1. A, with a view of giving preference to B, a creditor,
transferred to him Nov. 15, 1873, certain securities. B accepted
them with knowledge that A was insolvent. Proceedings in bankruptcy
were instituted against A. Feb. 7, 1874, he was declared to be
bankrupt. His assignee brought suit in June, 1875, against B. for
the value of the securities.
Held that he was entitled to
recover.
2. The tenth section of the Act of June 22, 1874, 18 Stat., part
3, 178, whereby in cases of involuntary or compulsory bankruptcy,
the period of four months mentioned in sec. 35 of the Bankrupt Act
of March 2, 1867, 14
id. 534, was changed to two months,
did not take effect until two months after its passage. It was not
intended to destroy previously vested rights of property or action,
nor was it in the nature of a statute of limitations. It merely
declared that certain acts thereafter committed more than two
months prior to the institution of proceedings in bankruptcy should
be valid.
MR. JUSTICE MILLER delivered the opinion of the Court.
On the fifth day of February, 1874, a petition in bankruptcy was
filed in the proper court against Thomas Morrell and C. Cuyler
Campbell, and they were duly adjudicated bankrupts. Rasin was
appointed assignee, and brought the present
Page 102 U. S. 621
suit, alleging that the defendants, Auffm'ordt & Co., had
received by way of preference certain securities from the bankrupts
with knowledge of their insolvent condition. A decree for the value
of the securities was rendered in his favor, from which this appeal
was taken.
The testimony leaves no doubt that the transaction was intended
as a security for an existing debt and that the appellants had
reasonable cause to believe that Morrell and Campbell were
insolvents. Indeed, it is very clear that the decree must be
affirmed unless the period which elapsed between the receipt of the
securities and the beginning of the bankruptcy proceedings was,
under the bankrupt law, sufficient to protect the appellants.
The securities were received on the 15th of November, 1873. The
period fixed by the act then in force was four months. As the
petition in bankruptcy was filed Feb. 5, 1874, the lapse of time is
clearly no defense under that act. But Congress, on the
twenty-second day of June, 1874, passed an amendatory act, in which
is found this clause:
"That in cases of involuntary or compulsory bankruptcy the
period of four months mentioned in section 35 of the act to which
this is an amendment, is hereby changed to two months, but this
provision shall not take effect until two months after the passage
of this act."
This suit was commenced May 11, 1875, and in the answer of
defendants the lapse of two months from the receipt of the
securities to the filing of the petition in bankruptcy is pleaded.
There is, however, no allegation in the answer or in the bill, nor
do we find any record evidence, that the petition was filed by
creditors or anything to show whether it was a case of voluntary or
involuntary bankruptcy.
The case, however, has been argued by counsel on both sides as
if it were the latter, and we will so treat it. This raises the
question whether the law as it stood before the amendment of 1874
or the time prescribed in that amendment governs the rights of the
parties in this suit.
It is to be observed that the full period of four months from
the receipt of the securities had passed -- indeed, more than six
months had passed -- before the enactment of this amendment,
Page 102 U. S. 622
and the bankruptcy proceeding had been initiated within that
period and the assignee appointed. The rights of the parties were
therefore fixed before the new law was passed. The assignee had a
vested right to the securities, or to their value. The legal
obligation to return them or to pay him their value had been
incurred by the defendants. To hold that Congress intended by this
amendatory statute to take away that right of action is to hold
that it intended by a retrospective statute to destroy a vested
right of property or an existing right of action. If it be conceded
that Congress could do this, the principle is too well established
to need the citation of authorities that no law will be construed
to act retrospectively unless its language imperatively requires
such a construction. We think the clause in the act of 1874 under
consideration not only does not require this, but that such an
inference is fairly negatived by the provision that the clause
shall not take effect until two months after the passage of the
act. The evident purpose of this provision was that in cases where
such a transfer has been made as sec. 35 of the original act
forbids, but had not at the date of the act been covered by the
lapse of four months without the initiation of proceedings in
bankruptcy, that provision should remain the law of such cases for
two months after the act was passed, though it became immediately
the rule as to preferences made after its passage. Congress thus
showed its intent to provide one rule for cases where the lapse of
time had not yet cured the unlawful transfer made before its
passage and the rule for such transfers made after its passage,
leaving by a very strong inference cases where the rights of
parties had been fixed under the old law to be governed by its
provisions.
There is no question but what Congress could by a statute have
limited the time within which an action should be brought in the
future, so as to have barred the present action, which was
commenced nearly a year after the new law went into effect. But
this statute is not a statute of limitation of actions, but a
declaration of a period when an act otherwise voidable shall be
held to be valid, and we see no reason to believe that in making a
new rule on that subject, Congress intended to
Page 102 U. S. 623
make it retrospective for the purpose of destroying rights of
property or rights of action which had become vested before the
passage of the law.
Decree affirmed.