53 Iowa 657 | Iowa | 1880
I. It is unncessary to state with particularity the pleadings filed after the petition.
One of the defendants, White, filed a cross-petition alleging that he had entered into a contract to purchase the mortgaged properly of Dryden & Berry, who have not performed their part of the agreement. Upon a ■ hearing of the issues joined on the cross-petition, a decree was entered rescinding and canceling the contract between White and Dryden & Berry.
Neither party appeals from this decree. No question pertaining to White’s cross-petition arises in the case before us.
II. The defendants Dryden & Berry, in answer to plaintiffs’ petition, allege that prior to the commencement of the action they had filed their petition in the United States District Court, whereon they were adjudged bankrupts, and in such proceedings they had made full surrender of their estate, including the property covered by the mortgage in suit, and that no assignee had been appointed by the bankrupt court. They further allege that the mortgage is a fraudulent preference in favor of plaintiffs, and contrary to the bankrupt law, and that it was made within sixty days prior to the filing of their petition in bankruptcy, and out of the usual course of business. They ask that they may be regarded as trustees of their creditors, and make their petition a cross-bill, praying that the mortgage may be set aside and canceled as in violation of the bankrupt law.
The plaintiffs moved to strike this answer from the files, for the reason that defendants cannot make the defense set up
To the answer of defendants plaintiffs replied, alleging that the court has no jurisdiction to determine the matters pleaded by defendants, and that they are not trustees for their creditors, and have no right to appear and plead in that capacity. The plaintiffs allege that the proceedihgs in bankruptcy were not instituted by defendants in good faith, but with intent to hinder and defeat their creditors, and that ■after instituting the proceedings they purposely refrained from further steps and abandoned the proceedings.
Subsequently Lee hied a petition of intervention, showing that after the pleadings above referred to had been hied he was appointed, by the United States District Court, assignee in bankruptcy of defendants Dryden & Berry; that plaintiffs were creditors of said defendants, who were insolvents, and executed the mortgage in violation of the bankrupt law of the United States, in that it was made out of the usual course of business, and covered substantially all their property, and was for the purpose of preferring the plaintiffs.
The petition of intervention alleges that defendants sold and transferred to plaintiffs certain goods of the value of $448.13 out of the usual course of business, and for the purpose of preferring plaintiffs, and that such transaction is in contravention of the bankrupt law, and, therefore, void, wherefore the intervenor asks judgment against plaintiffs for the value of the goods so transferred to them. The petition of the intervenor shows that he obtained authority from the United States District Court to prosecute a suit in the state courts to recover the value of the goods transferred by defendants to plaintiffs.
The plaintiffs moved to strike the petition of intervention from the files, upon the ground, among others, that the corirt has no jurisdiction of the matters pleaded, and has no author
The Revised Statutes of the United States, § Til, provide that the federal court shall have exclusive jurisdiction “of all matters and' proceedings in bankruptcy.” The language of the statute is not confined to actions, but has a broader application. The word “ proceedings ” relates to and describes actions; hence all actions in bankruptcy are within the exclusive jurisdiction of the federal courts. The word “ matters ”
We have considered with attention the authorities cited by counsel for the intervenor. They insist that Wiswall v. Campbell, 93 U. S., 349, considered with Claflin v. Houseman, 93 U. S., 137, establishes that “plenary actions and suits ” are no part of bankruptcy proceedings, and are, therefore, not within the exclusive jurisdiction of the federal courts. But the actions contemplated by the expression “ plenary actions and suits ” used in Claflin v. Houseman are not such as are based exclusively upon provisions of the bankrupt law. The court, as we understand the opinion,
We conclude that the court below erred in the decree canceling the mortgage of plaintiffs. The decree dismissing the cross-bill of the intervehor was based upon the evidence. Of course we do not find it necessary to disturb that part of the court’s judgment. It is correct, though it ought to have been based upon the absence of jurisdiction. The cause is triable here de novo. The execution of the mortgage and the existence of the debt are established by the proof — indeed they are not denied in the pleadings. As we have seen, the state courts cannot take cognizance of the -defense set up. The right of recovery is, therefore, in plaintiffs.
The decree of the Circuit Court upon plaintiff’s appeal will be reversed, and a decree will be entered in this court foreclosing the mortgage, and granting such other relief as is prayed for and authorized by the law, or, at plaintiff’s-option, the cause may be remanded to the Circuit Court for that purpose.
Reversed on piaintiee’s appeal.
Affirmed on intervenor’s appeal.