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Cases citing this case: Supreme Court
Cases citing this case: Circuit Courts
U.S. Supreme Court
HANOVER NAT. BANK v. MOYSES, 186 U.S. 181 (1902)
186 U.S. 181
HANOVER NATIONAL BANK OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK, Plff. in Err.,
v.
MAX MOYSES.
No. 203.
Argued April 7, 1902.
Decided June 2, 1902.
This was an action brought by the Hanover National Bank of New York
against Max Moyses in the circuit court of the
[186 U.S. 181, 182]
United1t18 States for the eastern district of Tennessee,
November 20, 1899, on a judgment recovered against him in the circuit
court of Washington county, Mississippi, December 12, 1892
The amended declaration averred the execution of a certain
promissory note by defendant payable to the bank of Greenville,
Mississippi; the indorsement thereof to plaintiff in New York; default
in payment, suit in the State court of Mississippi having jurisdiction
In personam against defendant, who was then a citizen and resident
thereof; recovery of judgment; and that the judgment 'still remains in
full force and effect, unappealed from, unreversed, or otherwise
vacated, and the plaintiff hath not obtained any execution or
satisfaction thereof.' It was also averred that after the rendition of
the judgment in Mississippi, defendant changed his domicil and
residence to the state of Tennessee, and thereafter, ' not being a
merchant or a trader, nor engaged in business or in any commercial
pursuits, nor using the trade of merchandise, and being without
mercantile business of any kind, filed his voluntary petition in
bankruptcy in the district court of the United States for the southern
division of said eastern district of Tennessee, under the act of
Congress of the United States of America, approved July 1st, 1898,
entitled 'An Act to Establish a Uniform System of Bankruptcy
Throughout the United States," and was adjudged bankrupt, and 'since
August 1st, 1898,' 'granted an adjudication of his discharge in
bankruptcy from all his debts, including that herein sued for.'
It was admitted that the discharge was 'good and effectual if said
act of Congress and the proceedings thereunder are valid,' but charged
that the act was void because in violation of the Federal Constitution
in many particulars set forth.
Plaintiff also stated that it was and had continued to be domiciled
in and resident in New York; that it was not a party to siad
proceedings in bankruptcy, nor did it enter its appearance therein for
any purpose, nor did it prove its claim, nor did it in any way subject
itself to the jurisdiction of the district court in said proceedings;
that plaintiff was not served with process
[186 U.S. 181, 183]
of any kind on said petition for adjudication, and had no
notice, personal or otherwise, of the said proceedings by voluntary
petition for adjudication; nor was any notice of the proceeding to
adjudicate defendant a bankrupt given plaintiff, or anyone else, 'nor
is any notice of any kind of such proceeding to adjudicate a person a
bankrupt upon his voluntary petition required by said act of Congress,
and in this said act of Congress violates the Fifth Amendment,' as
does the 'adjudication of defendant as a bankrupt;' that the situs of
the promissory note, on which the judgment was rendered, was never
within the jurisdiction of the district court; and that the court
never acquired jurisdiction of plaintiff, nor of the debt sued on.
Demurrer was filed to the amended declaration, the demurrer
sustained, and final judgment entered dismissing the suit. The circuit
court stated that it took this action on the authority of Leidigh
Carriage Co. v. Stengel, 37 C. C. A. 210, 95 Fed. 637. Thereupon the
bank brought this writ of error.
Errors were specified as follows: That the discharge under the act
of Congress of July 1, 1898, was a nullity, because:
'(a) It does not provide for notice as required by due process of
law to the creditor in voluntary proceedings for adjudication of
bankruptcy and for the discharge of the debt of the creditor.
'(b) Ten days' notice by mail to creditors to oppose discharge is
so unreasonably short as to be a denial of notice.
'(c) The grounds of opposition to a discharge are so unreasonaby
limited as, substantially, to deny the right of opposition to a
discharge. Thereby the act is also practically a legislative
promulgation of a discharge contrary to art. 3, 1, of the Federal
Constitution.
'2. Said act violates art. 1, 8, 4, of the Constitution in this:
'(a) It does not establish uniform laws on the subject of
bankruptcies throughout the United States.
'(b) It delegates certain legislative powers to the several
states in respect to bankruptcy proceedings.
[186 U.S. 181, 184]
'(c) It provides that others than traders may be
adjudged bankrupts, and that this may be done on voluntary
petitions.'
Messrs. Marcellus Green and Garner Wynn Green for plaintiff in
error.
