Where plaintiff in error seasonably sets up and claims that,
because the bankruptcy court adjudicated his debt to be not
provable, the proceedings in bankruptcy and defendant's discharge
are not a bar, a federal issue is raised, and as, in this case,
that question is not frivolous, this Court has jurisdiction under
§ 237, Judicial Code.
A disallowed debt and a nonprovable debt are not identical, and
a claim that has been presented and disallowed as not having
foundation is not a nonprovable debt, and the discharge is a
bar.
In this case,
held that the contract on which the claim
sued for was based was either terminated by defendant's bankruptcy
or noncompliance therewith constituted a breach, and, in either
case, defendant was released by his discharge.
As plaintiff, suing on a claim disallowed in the bankruptcy
proceeding, made no effort to review the action of the bankruptcy
court in the
Page 236 U. S. 71
direct way prescribed by the Bankruptcy Act, the result in this
case cannot be obtained indirectly by suit in the state court based
on the contention that the debt was nonprovable.
8 Ga.App. 605 affirmed.
The facts, which involve the jurisdiction of this Court under
§ 237, Judicial Code, and the effect of a discharge in
bankruptcy, are stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS delivered the opinion of the Court.
Lesser brought suit in the City Court of Atlanta against Gray
and another, once members of Inman & Company, for damages
alleged to have resulted from breach of contract by the firm. A
demurrer was sustained and final judgment rendered for defendant;
this was affirmed by the Court of Appeals of Georgia (8 Ga.App.
605), and the matter is here upon writ of error.
A motion to dismiss must be denied. Plaintiff in error
seasonably set up and claimed that, because the bankruptcy court
adjudicated his debt to be not provable (
Re Inman &
Co., 175 F. 312), the proceedings in bankruptcy and discharge
of defendant constituted no bar to a recovery thereon in the state
court. A federal issue is raised, and we cannot say that it is too
frivolous to give jurisdiction.
Rector v. City Deposit Bank
Co., 200 U. S. 405,
200 U. S.
411.
The following summary adequately indicates the essentials of the
original petition:
Inman & Company, a copartnership composed of Gray and
Page 236 U. S. 72
others, in July, 1907, agreed to purchase from Lesser 500 bales
of patches -- cotton bagging -- to be delivered during the twelve
months commencing September 1, 1907. About one third was delivered
and paid for prior to May 4, 1908, at which time an involuntary
petition in bankruptcy was filed against the firm and its members.
Shortly thereafter, all were adjudicated bankrupts. Trustees were
appointed, and in July, 1908, Gray obtained his discharge. Prior to
the bankruptcy proceedings, there was no breach or disavowal of the
contract, and thereafter no demand for further deliveries nor offer
to make any.
In February, 1909, Lesser presented a claim against the estate
for his alleged loss. The trustees objected on several grounds.
Among others, these were specified:
"That said claim is not a provable claim in bankruptcy under the
provisions of the Bankrupt Act; that said claim on its face shows
that, at the time of the filing of the petition in said cause, and
at the date of adjudication, the merchandise, the subject matter of
the claim, had not been delivered to the bankrupts as provided
under the contract of sale therein set forth, but that all of said
merchandise that had been delivered, to-wit, the amount of 174
bales, had been paid for. . . . Said proof shows that, at the date
of the adjudication, as well as the filing of the petition, no
breach of said contract had occurred. . . . Your trustees show that
the contract set forth is not such a contract as is avoided by an
adjudication in bankruptcy, and therefore that the same is not a
provable debt."
The referee disallowed the claim, and the United States district
court approved his action for reasons stated in a written opinion
incorporated in the petition.
"Petitioner shows that the defendants have failed under said
contract to accept and pay for 326 bales of patches at the contract
price, and petitioner having retained said goods, defendants are
indebted to him for the difference between the contract price and
the market price at the
Page 236 U. S. 73
time and place of delivery under said contract; . . . that his
said claim having been disallowed and adjudicated not provable in
bankruptcy, the said discharges of the defendants are no bar to the
prosecution of this suit, and the plea of bankruptcy is not
available to the defendants,"
and he prays for judgment.
