of the whole body of the debtor's assets. Took v. Tuck 1 is not,
I think, opposed to the opinion expressed in Ex parte Barrow 2. The allegations made in the pleadings in that case were not incon- sistent with good faith: indeed, they were apparently consistent with the debtor having paid the composition and 'become a free man." Best C.J., however, stated the ground upon which the courts hold that a private agreement for the benefit of a particular creditor contemporaneously with a composition agreement is illegal: 'It is the pretending to accept the same terms as the other creditors, and
SO encouraging them to come into the arrangement, when the party
SO pretending has at the time secured to himself some advantage, of which the others are not to partake" 3. He does not assert that agreements made subsequently to the composition agreement destroying the equality of creditors, parties to the composition agreement, and inconsistent with good faith, are lawful. He was,
I think, dealing with the particular case and making clear that the pleadings did not allege the fraud he mentioned or any other dealing that was necessarily inconsistent with good faith. The nature of the agreement and the circumstances of the case must in the end determine whether any particular agreement is inconsistent with good faith and consequently unlawful.
In my judgment, the arrangement in this case between the bank and the company which has been attacked is not illegal. It is not inconsistent with good faith towards the other creditors of the company. In April of 1936 instalments of the composition which had fallen due had not been paid, though they were secured by a charge. It was in the interest of the company to pay the com- position and become free of that obligation and the charge in respect thereof over its assets and to obtain financial assistance for the purpose of carrying on its business. It was equally desirable from the point of view of its creditors that the composition should be paid. The bank undertook to find moneys for the company to discharge the composition and to finance its future operations if the company accepted liability for the further advances and its original debt. It was a business operation beneficial alike to the company, the other creditors, and the bank.
The arrangement, it is said, is inconsistent with good faith because it does not provide for the equal treatment of all the creditors, but that contention fastens upon one feature of the arrangement and ignores the business considerations that dictated it, including the
1(1827) 4 Bing. 224 [130 E.R. 755].
2(1881) 18 Ch. D. 464.
[130 E.R., at p. 757].
3(1827) 4 Bing., at pp. 228, 229