116 Tenn. 201 | Tenn. | 1905
delivered the opinion of the Court
Complainants, who are judgment creditors of the defendant M. Alice Smith, filed this hill for the purpose of setting aside an alleged fraudulent conveyance made by the said M. Alice Smith to her sister, Lizzie Smith, and also for the purpose of annulling a decree of the chancery court of Giles county in which it was decreed that a three-eighths undivided interest of M. Alice Smith in the house and lot in question was the property of her sister, Lizzie Smith, by virtue of the conveyance already mentioned.
The property sought to be reached by complainants is an undivided' interest in a house and lot situated
On the 2d of August, .1902, said trustee in bankruptcy obtained leave of the chancellor to file an amended and supplemental bill in said cause, subject, however, to all defenses on the part of defendants. The substance of the amended and supplemental bill was that it set out the original proceedings and alleged that the conveyance by M. Alice Smith of her three-eighths undivided interest in the house and lot to her sister was fraudulent and void as to creditors, and prayed that said conveyance be set aside and that said interest be held to pa.y the claims of creditors of said M. Alice.
This bill Avas afterwards amended so as to show that said M. Alice Smith Avas granted a discharge in bankruptcy on August 5, 1902.
An answer was also filed by the defendants, and under and by permission of the chancellor defendants were allowed to incorporate their demurrer in their answers and to rely upon the same at the hearing. Subsequently defendants withdrew their answer, and it was agreed that the action of the chancellor on the demurrer should be final. On the hearing the chancellor overruled the demurrer and decreed full relief to the complainants. On appeal the decree of the chancellor was affirmed by the court of chancery appeals, but on appeal this court reversed both decrees, as follows: “The decree of the court of chancery appeals is reversed. The order of reversal will show that the case should be determined on answer to supplemental bill of Akers, trustee, and that equity as between the parties requires that the case should not go off upon demurrer. Costs of appeal are divided between parties.” .
After the remandment of the case on the 16th of July, 1904, defendants answered the amended and supplemental bills filed by the trustee in bankruptcy April 17, 1904, wherein they denied that the conveyance of M. Alice Smith to her codefendant Lizzie Smith was fraudulent, but averred that it was based upon a valuable and sufficient consideration. M. Alice Smith also averred that August 12, 1902, she was granted a full and final discharge in bankruptcy from all debts and liabilities
It wras further averred that the original bill was filed within four months next prior to the filing of the petition of M. Alice Smith in bankruptcy, and that the deed of M. Alice to her sister, Lizzie Smith, was executed, delivered, and registered more than four months prior to the filing of her petition in bankruptcy, and that under the bankruptcy law her deed must stand and cannot be impeached, that liens, if any were created by the filing of the original bill and levy and attachment thereunder, were discharged by the filing of her petition in bankruptcy, and that, the federal court having assumed jurisdiction of the matter, its decree discharging her is final and conclusive upon complainants as well as Akers, trustee, and that complainants cannot nowr do through said Akers, trustee, what they could not do themselves. It appears that on October 8, 1904, Akers, trustee, was permitted to file a petition in the nature of an amended and supplemental bill in this cause, wherein it is stated that said Akers, as trustee, was discharged by the referee-in bankruptcy on the supposition that his trust with respect to the estate of M. Alice Smith had been closed,
Defendants moved to dismiss said petition, which was overruled. Defendants thereupon demurred to the petition, which demurrer was also overruled by the chancellor. Defendants then filed an elaborate answer to the petition to revive. Proof was taken, and on the hearing the chancellor again decreed that the conveyance from M. Alice Smith to her codefendant and sister, Lizzie Smith, was fraudulent in law and fact, and further adjudged that the decree in the case of ill. Alice Smith et al. v. Buckner Smith et al., wherein it was adjudged that M. Alice Smith had no interest in the house and lot in controversy, was fraudulent in law and fact. The chancellor thereupon set aside the deed from M. Alice Smith to her sister, Lizzie Smith, and also the decree in the case aforesaid in so far as it adjudged that M. Alice Smith had no interest in the house and lot in question.
