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THE BANKRUPTCY LAW IN ENGLAND.

The Times, in a recent city article, says :—" Owing to the Bankruptcy BUI of Lord Cairns having been abandoned, a short one has been introduced hy Mr Moffatt, to prevent a continuance of the worst evils of the existing system. It provides, first, that no deed or instrument between ■& debtor and his creditors shall be valid unless the debtor shall, within a certain number of days after its execution, leave at the i

office of the Chief Registrar a list showing -Iris : debts and liabilities of every kind on- the day - of such" execution, and the times when such debts and liabilities were contracted, and the considerations for the same, the names, residences, and occupations of his creditors, and the respective amounts due to them upon the securities held by them, and the estimated value of such securities; also a statement showing his property and credits and the estimated value thereof. 2. , That no creditorshall be reckoned in the computation of the number or value of the creditors of debtor executing such deed unless he has executed or assented to it after the execution thereof by the debtor, and unless he proves his debt by affidavit or declaration, and the true value of all securities held by him is stated in the proof, it being stipulated that in the computation of the requisite value of such creditors the amount due to each creditor who shall prove his debt, after deducting the value of the securities held by him, shall alone be returned ; 3, That any creditor of a debtor executing such deed whose debt shall exceed £lO may obtain a summons requiring such debtor, or any creditor or person stated to be a creditor of such debtor, to be examined before a Commissioner of Bankruptcy, the Commissioner being empowered, at the conclusion of such examination, to determine by whom the whole or any part of the expense shall be borne whether by the creditor procuring the summons, or by the person examined, or by the debtor, or by the trustees and inspectors of his estate ; and, 4, That any debtor may petition for adjudication of bankruptcy against himself, on condition that he shall satisfy the Court that his available estate is sufficient to pay to each of his creditors 5s in the pound ; or, in case the Court is not satisfied that the estate is sufficient for the purpose, he shall show that he has convened a meeting of all his creditors whose debts exceed £lO, and that the majority iu number, representing three-fourths in value of the creditors present or represented at such meeting, have passed a resolution that in their opinion it is for the interest of the creditors that he should be adjudicated bankrupt upon the petition presented, or to be presented by him, the value of any securities held by creditors at such meeting being deducted from the computation of thendebts. The object of this measure is avowedly to check the 6,000 questionable parties who now annually pass through the Court of Bankruptcy at the public cost, and who are acquitted of their debts almost without inquiry, and to stay the open and scandalous frauds that are committed under deeds ofarrangemeut. Lord Westbury's Act, 1861, gave immense facilities to debtors for the cancellation of their liabilities, but relegated all the main securities that creditors ought also to have had to the action of the intended Chief Judge in Bankruptcy. That functionary was expunged from the Bill by the House of Lords, and thus fraudulent insolvents contrive to get practical absolution under Act of Parliament. The total amount of unsecured debts passing under deeds of arrangement in 1851 was about £1,500,000. The amount passing in 1867 has increased to £29,500,000, and a very heavy proportion of this enormous sum is believed to have been tainted with dishonesty.

The editor of the "Wagga "Wagga Express hashadratherahard time of it. In a recent issue, under the heading " Another threatened assault on the editor of the Express" it reports that " in the early part of last week a bootmaker and temperance apostle, named G-eorge Everett, sent us for publication two comunications, advocating his favor te cause of teetotalism one in prose and the other m verse. Other communications of a similar class which he had previously sent we had rewritten and published; but the thing wasgrowingintoanuisance,andnot having the time to lick his compositions into shape, we declined to publish them, and recommended him to send us no more until he could obtain the assistance of the schoolmaster in writing them. This gave the gentleman great offence, and early on Saturday morning he repaired to the private residence of one of the proprietors and endeavored to force open the door, saying he wanted to see the editor, and threatening to ' smash ' him if he could find him. Finding that the editor was not in, he took his departure, vowing vengeance; and an hour or two later appeared at the printing office, where the editor then was, and there, with a great deal of abusive and insulting language, repeated his threats until a policeman coming up, he was given into custody, and being brought before the police magistrate was reonvicted and fined."

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WEST18681003.2.27

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Westport Times, Volume III, Issue 367, 3 October 1868, Page 6

Word count
Tapeke kupu
875

THE BANKRUPTCY LAW IN ENGLAND. Westport Times, Volume III, Issue 367, 3 October 1868, Page 6

THE BANKRUPTCY LAW IN ENGLAND. Westport Times, Volume III, Issue 367, 3 October 1868, Page 6

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