Part, Chapter
1 I,III| him his last funds.~The assignees of the failure would, as
2 I,VI | bottles were making.~The assignees, when called upon to pay
3 I,VI | and choose the provisional assignees, who are to supersede the~
4 I,VI | of one or more permanent assignees is an act which~gives opportunity
5 I,VI | every thousand provisional~assignees, not more than five ever
6 I,VI | attorney of the creditors, the assignees, the agent,~and the judge-commissioner
7 I,VI | leaves~the cause to the assignees and the attorneys,--except,
8 I,VI | to select the provisional assignees, who are often, as we have~
9 I,VI | is supposed to select the assignees. Thus it happens that the~
10 I,VI | almost always appoints as assignees those creditors whom it~
11 I,VI | part of the bankrupt, his~assignees, and his solicitor, among
12 I,VI | the debtor appoints~his assignees, audits his own accounts,
13 I,VI | concordat/. The provisional assignees make a~little report at
14 I,VI | then~select the permanent assignees, take extreme measures,
15 I,VI | it is customary, when two assignees are~appointed, for only
16 I,VI | death. The names of the~assignees selected through the influence
17 I,VI | creditors appointed the assignees, little Molineux~returned
18 I,VI | been won in the courts, the assignees~decided to sell that property,
19 I,VI | thousand francs, to which the assignees~added seventy thousand produced
20 I,VI | himself,~Ragon, the two assignees, and the commissioner.~ ~
21 I,VI | agreement with the~judge and the assignees. The three solicitors were
22 I,VI | The solicitors and the assignees signed the~papers.~ ~"In
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