Messrs. George T. White and Francis Martin for defendant in error.
Mr. Chief Justice Fuller delivered the opinion of the court:
By the 4th clause of 8 of art. 1 of the Constitution the power is
vested in Congress 'to establish . . . uniform laws on the subject of
bankruptcies throughout the United States.' This power was first
exercised in 1800. 2 Stat. at L. 19, chap. 19. In 1803 that law was
repealed. 2 Stat. at L. 248, chap. 6. In 1841 it was again exercised
by an act which was repealed in 1843. 5 Stat. at L. 440, chap. 9; 5
Stat. at L. 614, chap. 82. It was again exercised in 1867 by an act
which, after being several times amended, was finally repealed in
1878. 14 Stat. at L. 517, chap. 176; 20 Stat. at L. 99, chap. 160. And
on July 1, 1898, the present act was approved.
The act of 1800 applied to 'any merchant, or other person, residing
within the United States, actually using the trade of merchandise, by
buying or selling in gross, or by retail, or dealing in exchange, or
as a banker, broker, factor, underwriter, or marine insurer,' and to
involuntary bankruptcy.
In Adams v. Storey, 1 Paine, 79, Fed. Cas. No. 66, Mr. Justice
Livingston said on circuit: 'So exclusively have bankrupt laws
operated on traders, that it may well be doubted whether an act of
Congress subjecting to such a law every description of persons within
the United States would comport with the spirit of the powers vested
in them in relation to this subject.' But this doubt was resolved
otherwise, and the acts of 1841 and 1867 extended to persons other
than merchants or traders, and provided for voluntary proceedings on
the part of the debtor, as does the act of 1898.
It is true that from the first bankrupt act passed in England, 34 &
35 Hen. VIII. chap. 4, to the days of Queen Victoria, the
[186 U.S. 181, 185]
English bankrupt acts applied only to traders, but, as Mr.
Justice Story, in his Commentaries on the Constitution, pointed out,
'this is a mere matter of policy, and by no means enters into the
nature of such laws. There is nothing in the nature or reason of such
laws to prevent their being applied to any other class of unfortunate
and meritorious debtors.' 1113.
The whole subject is reviewed by that learned commentator in
chapter XVI. 1102 to 1115 of his work and he says ( 1111) in respect
of 'what laws are to be deemed bankrupt laws within the meaning of the
Constitution:' 'Attempts have been made to distinguish between
bankrupt laws and insolvent laws. For example, it has been said that
laws which merely liberate the person of the debtor are insolvent
laws, and those which discharge the contract are bankrupt laws. But it
would be very difficult to sustain this distinction by any uniformity
of laws at home or abroad . . . . Again, it has been said that
insolvent laws act on imprisoned debtors only at their own instance,
and bankrupt laws only at the instance of creditors. But, however true
this may have been in past times, as the actual course of English
legislation, it is not true, and never was true, as a distinction in
colonial legislation. In England it was an accident in the system, and
not a material ground to discriminate, who were to be deemed in a
legal sense insolvents, or bankrupts. And if an act of Congress should
be passed, which should authorize a commission of bankruptcy to issue
at the instance of the debtor, no court would on this account be
warranted in saying that the act was unconstitutional, and the
commission a nullity. It is believed that no laws ever were passed in
America by the colonies or states, which had the technical
denomination of 'bankrupt laws.' But insolvent laws, quite coextensive
with the English bankrupt system in their operations and objects, have
not been unfrequent in colonial and state legislation. No distinction
was ever practically, or even theoretically, attempted to be made
between bankruptcies and insolvencies. And a historical review of the
colonial and state legislation will abundantly show that a bankrupt
law may contain those regulations which are generally found in
insolvent laws, and that an insolvent law may contain those which are
common to bankrupt laws.'
[186 U.S. 181, 186] Sturges v.
Crowninshield, 4 Wheat. 122, 195, 4 L. ed. 529, 548, was cited, where
Chief Justice Marshall said: 'The bankrupt law is said to grow out of
the exigencies of commerce, and to be applicable solely to traders;
but it is not easy to say who must be excluded from, or may be
included within, this description. It is, like every other part of the
subject, one on which the legislature may exercise an extensive
discretion. This difficulty of discriminating with any accuracy
between insolvent and bankrupt laws would lead to the opinion that a
bankrupt law may contain those regulations which are generally found
in insolvent laws; and that an insolvent law may contain those which
are common to a bankrupt law.'