In support of the demurrer, defendant Gray maintains: (1) The
plaintiff sustained no legal injury. Before any breach of the
contract, an involuntary petition in bankruptcy, afterwards
sustained, was commenced against the partnership and its members;
the partnership was dissolved, the contract rendered impossible of
performance and annulled by the law, and whatever loss resulted was
damnum absque injuria. (2) If there ever was a valid
claim, defendant's discharge in bankruptcy acquitted it. (3) The
matter was submitted to a competent court of bankruptcy with
exclusive jurisdiction, which disallowed the demand; no appeal was
taken, and the question became
res judicata.
The plaintiff in error insists that he suffered legal damage
because the contract of purchase was not fully complied with.
"Under the classification of the act, claims are either provable or
not provable;" when of the former class, they are dischargeable;
when of the latter, they are not dischargeable. His "claim had been
adjudged by the bankruptcy court, to which it had been presented
for proof, to be not provable," and therefore the discharge
constitutes no bar to his right to recover against the
defendant.
Section 2 of the Bankruptcy Law (July 1, 1898, c. 541, 30 Stat.
544) invests courts of bankruptcy with jurisdiction to
"(2) allow claims, disallow claims, reconsider allowed or
disallowed claims, and allow or disallow them against bankrupt
estates; . . . (6) bring in and substitute additional persons or
parties in proceedings in bankruptcy when necessary for the
complete determination
Page 236 U. S. 74
of a matter in controversy; (7) cause the estates of bankrupts
to be collected, reduced to money and distributed, and determine
controversies in relation thereto, except as herein otherwise
provided; . . . (10) consider and confirm, modify, or overrule, or
return, with instructions for further proceedings, records and
findings certified to them by referees; . . . (15) make such
orders, issue such process, and enter such judgments in addition to
those specifically provided for as may be necessary for the
enforcement of the provisions of this Act. A 'discharge' shall mean
the release of a bankrupt from all of his debts which are provable
in bankruptcy, except such as are excepted by this Act."
(§ 1.) "A discharge in bankruptcy shall release a bankrupt
from all of his provable debts." (§ 17.) Debts of the bankrupt
may be proved and allowed against his estate which are founded upon
an open account, or upon a contract, express or implied, and
unliquidated claims may be liquidated in such manner as the court
shall direct, and may thereafter be proved and allowed. (§
63.)
A bankruptcy court in which an estate is being administered has
full power to inquire into the validity of any alleged debt or
obligation of the bankrupt upon which a demand or claim against the
estate is based. This is essential to the performance of the duties
imposed upon it. When an alleged debt or obligation is ascertained
to be invalid -- without lawful existence, the claim based thereon
is necessarily disallowed. A disallowed claim and a nonprovable
debt are not identical things, and a failure accurately to observe
the distinction has led to confusion in argument.
The United States district court, being of opinion that an
implied condition in Lesser's contract terminated it when the
involuntary bankruptcy proceeding was begun, held that the bankrupt
incurred no obligation to pay damage by reason of the firm's
failure fully to comply therewith.
Page 236 U. S. 75
Accordingly, the judgment in respect of the claim presented by
plaintiff against the estate was that it be disallowed because
without foundation, not that he had a nonprovable debt.
The petition in the cause now under review was properly
dismissed. If, as both the bankruptcy and state courts concluded,
the contract was terminated by the involuntary bankruptcy
proceeding, no legal injury resulted. If, on the other hand, that
view of the law was erroneous, then there was a breach, and
defendant Gray became liable for any resulting damage, but he was
released therefrom by his discharge. In this state of the record,
we will not enter upon a consideration of the specific reason
assigned by the state court for sustaining the demurrer. No effort
was made by plaintiff in error to secure a review of the action of
the bankruptcy court in the direct way prescribed by the statute,
and that result may not be obtained indirectly through the present
proceeding. The judgment of the court below is
Affirmed.