The chancellor further decreed that Akers, trustee in bankruptcy of M. Alice Smith, had the right to subject the three-eighths interest in the house and lot in question to the payment of the debts provable against the estate of said M. Alice Smith, and that a lien was created upon this property by the filing of the bill and amended and supplemental bills in this cause. On appeal the court of chancery appeals affirmed the decree of the chancellor. The cause is again before this court on the appeal of the defendants. It may be stated that
On the main question of fact presented, viz., whether the conveyance from M. Alice Smith of her three-eighths undivided interest in said property to her sister, Lizzie Smith, was fraudulent, the court of chancery appeals finds as follows: “After an examination of the direct evidence in this case, read in the light of and in connection with the averments of the bill of appellants and their mother against their father and others, heretofore referred to and quoted from, and the evidence given by appellants in that case made a part of the record in this case, we find it impossible to avoid coming to the conclusion that the deed of M. Alice Smith to her sister, Lizzie Smith, conveying her three-eighths interest in the house and lot in question; was fraudulent, both in law and fact, and we so find as a fact. We need not detail the evidence in the record on which we base this finding. It is only necessary to say that the deed of conveyance recites a consideration in hand paid of $800, when manifestly under the weight of the proof nothing at all was paid at the time, and the fact is, under the proof, the sister had nothing at all with which to pay
As already stated, one of the declared objects of the present bill was to annul a certain decree of the chancery court of Giles county, wherein it was adjudged that the three-eighths undivided interest of M'. Alice .Smith in the house and lot belonged to her sister, Lizzie Smith, by virtue of the deed just mentioned. On this subject the court of chancery appeals finds as follows:
“Some years ago, and before this litigation arose, certain parties made a deed to the house, and lot in .question to Mrs. Mary Ann Smith, the mother of the defendants, conveying to her the property absolutely and in fee simple. Under the terms and limitations of the trust . . . the deed to it should have been made to Mary Ann Smith for life, Avith remainder to her children. It appears that, although the deed to Mrs. Smith was of the character stated, she and her children always regarded the property as belonging to the former only for life, with remainder in fee to the latter. Under this arrangement it appears that the daughter M. Alice Smith acquired a three-eighths undivided interest in remainder in the house and lot and her sister, Lizzie Smith, an undivided five-eighths interest therein. It appears that in this situation M. Alice Smith, her sister, Lizzie Smith, and her mother, Mary Ann Smith (the last named suing by M. Alice Smith as next friend), De
“The object of that bill was to reform the deed to the house and lot to Mary Ann Smith so as to limit her estate therein to a life estate, to show that three of the children of Mary Ann Smith and husband, Buckner Smith, had died intestate and without issue, and that as the property then stood M. Alice Smith owned a three-eighths interest in remainder, and Lizzie Smith a five-eighths undivided interest therein. . . . December 24, 1901, four days after the above bill was filed, M. Alice Smith conveyed by deed absolute her three-eighths interest in remainder in the house and lot in question to her sister, Lizzie, for the consideration recited of |800 to her in hand paid. This deed was noted for registra^ tion December 27, and registered December 30, 1901. The decree in the case of M. Alice Smith, et al. v. Buckner Smith et al., just referred to', was rendered March 1, 1902. On the testimony of M. Alice Smith and her sister, Lizzie, their mother being a party complainant by next friend to the bill, the decree in the case limited the estate of the mother in the house and lot to a life estate, and adjudged that the father, Buckner Smith, had no interest in the property, and that Lizzie Smith by virtue of the conveyance to her of M. Alice Smith owned all the remainder interest in the property.”
It is not seriously contended that this court would be warranted in going behind the findings of the court of chancery appeals into an original examination of the question whether said decree and conveyance were fraudulent or not. The main assignment of error, however, is that the court of chancery appeals erred in decreeing that the discharge in bankruptcy granted to M. Alice Smith August 5, 1902, was not a complete bar to any further proceedings on the part of complainants in this cause.
This assignment of error is based on the fact that the conveyance of M'. Alice Smith to Lizzie Smith was executed December 24, 1901, and recorded in the register’s office of Giles county, Tennessee, December 30, 1901 — more than four months prior to the filing of the petition in bankruptcy by M. Alice Smith on May 22, 1902. It is said the petition of A. W. Akers, trustee, was filed
Counsel for appellants rely in support of this position on section 11 of the bankrupt act of 1898 (Act July 1, c. 541, 30 Stat., 549 [U. S. Comp. St., 1901, p. 3426]), ‘ which provides that “a suit which is founded upon a claim from which a discharge would be a release, and which is pending against a person at the time of the filing of the petition against him, shall bo stayed until after an adjudication or the dismissal of the petition; if such person is adjudged a bankrupt, such action may be further stayed until twelve months after the date of said adjudication, or if within that time such
It is said that the bill filed by complainants April 5, 1902, was stayed under said section until the discharge in bankruptcy of M. Alice Smith; and, the discharge haring granted to said M. Alice Smith, the bill in this case should have been dismissed, no legal proceedings having been had impeaching or setting aside said discharge in bankruptcy, and none can now be had.
Counsel also relies on section 1, subsec. 12, of the bankruptcy act (30 Stat., 544 [U. S. Comp. St., 1901, p. 3418]), which provides that “discharge shall mean the release of a bankrupt from all of his debts which are provable in bankruptcy, except such as are excepted by this act.” It is said that complainants, being parties to the bankruptcy proceeding, are now estopped and concluded by the discharge granted to M. Alice Smith which released her from all debts owing by her at the time of filing her petition. It is further said that, if fraud existed, it would have prevented the discharge, but the discharge was not resisted or prevented, and the question of fraud is now res adjudicate, and complainants are estopped; citing Morris v. Creed, 11 Heisk., 155; Hudson v. Bigham, 12 Heisk., 59.
