more favorable to the creditor than one requiring him to pay back the preference in full and receive only his pro rata share of the bankrupt’s ¾ estate. In the present case the trustee, who represents the interests of all the creditors, seeks to have the debts which these creditors owe the estate of Mary G-. Knox set off against the debt -which Mary G-. Knox owes these creditors. Her other creditors will have a right to complain if her property is used for any other purpose than the payment of her debts.
It is argued for the creditors that as the payments to them as creditors of Robert J. Knox were made añore than four months prior to the filing of the petition herein subdivision “b” of section 60 is applicable and the payments cannot be attacked in bankruptcy. As the court understands the position of the trustee it is not founded upon the theory that the bankrupt has given a fraudulent preference to these creditors, but upon the radically different theory that they have taken from the bankrupt without her knowledge or consent *587⅜¾,-ÍOü winch belongs to her general creditors. The rigid, to compel (.he creditors to account for this money does not depend upon the bankruptcy act but upon well-known principles of the common law. Where an agent with the knowledge of his creditor pays his ow,n debt with the property of his principal the latter, ou discovering the fraud, may recover the property so transferred. Btory, Ag. (9th Ed.) §§ 22&-231; Van Amringe v. Peabody, 1 Mason, 440, Fed. Oas. Xo. 10,825. The court is of (he opinion that the referee was right-in holding that it will be inequitable to permit these creditors to draw additional sums from the bankrupt’s estate. Affirmed.