Court Opinion

ID: 9299305
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-12-02 17:05:53.817203+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:13:37.307016
License: Public Domain

WELICER, District Judge.
A jury in this case was waived, and the facts, with the evidence, were submitted to the court at a former term, but the case has been continued for argument and under advisement to this term, and has been argued at length, orally and elaborately; briefs have been submitted by counsel on each side. All the testimony in the case has been reduced to writing, and we have a full report of it before us, so there can be no controversy as to what was the testimony on the trial. The matters in controversy fully appear in the pleadings.
The questions presented and discussed by counsel are mainly as follows: 1. Were Norris, Hull & Co. insolvent when defendants acquired the notes which they seek to set off in this ease? 2. Did the defendants know of the insolvency of Norris, Hull & Co. when they became the purchasers of these set-offs? 3. Was the purchase of the notes by the defendants a bona fide one for their own benefit, or for a valuable consideration? 4. Supposing the purchase to have been unobjectionable in other respects, what effect would knowledge on the part of the defendants of the insolvency of Norris, Hull & Co. when they made the purchase, have on their right to have the set-offs allowed ?
First As to the insolvency of Norris, Hull & Co. when the defendants purchased the notes in question, there seems to be no doubt. In fact it is admitted by their counsel. This being the case—
Second. Did the defendants know this when they acquired these notes? We have carefully considered this point. The testimony on the trial showed that before the transfer to defendants of these notes, Stoddard, Lover-ing & Co., a firm doing business at Boston, Mass., had knowledge of the insolvency of Norris, Hull & Co., but it nowhere appears that this was known to defendants, Cady & Co., unless they acquired such knowledge in the negotiations by which they acquired the notes in question. The defendant Awl was called as a witness on behalf of Cady & Co., to prove the purchase by them of these notes, and was cross-examined by plaintiffs’ counsel, and defendant, Geo. W. Cady was called as a witness in behalf of plaintiffs, .and both testified that they had no knowledge of the insolvency of Norris, Hull & Co. when they bought the notes. It is insisted, however, by plaintiffs’ counsel, that the circumstances attending the purchase and what was said at the time, were sufficient to charge them with notice.
What were these circumstances, and what was said that should charge them with such notice? It appears that Norris, Hull & Co. were doing business in Portland, Me., and the defendants in the city of Cleveland, O. They had business transactions with Norris, Hull & Co. down to the very day of the purchase of these notes, Feb. 11, 1874. This business was done by correspondence. A short time before the purchase, they were applied by one Dresser, as agent of Stoddard, Lovering & Co., who offered to sell to them the notes in question, and if Cady & Co. received notice of the insolvency of Stoddard, Lovering & Co. it must have been during these negotiations. We have failed to find in the testimony anything equivalent to notice to *1156the defendants of this insolvency, when they took the notes. It is said that during these negotiations Cady & Co. asked Dresser why Stoddard, Lovering & Co. wished to dispose of' this paper, and the reply was that they had more of it than they wanted to keep, and wished to dispose of some of it. This would not have a tendency to charge them with notice of the maker’s insolvency for such transactions are of very common occurrence. Oth•er circumstances and conversations at the time are referred to, to charge them with notice, such as the remark of Dresser that they were tricky, but taken altogether, come very far short of proving that Cady & Co. had knowledge of the insolvency of Norris, Hull & Co. when they made the purchase of these notes.
It is further insisted on in argument by plaintiffs’ counsel that at least the circumstances were such as to put Cady & Co. on inquiry when they made the purchase that the makers of the notes were insolvent. Whatever might have been the law formerly on this subject, such is not the law mow, when applied to negotiable paper. It is so held by the supreme court of the United States in Goodwin v. Simmons, 20 How. [61 U. S.] 343; also in Woolfolk v. Bank of America, 10 Bush, 504; and is now a fixed rule of law. To charge Cady & Co. with notice of the insolvency of Norris, Hull & Co., the testimony ought at least to be as strong as would be required in cases where preferences have been made which are declared void by the bankrupt act. But the testimony here falls far short of what would be required in such cases.
We think, therefore, that the evidence in this case is insufficient to show that the defendants had knowledge when they purchased these notes of the insolvency of Norris, Hull & Co.
3. Did they pay value for these notes, so as to be entitled to be treated as bona fide purchasers and holders, and not as trustees for Stoddard, Lovering & Co.? On this point, it clearly appears that they paid a sufficient consideration and were fully protected in this respect, and, so far as this point is concerned, they are entitled to have the set-off made as claimed by them. This, of course, determines the case in favor of the defendants. Here we might stop and not determine the further point, but as the point has been made and discussed we think it ought to be decided. This is the fourth point above stated which is, supposing the question of notice of the insolvency had been found against Cady & Co., but that in other respects they were bona fide purchasers, would they then be entitled to have the set-off allowed? This we are compelled to answer in the affirmative. We do this knowing that there is not complete accord in the decisions that have been made on this subject. If the purchase of a set-off is otherwise unobjectionable, knowledge that the debtor is insolvent at the time of the purchase will not prevent the set-off being made. The law as to set-off under the bankrupt law of 1867 is as follows: “And be it further enacted, that in all cases of mutual debts or mutual credits between the parties, the account between them shall be stated, and one debt set-off against the other, and the balance only shall be allowed or paid, but no set-off shall be allowed of a claim in its nature not provable against the estate. Provided, that no set-off shall be allowed in favor of any debtor to the bankrupt of a claim purchased by or transferred to him after the filing of the petition.” Of debts and proof of claims under the same law: “And be it further enacted, that all debts due and payable from the bankrupt at the time of the adjudication of bankruptcy, and all debts then existing, but not payable until a future day a rebate of interest being made when no interest is payable by the terms of the contract, may be proved against the estate of the bankrupt” As we read the law of 1867, as to set-off and proof of claims, this case comes within the letter and meaning of the law. It was necessary, in establishing a rule under which claims against a bankrupt might be purchased and set off. Congress provided substantially, that this might be done at any time — in case of involuntary bankruptcy — before the filing of the petition. In this case, the claims sought to be set off were purchased two months before the petition was filed. To hold that notice of the insolvency of the bankrupt at the time of acquiring the claims sought to be set off — he being a holder for value would permit the set-off — would, in our opinion, in effect, be in-grafting upon this law what is not contained in it, and which congress never intended should be embraced within its meaning.
Finally, it has been said that the defendants’ claims not being due when the petition was filed, they were not proper set-offs; under the statutes of Ohio. This question came up in Fuller v. Steiglitz, 27 Ohio St., on page 361. It is there said: “Again, many cases arising under the bankrupt laws adopt a broader rule.”
The court, in 4 Ohio St. 593, say: “They have very little, if any, application to this case. Those statutes have generally permitted a set-off of mutual credits, whether due or not, and have therefore, administered a much broader equity than the ordinary law of set-off.” The law of set-off, therefore, under the United States bankrupt law, is to be administered by that law, and by the express provisions of that law the claims set up as set-offs, as in this case, are, if mutual debts or credits, allowed, whether already matured or not.
We, therefore, come to the conclusion on the whole case that the defendants are entitled to have their set-offs allowed, and we give judgment accordingly. We are sustained in this decision by the cases: In re City Bank, etc. [Case No. 2,742], and Hovey v. Home Ins. Co. [Id. 6,743]; the holding in which cases we approve.