198 Mass. 590 | Mass. | 1908
The question presented by the bill of exceptions is the same in each of these two cases, namely: Whether the R. L. c. 167, § 126, declaring that an attachment of property on mesne process shall be dissolved by the appointment of a receiver to take possession of such property, is applicable to a case where the receiver is appointed by the Circuit Court of the United States.
The language of the statute, “by any court of competent jurisdiction in this Commonwealth,” standing alone, is broad enough to include the federal courts, and if all the provisions of the statute were properly applicable to proceedings in these courts, we should be inclined to give the appointment of a receiver in them the same effect as it would have if made in a State court. But § 127 provides that, when an attachment has been dissolved under the preceding section, “the proceedings for the appointment of a receiver shall not thereafter be dismissed and the receiver discharged, until all the assets which have come into his hands as receiver have been fully distributed, or the claim upon which the attachment was made has been fully paid and discharged, unless the debtor, before such dismissal, deposits with the officer who made the attachment, such amount of money as the court before which such receivership proceedings are pending, after notice to the attaching creditor and a hearing, finds reasonable for the protection of his claim in the action in which the attachment was made.”
In Second National Bank of Pittsburg v. Lappe Tanning Co., ante, 159, it was held that a court in which the proceedings of an ancillary receivership were pending had no power to transmit the assets to the domiciliary receiver, after the dissolution of an attachment under this statute, until provision had been made for the attaching creditor under § 127.
Before the enactment of this statute, attachments in force at
Our Legislature has no power so to control a federal court, or so to interfere with its proceedings authorized by laws outside of this statute. Boyle v. Zacharie, 6 Pet. 648, 658. Foster’s Fed. Pr. (1st ed.) 8, par. 6. A federal court might entirely disregard the prohibition contained in § 127, as an attempt at unlawful interference with its rights and powers. The Legislature must be presumed to have known this, and not to have enacted an illegal and ineffectual law.
Plainly, it was not intended that an attachment should be dissolved under the first of the two sections without giving the creditor the benefits secured by the second of the sections. The statute will be given effect if the words, “ by any court of competent jurisdiction in this Commonwealth,” be held to mean any "court which is subject to the legislation of the Commonwealth.
It is true that legal and equitable rights, of a general character, whether obtained under laws of a State or under laws of the United States, may be enforced either in the federal courts or in the courts of the State. Claflin v. Houseman, 93 U. S. 130,136,137. Morgan v. New York National Building & Loan Association, 73 Conn. 151, 154. The State cannot create an absolute right and forbid the enforcement of it in a federal court. Barrow Steamship Co. v. Kane, 170 U. S. 100, 111. Reagan v. Farmers' Loan & Trust Co. 154 U. S. 362, 391.
Of the power of the Legislature, under the constitution, to require the dissolution of attachments only when the property can be held under the laws of Massachusetts for the benefit of creditors who prove their claims here, there is no doubt.
The case from 73 Conn. 151, cited above, was materially different from the one before us. The statute considered in it provided generally for the dissolution of all attachments made within sixty days prior to the commencement of proceedings resulting in the appointment of a receiver. In its terms, and in all particulars, it was as applicable when the appointment was made in a federal court as when it was made in a State court. The only ground for suggesting a question was that, by the statute, the costs that had accrued previously were to be allowed as a debt. The court treated this provision as the creation of a right, which properly could be enforced in a federal court as well as in a State court, and not as an interference with the remedies or procedure of the court.
In each case the entry must be
Exceptions overruled.