The time within which a writ of error may be brought to review
an adjudication of bankruptcy of the district court is two years as
regulated by § 4, 5, of the Act of March 3, 1891, c. 517, 26
Stat. 826, 827, and not thirty days, the time fixed for appeals by
general order of this Court in bankruptcy, No. 36.
Allen v.
Southern Pacific Co., 173 U. S. 479.
A bill of exceptions is not necessary when it adds nothing to
the record.
C. H. Nichols Lumber Co. v. Franson,
203 U. S. 278.
The objections to a double resort to review decisions of the
lower courts to both the circuit court of appeals and this Court do
not apply where the proceeding in the circuit court of appeals is
merely revisory, as
Page 212 U. S. 446
it is under § 24
b of the Bankruptcy Act, and a
merely interlocutory decision in such a proceeding cannot prevent a
case, otherwise proper to be brought here, from being taken to this
Court after final judgment.
Provable claims on which a petition to have the debtor
adjudicated a bankrupt under § 59
b of the Bankruptcy
Act can be based are claims that can be proved in the proceeding,
and a liquidation may be ordered on the filing of the petition to
ascertain whether the petition is based on a provable claim.
A provable claim may be based on the breach of an express
warranty.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case comes up on a certificate concerning the jurisdiction
of the district court on the following facts: the W. M. Laird
Company filed a petition in bankruptcy against the Frederic L.
Grant Shoe Company alleging acts of bankruptcy and setting up a
claim for $3,732.80 for the breach of an express warranty of shoes
sold to it by the latter. The shoe company answered, denying the
foregoing allegations and denying that the claim alleged was a
provable claim. The case coming on to be tried before a jury, it
moved the court to dismiss the proceeding for want of jurisdiction.
The motion was denied, and, insolvency and acts of bankruptcy being
admitted, the claim was liquidated at $3,454, the shoe company
offering no evidence. The shoe company was adjudged a bankrupt, and
at the same time the judge certified that the jurisdiction of the
court to make such an adjudication on a claim for unliquidated
damages was the only question in issue. Afterwards this writ of
error was brought, the taking of jurisdiction being the only error
assigned.
It already has been decided between these parties that a writ of
error, not an appeal, is the proper means of bringing the
Page 212 U. S. 447
case here.
203 U. S. 203 U.S.
502. But the defendant in error moves to dismiss on the grounds
that the writ was not sued out in time, because General Order 36(2)
allows only thirty days for appeals, and that no bill of exceptions
was filed. Neither reason is good. The statutes fix the time within
which writs of error may be brought, Rev.Stat. § 1008.
See Act of March 3, 1891, c. 517, §§ 4, 5, 26
Stat. 826, 827.
Allen v. Southern Pacific R. Co.,
173 U. S. 486.
A bill of exceptions was not necessary, as it would have added
nothing to what is patent on the face of the record.
C. H.
Nichols Lumber Co. v. Franson, 203 U.
S. 278.
Perhaps it should be mentioned that a motion to dismiss, earlier
than the one we have mentioned, was made and overruled, 125 F. 576,
and that thereafter, on a petition for review, the decision was
affirmed by the circuit court of appeals, 130 F. 881. Although in
the report the case is headed "In Error to the district court," it
appears by stipulation that the proceeding was a revisory one under
§ 24
b of the Bankruptcy Act, the order having been
interlocutory. It is suggested that the plaintiff in error is
concluded by the action of the circuit court of appeals. But,
notwithstanding the objections to a double resort, we do not
perceive how such an interlocutory decision, even of the higher
court, can prevent a case, otherwise proper to be brought here,
from being taken up after a final judgment is reached.
Coming to the question certified, we are of opinion that the
decision of the courts below was right. The argument to the
contrary is based on the letter of the statute, and is easily
stated and understood. By § 59
b, petitions to have a
debtor adjudged a bankrupt may be filed only by creditors who have
provable claims. By § 63
b,
"Unliquidated claims against the bankrupt may, pursuant to
application to the court, be liquidated in such manner as it shall
direct, and may thereafter be proved and allowed against his
estate."
The word "thereafter" shows, it is said, that they are not yet
proved to exist when merely presented and sworn to. Therefore it
does not
Page 212 U. S. 448
yet appear that there is any foundation for the proceeding in
the requisite amount or even the existence of the claim. But there
must be a proceeding in court before a liquidation can take place,
and therefore the claim cannot be liquidated until a proceeding is
started in some other way. In short, the claim upon which the
petition is based must be provable when the petition is filed, and
this claim was not provable then, since, by the express words of
the act, it had to be liquidated before it could be proved.
On the other hand, by the equally express words of §
63
a, among the debts that may be proved are those founded
upon a contract, express or implied. Again, by § 17, the
discharge is of all "provable debts," with certain exceptions, and
it would not be denied that this claim would be barred by a
discharge.
Tindle v. Birkett, 205 U.
S. 183. If the argument for the plaintiff in error is
sound, a creditor for goods sold on a
quantum valebant
would be as badly off as the petitioner, and both of them might be
postponed in reducing their claims to judgment until it was too
late. The intimations in
Tindle v. Birkett, supra, and
Crawford v. Burke, 195 U. S. 176, are
adverse to such a result. The whole argument from the letter of the
statute depends on reading "provable claims" in § 59
b
as meaning claims that may be proved then and there when the
petition is filed. But, if it can be seen then and there that the
claims are of a kind that can be proved in the proceedings, the
words are satisfied, and, further, no reason appears why a
liquidation may not be ordered on the filing of the petition to
ascertain whether it is filed rightly or not.
It is said that an unfounded claim of this sort might be used as
a weapon to enforce an unjust demand or to make a solvent but
struggling debtor bankrupt.
In re Big Meadows Gas Co., 113
F. 974. But an unjust demand may be made for a liquidated sum,
also, and we have mentioned the injustice on the other side. Again,
it has been suggested that a cause of action for a breach of
warranty really is for deceit, and sounds in tort, claims for torts
not being mentioned among the "debts
Page 212 U. S. 449
which may be proved" in § 63
a.
In re
Morales, 105 F. 761. No doubt, at common law, a false
statement as to present facts gave rise to an action of tort, if
the statement was made at the risk of the speaker and led to harm.
But ordinarily the risk was not taken by the speaker unless the
statement was fraudulent, and it was precisely because it was a
warranty -- that is, an absolute undertaking by contract that a
fact was true -- that, if a warranty was alleged, it was not
necessary to lay the
scienter. Schuchardt
v. Allen, 1 Wall. 359;
Norton v. Doherty,
3 Gray 372. In other words, a claim on a warranty, as such,
necessarily was a claim arising out of a contract, even if, in case
of actual fraud, there might be an independent claim purely in
tort.
Judgment affirmed.