In the case, Re Klein, Fed. Cas. No. 7,865, decided in the circuit
court for the district of Missouri, and reported in a note to Nelson
v. Carland, 1 How. 265, 277, 11 L. ed. 126, 130, Mr. Justice Catron
held the bankrupt act of 1841 to be constitutional, although it was
not restricted to traders, and allowed the debtor to avail himself of
the act on his own petition, differing in these particulars from the
English acts. He said, among other things: 'In considering the
question before me, I have not pretended to give a definition (but
purposely avoided any attempt to define) the mere word 'bankruptcy.'
It is employed in the Constitution in the plural, and as part of an
expression, 'the subject of bankruptcies.' The ideas attached to the
word in this connection are numerous and complicated; they form a
subject of extensive and complicated legislation; of this subject,
Congress has general jurisdiction; and the true inquiry is,-To what
limits is that jurisdiction restricted? I hold, it extends to all
cases where the law causes to be distributed the property of the
debtor among his creditors; this is its least limit. Its greatest is
the discharge of a debtor from his contracts. And all intermediate
legislation, affecting substance and form, but tending to further the
great end of the subject,-distribution and discharge,-are in the
competency and discretion of Congress. With the policy of a law
letting in all classes,-others as well as traders,-and permitting the
bankrupt to come in voluntarily, and be discharged without the consent
of his creditors, the courts have no concern; it belongs to the
lawmakers.' [186 U.S.
181, 187] Similar views were expressed under the act of
1867, by Mr. Justice Blatchford, then District Judge, in Re Reiman, 7
Ben. 455, Fed. Cas. No. 11,673; by Deady, J., in Re Silverman, 1 Sawy.
410, Fed. Cas. No. 12,855; by Hoffman, J., in Re California P. R. Co.
3 Sawy. 240, Fed. Cas. No. 2, 315; and in Kunzler v. Kohaus, 5 Hill,
317, by Cowen, J., in respect of the act of 1841, in which Mr. Justice
Nelson, then Chief Justice of New York, concurred. The conclusion that
an act of Congress establishing a uniform system of bankruptcy
throughout the United States is constitutional, although providing
that others than traders may be adjudged bankrupts, and that this may
be done on voluntary petitions, is really not open to discussion.
The framers of the Constitution were familiar with Blackstone's
Commentaries, and with the bankrupt laws of England, yet they granted
plenary power to Congress over the whole subject of 'bankruptcies,'
and did not limit it by the language used. This is illustrated by Mr.
Sherman's observation in the Convention, that 'bankruptcies were, in
some cases, punishable with death by the laws of England, and he did
not choose to grant a power by which that might be done here;' and the
rejoinder of Gouverneur Morris, that 'this was an extensive and
delicate subject. He would agree to it, because he saw no danger of
abuse of the power by the legislature of the United States.' Madison
Papers, 5 Elliot, 504; 2 Bancroft, 204. And also to some extent by the
amendment proposed by New York, 'that the power of Congress to pass
uniform laws concerning bankruptcy shall only extend to merchants and
other traders; and the states, respectively, may pass laws for the
relief of other insolvent debtors.' 1 Elliot, 330. See also Mr.
Pinkney's original proposition, 5 Elliot, 488; the report of the
committee thereon, 5 Elliot, 503; and The Federalist, No. 42, Ford's
ed. 279.
As the states, in surrendering the power, did so only if Congress
chose to exercise it, but in the absence of congressional legislation
retained it, the limitation was imposed on the states that they should
pass no 'law impairing the obligation of contracts.'
In Brown v. Smart,
145 U.S. 454, 457 , 36 S. L. ed. 773, 775, 12 Sup. Ct. Rep. 958,
959, Mr. Justice Gray
[186 U.S. 181, 188] said: 'So long as there is no
national bankrupt act, each state has full authority to pass insolvent
laws binding persons and property within its jurisdiction, provided it
does not impair the obligation of existing contracts; but a state
cannot by such a law discharge one of its own citizens from his
contracts with citizens of other states, though made after the passage
of the law, unless they voluntarily become parties to the proceedings
in insolvency. . . . Yet each state, so long as it does not impair the
obligation of any contract, has the power by general laws to regulate
the conveyance and disposition of all property, personal or real,
within its limits and jurisdiction.' Many cases were cited, and, among
others, Denny v. Bennett,
128 U.S. 498 , 32 L. ed. 494, 9 Sup. Ct. Rep. 134, where Mr.
Justice Miller observed: 'The objection to the extraterritorial
operation of a state insolvent law is that it cannot, like the
bankruptcy law passed by Congress under its constitutional grant of
power, release all debtors from the obligation of the debt. The
authority to deal with the property of the debtor within the state, so
far as it does not impair the obligation of contracts, is conceded.'
