Respondent has interposed a motion to dismiss this petition to review and revise on the ground that the subject-matter is not within our jurisdiction under section 24b. Facts disclosed in the petition are these: On December 26, 1912, the Breyer Printing Company was adjudicated a bankrupt upon a petition of creditors filed on December 24, 1912, and the Central Trust Company was appointed receiver and afterwards was duly elected trustee. Petitioner leased certain premises to the Breyer Printing Company
If a creditor files and asks the allowance of a claim as an unsecured creditor, he plainly institutes a “proceeding in bankruptcy.” And if in connection with the presentation of such a claim he asserts grounds why in the distribution of the proceeds of the estate he should be given priority over other general creditors (as in Coder v. Arts,
Against the conclusion that the order or decree of the bankruptcy court was made in the settlement of a “controversy” between the trustee and an adversary who claimed a lien upon and right of possession of specific chattels, it is urged that the claimant’s pleading should be construed as a presentation of a claim of a general creditor for allowance, accompanied by a statement of grounds why he should be given priority in the ultimate distribution of assets over other general creditors. Counsel insist that this construction of the pleading is permissible because it contains a statement of the amount of rent due from the bankrupt and asks that the trustee be ordered to pay the amount thereof. But no adverse claimant could set up his right in and to certain specific chattels under his lien without disclosing the fact and amount of the debt secured by the lien. And the petition in this case, as in every such case, asks a mandate upon the trustee to pay money only in the event that the specific chattels have been sold pending the determination of the adverse claimant’s rights.
Inasmuch as the adverse claimant’s petition and the trustee’s answer formulated only an issue concerning the title and right of possession of certain chattels (or the proceeds of sale in lieu thereof), the fact that the referee gratuitously allowed the amount of rent and costs as a' general claim cannot convert the “controversy” into a “proceeding in bankruptcy.” The only matter taken from the referee to the District Judge was the issue in the equitable controversy; and the correctness of the decree on that issue is not determinable by us under section 24b.
The petition to review and revise is therefore dismissed for lack of jurisdiction.
