delivered the opinion of the Court.
In April, 1926, the bankrupt, Henry Barceloux, was the owner of 2500 shares of the Peter Barceloux Company, a quarter of the capital stock. The other three quarters were owned, one by his brother George, one by his sister Cora, and one by three nephews, the sons of a deceased
A time arrived when the unwelcome stranger seemed likely to break in. The family combined to maintain its solidarity and keep the intruder out. Henry Barceloux had become heavily involved in debt. A former partner, Freeman, had recovered. a judgment against him for nearly $50,000. Freeman had been lenient, but Freeman was now dead, and the administrator was asking for security as the price of delay. There were other creditors too, though, they are not shown to have been importunate. With these intruders visible, the family' set out to build protective barriers. There is testimony that Henry Barceloux was indebted to the corporation in upwards of $33,000.. On April 27, 1926, he secured part of this indebtedness by a pledge of 2499 shares of the Barceloux stock. The agreement was in writing. We are assured by the family that it was confirmatory of an oral agreement made some years before, but the testimony as to this is not persuasive, and might, not unreasonably, be. rejected by the trier of the facts. The movement of events was swift thereafter. The Freeman administrator had still to be placated. He was put off in June, 1926, with an assignment of the equity in the Barceloux shares together with an assignment of an interest in heavily mortgaged lands. He gave notice to the corporation of his interest in the shares and made demand upon the secretary for a statement of the indebtedness secured by the superior lien. He also asked for an agreement that the corporation give him notice of ninety days before enforcing its security. His activity aroused the family to new measures of protection. The request for notice was
The scene was now. ready. The time for action was at hand. On August 16, 1926, there was the gesture of a public sale. A printed notice had beén posted on a tele-, graph pole and perhaps elsewhere. There was no other notice either to Freeman or to any one else. At the appointed time, the members of the family, accompanied, by a lawyer, went through the form of an auction on the steps of the court house. The debtor’s sister, Cora, who was a director of the corporation, read the notice of sale and asked for bids; all the collateral, both the Barceloux shares and the others, being offered as a single lot. The brother George,* who was then the president, made a bid for the entire lot in the name of the Barceloux corporar tion, -the bid being for the amount of its claim against the debtor and a fee for its attorney. No sooner had the corporation bought than it sold back again to George. In payment for what it sold, it took his promissory note with a pledge of the shares as collateral security. About two years later, it canceled the resale, gave back the promissory note and thereafter held the shares as owner. In the meanwhile a few scraps of property retained by Henry Barceloux had been put out of his name. He still held one share in the Barceloux Company. He sold it to his sister. He had equities in other properties, lands and shares of stock. He sold part to his sister and part to his
The trustee in bankruptcy has brought- this suit under § 70 (e) of the National Bankruptcy Act * to recover from the Barceloux Company the value of property pledged by the bankrupt with fraudulent-intent. At the filing of the bill the company had resold the shares to George Barceloux, its president; and the prayer for relief,1 adapting itself to the situation then existing, was for the value of the shares on August 16, 1926, with interest at 7%, the statutory rate of interest in the state of California. There was also a prayer for an accounting and for any other relief consistent with equity. The District Court found that the fraudulent intent had been made out; that both pledgor and pledgee were sharers in it; and' that there should be an appointment of a master to take and state an account and to report the value of the property covered by the pledge. Upon the coming in of the report, there was a final judgment for $106,409.44, with costs, in favor of the trustee. . 51 F. (2d) 80. ■
An appeal by the defendant followed with the result that the decree was reversed, one judge dissenting. 61 F. (2d) 145. The Court of Appeals held that the Freeman
The evidence sustains the finding of the District Court that the pledge to the defendant was made in fraud of creditors.
More is here than a mere preference. If that and nothing else had been intended, the pledge would be- proof against attack, for it was made more than four months before the bankruptcy petition. But in truth there was much besides. The pledge was a step in a general plan which must be viewed as a whole with all its composite implications.
Dean
v.
Davis,
The trustee is not subject to the bar of an estoppel in his effort to undo the fraud.
The argument for the defendant is that the Freeman administrator is estopped by force of his acceptance of a junior lien upon the shares,, and that the trustee as his champion enjoys no better right. To overcome the supposed estoppel it is enough to recall the fact that at the
The result would not b'e different, however, if the administrator stood alone. Neither in.his own name nor indirectly, through the trustee is he building any rights upon the pledge or "claiming any preference over others. He has rejected the security, and claims as a general creditor. ' There may have been obscurity as to this at the . beginning of the suit. . The bill of complaint which was a declaration by the trustee, and not by the administrator, gives recognition to the junior pledge as valid and subsisting. There has >vbeen no obscurity, however, since the trial and the interlocutory judgment. The pledge to the administrator is disregarded, and he is left in the same position with reference to any general creditors as if ther transaction putting him ahead of them had been undone from' the beginning. One who takes a mortgage or an assignment of an interest in property subject to a specific lién may be estopped while he retains the benefit from disavowing the attendant burden.
Freeman
v.
Auld,
Disaffirmance, and abandonment in this instance , rested on sufficient grounds. The Freeman administrator, though informed of the fact that there was a pledge superior to his, had no knowledge of anything else. He was not informed of the circumstances essential to an
The repurchase of the certificates by the fraudulent grantee during the pendency of the suit did not make it error for a court of equity to render judgment for the value.
There is no occasion to consider what relief would have been proper if the certificates had been owned by the defendant at the filing of the bill, and had been continuously retained thereafter. We may assume, though we do not decide,, that the trustee; suing in sueh circumstances for an accounting in equity, would have had the shares, and not the value. See
Dunphy
v. Kleinsmith,
The defendant being chargeable with the value upon the filing of-the bill, the. question for us "now is whether it could , change its liability by buying , back the shares. The answer is supplied by the opinion of Story, J., in
Oliver
v.
Piatt,
The ruling of the trial court whereby the highest value of the-property up to the time of the decree was made thev measure of the recovery was not harmful to the defendant.
The recovery would have been larger if the value at the sale with legal interest thereafter had been adopted as the measure. ,,
The defendant may participate on the same basis with other creditors in the distribution of the assets.
The decree of the District Court is erroneous in so far as the claim of. the deféndant is . postponed to those of others. Moore v. Bay, supra.
The decree of the Circuit Court of Appeals is reversed, and-that of the-District Court modified in accordance with this opinion and as modified affirmed.
Reversed.
Notes
“The trustee may avoid any transfer by the bankrupt of his property which any creditor of such bankrupt might have avoided, and may.recover the property so transferred, or its value, from the person to whom it was transferred, unless he was a bona fide holder for value prior to the date of the adjudication.” National Bankruptcy Act, § 70 (e), July 1, 1898, c. 541, 30 Stat. 565; 11 U.S. Code, § 110. ' ' •
