| Great Britain. Court of King's Bench, Richard Vaughan Barnewall, Sir Edward Hall Alderson - 1820 - 820 pages
...the assignees : Held, that these goods were within 21 Jac. c. 19., being property in the possession, order, and disposition of the bankrupt, with the consent of the true owner, and that the assignees were therefore entitled to them. Fox, Administrator, v. Fisher, M. 6O G. 3.... | |
| John William Buck, John Scott Earl of Eldon, Sir Thomas Plumer, Sir John Leach, Great Britain. Court of Chancery - 1820 - 724 pages
...assignees: — Held, that these goods were within 21 Jac. I. c. 19, being property iu the possession, order, and disposition of the bankrupt, with the consent of the true owner; and that the assignees were therefore entitled to them. Fox against Fisher, 3 Barn, and Aid. 135. 13.... | |
| Great Britain. Court of Exchequer, George Price - 1822 - 772 pages
...vessel in the present case, was, notwithstanding the transfer, allowed to remain in the possession, order, and disposition of the bankrupt, with the consent of the true owner and proprietary: and he (the trader) having become thereby the reputed owner, the law operated on that... | |
| Great Britain. Court of King's Bench - 1823 - 856 pages
...therefore, that the three-fourth shares of the ship, at the time of the act of bankruptcy, were in the order. and disposition of the bankrupt, with the consent of the true owner ; and that the case, as to those three-fourths, is within the statute of James ; and, consequently,... | |
| New York (State). Court of Chancery, William Johnson - 1828 - 556 pages
...not strictly apply, for the statute of 1 1 and 12 Geo. HI. ch. 8. declares, that goods placed under the order and disposition of the bankrupt, with the consent of the true owner, shall pass to the assignees. This is a proper rule, under the bankrupt system, to prevent fraud and... | |
| Great Britain. Court of Common Pleas, Peregrine Bingham - 1829 - 616 pages
...first is, that the chariot was finished; and as to the second, if this article be held to have been in the order and disposition of the bankrupt, with the consent of the true owner, every man who sends his carriage to have a nail driven into it, will be liable to lose it under a commission... | |
| 1855 - 980 pages
...of Bankruptcy an order for the sale of the goods cdYnprised in the bill of sale to Short and Cutts, as being in the order and disposition of the bankrupt with the consent of the true owner at the time he became bankrupt. The defendants contended at the trial that they were protected by section... | |
| 1857 - 1052 pages
...the money, for that the notices served before the money was paid into court prevented the costs from being in the order and disposition of the bankrupt with the consent of the true owners, and that therefore they did not pass to the assignees in bankruptcy, but belonged to the lender... | |
| Edward Erastus Deacon - 1833 - 1062 pages
...case out of the rule of reputed ownership. And the bills in question cannot be said to have been in the order and disposition of the bankrupt, with the consent of the true owner ; for they were remitted by Marsden and Flower to England, without the consent of the true owner. Sir... | |
| Great Britain. Court of Common Pleas - 1833 - 916 pages
...— it was held that these goods were within the 21 Jac. 1, c. 19, being property in the possession, order, and disposition of the bankrupt, with the consent of the true owner; and that the assignees were therefore entitled to them : and Mr. Justice Bayley said — " The possession... | |
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