It seems to us that the fallacy underlying this assignment of error is that the property of M. Alice Smith fraudulently conveyed to her sister is exonerated from the payment of the claims of her creditors by her discharge in bankruptcy, simply for the reason that the
But counsel insists that “all of these debts have been discharged, and asks what right has the court to order them paid.” And again inquires: “Where will these debts be paid?” And replies: “Not in the bankrupt court, as the referee has finally certified the case to the court and has lost power over it, and this court is the proper place for such payment; not in the State
It appears that under an amendment of the bankrupt law passed in 1903 (Act Feb. 5, 1903, c. 487, sec. 113, 32 Stat., 799 [U. S. Comp. St. Supp., 1905, p. 689]),. the bankruptcy court has concurrent jurisdiction with the State courts in setting aside fraudulent conveyances and recovering the assets of the bankrupt. This, however, was not the law at the time Akers intervened in this case, and the State court was then the only tribunal that had jurisdiction in such cases. It is unnecessary for us to decide in what court these assets so recovered will be distributed, but it would seem that having been recovered by the trustee they would be distributed in the bankruptcy court under proper orders of the federal court reopening the case.
The right of the trustee in bankruptcy to intervene in this case for the benefit of creditors is fully conferred by the act of Congress passed July 1, 1898, as follows: “The trustee may avoid any transfer by the bankrupt of his property which any creditor of the 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.”
“The trustee is vested not only with the title to the
“And all property transferred by the bankrupt in fraud of his creditors vests in the trustee, and there is no four months’ limitation on this class of transfers.” Section 70 and subsections; Collier on Bankruptcy, 555; Loveland on Bankruptcy, 382. It has been frequently adjudicated that the trustee in bankruptcy is the proper party to bring suit to recover property fraudulently transferred by the bankrupt. Glenny v. Langdon, 98 U. S., 20, 25 L. Ed., 43; Trimble v. Woodhead, 102 U. S., 647, 26 L. Ed., 290.
In Barton v. Geiler, 3 Lea, 297, it was said: “There does not seem to be any sound reason why the agency of the State courts should not be used in the collection of the assets of the bankrupt for the purpose of aiding the federal courts’ administration and distribution of the bankrupt’s estate. They assume no jurisdiction under the bankrupt act in so doing, but simply exercise their ordinary jurisdiction in suits between parties.” “We are of opinion, therefore,” said the court, “that an assignee in bankruptcy may sue in the State courts to recover the assets of the bankrupt, and that such suit in no way affects or interferes with the jurisdiction
The fourth and fifth assignments of error are that the court of chancery appeals erred in affirming the decree of the chancellor and declining to dismiss the petition of Akers, trustee, to revive, and in reviving, the case in the name of Akers, trustee. On this subject the court of •chancery appeals finds as follows: “Now it appears that the referee in the bankruptcy court, acting upon the theory that the administration of the estate of Miss Smith had been closed, so ordered and discharged the trustee. This was done while this case was pending in the supreme court on the first appeal, and upon the remandment of the case, and a presentation of the facts by the trustee to the referee of his ignorance of the fact that he had been discharged, the referee revoked his discharge of the trustee and reappointed him trustee. Now, the substance of the assignment of error is that the referee, having discharged the trustee, had no power or authority to reappoint him; the bankrupt himself having been given a final discharge.” A conclusive answer to these assignments is that the referee, under the bankrupt act of 1898, has the right to reinstate or reappoint a trustee inadvertently or improperly discharged. Section 2, subsec. 8, of the act (30 Stat., 545 [U. S. Comp. St., 1901, p. 3420]). It appears, moreover, that the appellants on the 8th of December, 1904, filed a bill in the federal court at Nashville to enjoin Alters, trustee, from further prosecuting this case. In that bill the question
The second ground is as follows: “The bill shows on its face that prior to fding the same a court of equity, to wit, the chancery court of Giles county, Tennessee, had already taken jurisdiction of all the matters set forth in complainant’s bill, and that said court is a court of competent jurisdiction.”
The fourth is:' “The bill shows on its face that the questions involved pertain to the bankruptcy of M. Alice Smith, which proceedings were instituted prior to the amendment of the bankrupt law of February, 1903, and that therefore this court has no jurisdiction of the matters in said bill set forth.”
These grounds of demurrer were sustained by the federal judge, and the bill dismissed, with costs. It appears-there was no appeal from that decree. We think for all these reasons there was no error in the action of the court of chancery appeals in holding that said cause was properly revived in the court below by Akers, trustee.
The eighteenth assignment is that the court of chancery appeals erred in decreeing that the total proceeds of sale of the three-eighths interest in the house and lot described in the pleadings should be turned over to the trustee in bankruptcy. It is insisted that only a sufficient amount of said recovery as will satisfy the orig
The nineteenth assignment of error is that the court of chancery appeals erred in declining to order the costs of the case paid out of the proceeds of the sale of the three-eighths interest in the house and lot described in the pleadings and in decreeing that the defendants and surety on their appeal bond were personally liable for the costs of the cause.
We are unable, however, to perceive any ground for taxing any part of the costs against the complainants, since the fraud of M. Alice Smith, participated in by Lizzie Smith, necessitated the filing of the bill.
The decree of the chancellor and the court of chancery appeals will be affirmed.