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INSOLVENTS. 1741
terrogatories, and to report on such interrogatories and answers to the
court, and who shall receive such compensation as said clerk of the court
of common pleas of Baltimore city may prescribe, to be paid by the parties
applying for the benefit of this article, which compensation shall not be
less than two dollars, nor more than ten dollars to each applicant, accord-
ing to the difficulties of the respective cases; and all sums of money re-
ceived from all such applicants by the said clerk, beyond the aggregate
of fifteen hundred dollars per annum, shall be paid into the treasury of
the State.
An. Code, sec. 20. 1904, sec. 20. 1888, sec. 20. 1854, ch. 193, sec. 1-8. 1880, ch. 172.
20. The court may allow to the preliminary trustee commissions not
exceeding two per cent., and to the permanent trustee commissions not
exceeding six per cent., upon the estate of the insolvent.
An. Code, sec. 21. 1904, sec. 21. 1888, sec. 21. 1854, ch. 193, sec. 19.
21. Any creditor may examine orally any insolvent, or any one to
whom he has conveyed property, or may have an issue made and tried by
a jury; and any creditor may file allegations of fraud at any time within
two-years after the time of the final discharge of an insolvent, and have
issues made thereon and tried by a jury; and if such issues be found against
the insolvent, his discharge and release shall be annulled and rescinded;
and in any case of objection to the release of an insolvent, whether by in-
terrogatories or otherwise, the party against whom the decision is made
shall pay costs, as in other cases.
A petition under this section held to have been filed within required two years;
jurisdiction of court attaches immediately upon filing of proper allegations within
required time. Jaeger v. Requardt, 25 Md. 240.
What the petition should allege and the issues submit. Goodwin v. Selby, 77
Md. 446.
Duty of court upon filing of petition. Castleberg v. Wheeler, 68 Md. 274; Jaeger
v. Requardt, 25 Md. 240.
An. Code, sec. 22. 1904, sec. 22. 1888, sec. 22. 1880, ch. 172, sec. 23. 1886, ch. 298, sec. 23.
1896, ch. 446.
22. Any person who shall depart from or remain absent from this
State with intent to hinder, delay or defraud his creditors, or conceal him-
self to avoid service upon him in any action for the recovery of a debt;
and any person who conceals or removes any of his property to prevent the
same from being taken under legal process, or makes an assignment, gift,
sale, conveyance or transfer of all or part of his estate or property with
the intent to delay, hinder or defraud his creditors; or who, when insolvent
or in contemplation of insolvency, executes a deed or conveyance giving
preferences, creates a lien making any unlawful preferences as therein
stated, or otherwise gives such preference; or when insolvent or in con-
templation of insolvency, confesses any judgment or allows any judgment
to be entered against him by any contrivance, or being a banker, broker,
merchant, trader, builder, or manufacturer, stops payment of his negoti-
able paper fraudulently, or suspends payment thereof and fails to resume
the same within twenty days; or being a banker or broker shall fail for
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