248 F. 112 | 3rd Cir. | 1917
This is a dispute between a mortgagee and general creditors. It involves the question: Do rents collected from mortgaged premises of a bankrupt between adjudication of bankruptcy and sale under foreclosure proceedings, belong to .the mortgagee (under a claim of deñciency) or to the general creditors of the bankrupt?
The referee found for the general creditors; the District Court, on review, reversed the referee and found for the mortgagee. Its order is before us on petition to revise.
While courts in various jurisdictions regard this question differently, two courts in this circuit have decided it in favor of the mortgagee in two cases arising in Pennsylvania. The court below, feeling bound by these decisions, made a similar ruling in this case arising in New jersey. The point has not been decided in Delaware. The question, now before us on appeal, calls for a review of the principle of three decisions rendered in this circuit.
The cases which hold against the allowance to the mortgagee of rents arising out of mortgaged property after bankruptcy, are based upon the general rule of law, that a mortgage, though in form a conveyance of land, is merely a high security for the payment of a debt or the performance of some other condition, Fox v. Wharton, 5 Del. Ch. 200, 225; Ellison v. Dolbey, 3 Penn. (Del.) 45, 52, 49 Atl. 178; Rickert v. Madeira, 1 Rawle (Pa.) 325; Lenning’s Estate, 52 Pa. 135; Wade v. Miller, 32 N. J. Daw, 296; Colton v. Depew, 59 N. J. Eq. 126, 44 Atl. 662; and that, as between mortgagor and mortgagee, the mortgagor retains the title and has the right to all rents, issues and profits of the mortgaged premises, so long as he is in possession. In connection with this rule, consideration is given the provision of the Bankruptcy Act, 'by which the trustee in bankruptcy acquires the mortgagor’s possession of the mortgaged premises and succeeds to his title and rights. These cases hold in effect that until the mortgagee has reduced the mortgaged premises to his possession, or has attached or sequestered the rents (which, generally speaking, cannot be done after bankruptcy), the possession of the trustee is that of the bankrupt mortgagor, and rents from the mortgaged premises, which, but for bankruptcy, would belong to the mortgagor, after bankruptcy belong to the trustee by virtue of his title and possession, and are therefore applicable to debts due general creditors. In re Foster, Fed. Cas. No. 4963; Foster v. Rhodes, Fed. Cas. No. 4981; In re Dole (D. C.) 110 Fed. 926, 7 Am. Bankr. Rep. 21; In re Bannar (D. C.) 149 Fed. 936, 18 Am. Bankr. Rep. 61; Matter of Cass, 6 Am. Bankr. Rep. 721; Remington, section 993; Brandenburg (4th Ed.) section 846.
In these decisions the fact of bankruptcy is noticed, but its effect on the relative rights of creditors is disregarded. Creditors’ rights are such as are conferred by the debtor’s obligations; their remedies are such as are conferred by law. A mortgagee acquires his right to the payment of the debt and to its security from the mortgage instrument;
When rents from mortgaged premises become bankrupt assets and can no longer be reached by legal process, what constitutes an equitable administration of a law that-takes away such process? When bankruptcy cuts off a creditor’s legal remedies, under the exigencies of the debtor’s insolvency, it does not destroy his legal rights in the debt or in its security. Under the scheme of bankruptcy these are preserved to him; but they are enforced in a new way, made necessary by the.bankrupt’s financial collapse. In enforcing creditors’ rights in the new way, it appears to us that equity should protect them in the same measure and preserve to them the same advantages, so far as practicable, that the law gave them before bankruptcy stepped in and interfered with them, having regard to their nature, their superiority, their priority. These are elemental considerations in the equitable application of assets to debts, which incline us to the view entertained by courts in this circuit, In re Industrial Cold Storage & Ice Co. (D. C.) 163 Fed. 390, and In re Torchia, 188 Fed. 207, 110 C. C. A. 248, which is, in effect, that for many purposes the relative rights of creditors are to be regarded as fixed when bankruptcy takes place; that after insolvency has taken the debtor’s property out of his hands, its income or product belongs to the lien creditor, who has thus become its virtual owner; and that such income or product issuing from mortgaged property, should not be diverted from the mortgage creditor who has a lien to general creditors who have no lien.
This view is not based upon the notion that the mortgage confers a lien on rents,, for, of course, it does not; but it is based upon what is conceived to be an equitable adjustment of rights, of which some are obviously superior to others. Such an application of income from encumbered property appears to be not only an equitable but a very practical way of administering bankrupt assets. It is pursued in principle by at least one court in the administration of property assigned for the benefit of creditors. In Bausman’s Appeal, 90 Pa. 178, and in Wolf’s Appeal, 106 Pa. 545, followed in In re Industrial Cold Storage & Ice Co. and In re Torchia, supra, where encumbered property was assigned for the benefit of creditors and rents were received by the assignee, the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania held, in substance, that, as between
As we are dealing in this case with the equitable administration of bankrupt assets, where creditors’ legal rights are preserved but where their legal remedies are lost and equitable remedies arc substituted, equity requires that the new remedies be as effective as the old in protecting and enforcing such rights. We are of opinion, therefore, that rents, which have been collected by the trustee from the bankrupt’s encumbered property, are applicable to the discharge of the debt for which the encumbrance was given as against debts due general creditors, if claim thereto be seasonably asserted.
The other objections to the order are not substantial and do not require discussion.
The order is approved.