In re Abbe

BY THE REGISTER. I, Whitfield S. Johnson, one of the registers of the said court, do certify that in the above case certain questions arose, which are hereby certified to the court for its opinion thereon. The bankrupt has filed his petition and schedules in a different form from that hitherto uniformly adopted in this district. He first petitions, using the form prescribed for partnership petitions, (form two.) In this petition he sets himself out as a member of “a copartnership lately composed of himself and one Henry C. Read, of the city of Philadelphia, state of Pennsylvania.” The petition then proceeds in the usual form for partners, alleging inability to pay debts, &c., and closes by praying that the said firm may be declared bankrupts, &e. It also contains the allegation that Abbe has been unable to get his “late co-partner, Henry O. Read, to join in this petition.” The petition is signed and sworn to by Warren 0. Abbe, alone. To this petition is attached a schedule showing debts to the amount of two thousand four hundred and fifty-six dollars, all of which are stated to have been “contracted as co-partner with Henry G. Read, of the late firm of Read & Abbe.” The schedules show that there are no partnership assets. Then follows an individual petition, (form one,) with schedules of individual debts and assets. These disclose but one individual debt, and that small in amount, and no individual assets, except such as are exempt from the operation of the act.

The papers altogether, then, form substantially a petition: 1st. To have the late firm of Read & Abbe declared bankrupt. 2d. To have Warren C. Abbe declared bankrupt. 3d. To have Warren C. Abbe decreed (upon full surrender, &c.) a certificate of discharge from all his debts, both individually and as a member of the former firm of Read & Abbe. On the case coming to me on order of reference, I doubted my power to make such adjudication as is prayed for by the papers, and also as to whether I should certify the papers to be “correct in form.” The practice in my district has hitherto invariably been for one who was formerly a member of a co-partnership to file an individual petition, (form one,) and annex thereto a schedule of his debts, both individual and co-partnership, stating opposite each debt, in its appropriate place in the schedules, “whether contracted as co-partner, &e., or not.” Under this practice a large number who owed joint and separate debts have been granted certificates of discharge; and the practice was accepted without question as the correct one, until the decision of Blatchford, J., in Re Little, [Case No. 8,390,] was announced. In this decision the ground was taken that, before partnership debts could be discharged, it was necessary to have the firm declared bankrupt, and that this could only be done by each partner joining voluntarily, or by being brought in by notice, under general order number eighteen. Since that decision, I Understand the practice in that district to have been modified so as to conform to it, but I am not aware of any other district in which it has been followed in practice. Aware of this decision, and, wishing to have the matter definitely settled, the attorney for the bankrupt in this case drew the papers in the form indicated, that this question might be raised and disposed of in this district. It is within my knowledge that there are a number of cases undisposed of in this district, in which tlie question as to the effect of a discharge upon an individual petition, upon partnership debts, becomes of great importance. I do not think I have the power to declare the firm of Read & Abbe bankrupts. The papers show that the firm was dissolved before the filing of the petition by Abbe. No act of bankruptcy is alleged or proved against Read. The petition is signed by Abbe alone. Read has not joined in it, and it is alleged that his consent cannot be obtained. He has had no notice of these proceedings. An order might-be granted to give such notice to Read, and ordering him, were sufficient acts alleged, to show cause why the firm should not be declared bankrupts, but I do not think it necessary. The only object of Abbe in asking that the firm be declared bankrupts, is alleged to be that the partnership debts may be discharged as to him. He does not care whether Read is discharged from them or not. All he seeks is, that his own discharge if obtained, may discharge all the debts, both joint and separate, for which he is now liable. This, I think, would be the effect of a discharge obtained upon his petition, without reference to Read. My opinion is, if the present papers are regarded as a petition of Abbe’s alone, and I adjudicate him bankrupt and not the firm, that his discharge would cover all debts both joint and separate. I have, therefore, refused to *5grant the first prayer of the papers, and have held that it was not necessary to take any steps as to Read. It is true that Judge Blatehford’s decision cited above holds, or seems to hold, differently; but, with all deference to his honor’s learning and ability, I am inclined to doubt its correctness.

James Buchanan, for petitioner.

It must be evident that if, in order for one partner to rid himself of partnership debts, it is necessary for him to bring in all the other partners, a large number of partnership debts must remain undischarged. In many cases it would be impossible to find the other partners, or, if found, to procure their assent, or to prove acts of bankruptcy sufficient to sustain a petition as against them. I think it also evident, from the wording of the act, that such was not the intention of congress. Section thirty-three expressly provides that “no discharge granted under this act shall release, discharge, or affect any person liable for the same debt for or with the bankrupt, either as partner, joint-contractor, endorser, surety, or otherwise,” implying that one partner may be discharged from joint debts, though the other is not. Neither does it seem that the act was so construed by the judges of the United States supreme court, who framed the general orders in bankruptcy and the forms of proceeding under the act. Among the particulars they require to be stated with regard to each debt in schedule A 3, is “whether contracted as co-partner, or joint-contractor, with any other person,, and, if so, with whom,” implying that partnership and individual debts may be set out in the same schedule attached to the same petition, the value of each debt being specified. It was early settled in England that a certificate upon a separate commission discharged both joint and separate debts. See Horsey’s Case, 3 P. Wms. 23. I have not been able to find any decision reversing this early settlement of the law, but there are several confirming it. See Eden, Bankr. 390; Owen, Bankr. 297; Tucker v. Oxley, 5 Cranch, [9 U. S.] 37; 2 Abb. N. Y. Dig. 479. But since this case was filed another case has arisen in the southern district of New York, (see In re Frear, [Case No. 5,074,]) in which Mr. Register Fitch discusses substantially the same questions and arrives at the same conclusions I have, which conclusions seem to be approved or, at least, not dissented from by Judge Blatchford.

I am of the opinion, therefore, first. That I have no power to adjudicate the firm of Read & Abbe, bankrupts. Second. That it is unnecessary to allow the papers to be amended or affidavits filed on which to issue an order to bring Read in on notice under general order number eighteen. Third. That Warren C. Abbe should be adjudicated a bankrupt, that creditors, both partnership and individual, may prove their debts under such proceedings, and that his discharge will be a bar to partnership as well as individual debts. If the court should hold these opinions correct, I will, therefore, regard the papers simply as the petition of Warren C. Abbe to be discharged from all his debts, both joint and separate, and proceed in all respects the same as has hitherto been done in other cases. All which is respectfully certified to the honorable court for its opinion thereon.

W. S. Johnson, Register.