Counsel justly says that 'the relation of debtor and creditor has a
dual aspect, and contains two separate elements. The one is the right
of the creditor to resort to present property of the debtor through
the courts to satisfy the debt; the other is the personal obligation
of the debtor to pay the debt, and that he will devote his energies
and labor to discharge it' (4 Wheat. 198, 4 L. ed. 549); and, 'in the
absence of property, the personal obligation to pay constitutes the
only value of the debt.' Hence the importance of the distinction
between the power of Congress and the power of the states. The subject
of 'bankruptcies' includes the power to discharge the debtor from his
contracts and legal liabilities, as well as to distribute his
property. The grant to Congress involves the power to impair the
obligation of contracts, and this the states were forbidden to do.
The laws passed on the subject must, however, be uniform throughout
the United States, but that uniformity is geographical, and not
personal, and we do not think that the provision of the act of 1898 as
to exemptions is incompatible with the rule.
[186 U.S. 181, 189]
Section 6 reads: 'This act shall not affect the allowance to
bankrupts of the exemptions which are prescribed by the state laws in
force at the time of the filing of the petition in the state wherein
they have had their domicil for the six months, or the greater portion
thereof, immediately preceding the filing of the petition.' [30 Stat.
at L. 544, chap. 541.]
Section 14 of the act of 1867 prescribed certain exemptions, and
then added: 'And such other property not included in the foregoing
exceptions as is exempted from levy and sale upon execution or other
process or order of any court by the laws of the state in which the
bankrupt has his domicil at the time of the commencement of the
proceedings in bankruptcy, to an amount not exceeding that allowed by
such state exemption laws in force in the year eighteen hundred and
sixty-four.' [14 Stat. at L. 517, chap. 176.] This was subsequently
amended, and controversies arose under the act as amended which we
need not discuss in this case. Lowell, Bankruptcy, 4.
It was many times ruled that this provision was not in derogation
of the limitation of uniformity because all contracts were made with
reference to existing laws, and no creditor could recover more from
his debtor than the unexempted part of his assets. Mr. Justice Miller
concurred in an opinion to that effect in the Case of Beckerford, 1
Dill. 45, Fed. Cas. No. 1,209.
Mr. Chief Justice Waite expressed the same opinion in Re Deckert, 2
Hughes, 183, Fed. Cas. No. 3,728. The Chief Justice there said: 'The
power to except from the operation of the law property liable to
execution under the exemption laws of the several states, as they were
actually enforced, was at one time questioned, upon the ground that it
was a violation of the constitutional requirement of uniformity, but
it has thus far been sustained, for the reason that it was made a rule
of the law to subject to the payment of debts under its operation only
such property as could by judicial process be made available for the
same purpose. This is not unjust, as every debt is contracted with
reference to the rights of the parties thereto under existing
exemption laws, and no creditor can reasonably complain if he gets his
full share of all that the law, for the time being, places at the
disposal of creditors. One of the effects of a bankrupt law is that
[186 U.S. 181, 190]
of a general execution issued in favor of all the creditors
of the bankrupt, reaching all his property subject to levy, and
applying it to the payment of all his debts according to their
respective priorities. It is quite proper, therefore, to confine its
operation to such property as other legal process could reach. A rule
which operates to this effect throughout the United States is uniform
within the meaning of that term, as used in the Constitution.'
We concur in this view, and hold that the system is, in the
constitutional sense, uniform throughout the United States, when the
trustee takes in each state whatever would have been available to the
creditor if the bankrupt law had not been passed. The general
operation of the law is uniform although it may result in certain
particulars differently in different states.
Nor can we perceive in the recognition of the local law in the
matter of exemptions, dower, priority of payments, and the like, any
attempty by Congress to unlawfully delegate its legislative power. Re
Rahrer,
140 U.S. 545 , 560, sub nom. Wilkerson v. Rahrer, 35 L. ed. 572,
576, 11 Sup. Ct. Rep. 865.
But it is contended that as to voluntary proceedings the act is in
violation of the 5th Amendment in that it deprives creditors of their
property without due process of law in failing to provide for notice.
The act provides that 'any person who owes debts, except a
corporation, shall be entitled to the benefits of this act as a
voluntary bankrupt' ( 4a), and that 'upon the filing of a voluntary
petition the judge shall hear the petition and make the adjudication
or dismiss the petition.' 18g. With the petition he must file
schedules of his property, and 'of his creditors, showing their
residences, if known, if unknown, that fact to be stated.' 7, subd. 8.
The schedules must be verified, and the petition must state that
'petitioner owes debts which he is unable to pay in full,' and 'that
he is willing to surrender all his property for the benefit of his
creditors, except such as is exempt by law.' This establishes those
facts so far as a decree of bankruptcy is concerned, and he has
committed an act of bankruptcy in filing the petition. These are not
issu- [186 U.S. 181,
191] able facts, and notice is unnecessary, unless
dismissal is sought, when motice is required. 59g.
As Judge Lowell said: 'He may be, in fact, fraudulent, and able and
unwilling to pay his debts; but the law takes him at his word, and
makes effectual provision, not only by civil, but even by criminal,
process to effectuate his alleged intent of giving up all his
property.' Re Fowler, 1 Low. Dec. 161, Fed. Cas. No. 4,998.
Adjudication follows as matter of course, and brings the bankrupt's
property into the custody of the court for distribution among all his
creditors. After adjudication the creditors are given at least ten
days' notice by publication and by mail of the first meeting of
creditors, and of each of the various subsequent steps in
administration. 58. Application for a discharge cannot be made until
after the expiration of one month from adjudication. 14.
Form No. 57 gives the form of petition for discharge and the order
for hearing to be entered thereon, requiring notice to be published in
a designated newspaper printed in the district, and 'that the clerk
shall send by mail to all known creditors copies of said petition and
this order, addressed to them at their places of residence as stated.'
Section 14b provides for the granting of discharge unless the
applicant has '(1) committed an offense punishable by imprisonment as
herein provided; or (2) with fraudulent intent to conceal his true
financial condition, and, in contemplation of bankruptcy, destroyed,
concealed, or failed to keep books of account or records from which
his true condition might be ascertained.'
The offenses referred to are enumerated in 29, and embrace
misappropriation of property; concealing property belonging to the
estate; making false oaths or accounts; presenting false claims;
receiving property from a bankrupt with intent to defeat the act;
extorting money for acting or forbearing to act in bankruptcy
proceedings.
It is also provided by 15 that a discharge may be revoked, on
application within a year, if procured by fraud and not warranted by
the facts.
Notwithstanding these provisions, it is insisted that the want of
notice of filing the petition is fatal because the adjudication
[186 U.S. 181, 192]
per se entitles the bankrupt to a discharge, and that the
proceedings in respect of discharge are in personam, and require
personal service of notice. The adjudication does not in itself have
that effect, and the first of these objections really rests on the
ground that the notice provided for is unreasonably short, and the
right to oppose discharge unreasonably restricted. Considering the
plenary power of Congress, the subject-matter of the suit, and the
common rights and interests of the creditors, we regard the contention
as untenable.
Congress may prescribe any regulations concerning discharge in
bankruptcy that are not so grossly unreasonable as to be incompatible
with fundamental law, and we cannot find anything in this act on that
subject which would justify us in overthrowing its action.
Nor is it possible to concede that personal service of notice of
the application for a discharge is required.
Proceedings in bankruptcy are, generally speaking, in the nature of
proceedings in rem, as Mr. Justice Grier remarked in Shawhan v.
Wherritt, 7 How. 643, 12 L. ed. 854. And in New Lamp Chimney Co. v.
Ansonia Brass & Copper Co.
91 U.S. 662 , 23 L. ed. 339, it was ruled that a decree adjudging
a corporation bankrupt is in the nature of a decree in rem as respects
the status of the corporation. Creditors are bound by the proceedings
in distribution on notice by publication and mail, and when
jurisdiction has attached and been exercised to that extent, the court
has jurisdiction to decree discharge, if sufficient opportunity to
show cause to the contrary is afforded, on notice given in the same
way. The determination of the status of the honest and unfortunate
debtor by his liberation from encumbrance on future exertion is matter
of public concern, and Congress has power to accomplish it throughout
the United States by proceedings at the debtor's domicil. If such
notice to those who may be interested in opposing discharge, as the
nature of the proceeding admits, is provided to be given, that is
sufficient. Service of process or personal notice is not essential to
the binding force of the decree.
Judgment affirmed.
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