On April 13, 1922, appellee, as trustee in bankruptcy, filed a complaint in the chancery court against W. W. Byrd and Ada Y. Byrd, his wife, and J. R. West, alleging that on February 2, 1922, the creditors of W. W. Byrd filed in the United States District Court at Jonesboro a petition to have W. W. Byrd declared an involuntary bankrupt, and' that on February 24,1922, the court made an order so adjudging. That on February 11,1922, B3)-rd paid to West a thousand dollars in partial satisfaction of a note held by West, executed by Byrd and his wife, in part payment of the purchase price on the homestead occupied by Byrd, and which he had bought from West. Byrd bought the house from West on March 1, 1919, and the purchase price was $5,000, of which $1,250 was paid in cash; $2,500 of the purchase money was represented by a mortgage on the house in favor of the American Trust Company of Jones-boro, which Byrd assumed; and the remaining $1,250 was represented by a note.due March 1, 1920, on which the thousand-dollar payment was made. The complaint alleged that the payment to West was fraudulent and void because Byrd was insolvent. His place of business had been levied upon under an execution, and the payment had been made after the petition in bankruptcy had been filed, and when West had knowledge thereof. The complaint prayed that the payment be declared'void as against the creditors of Byrd, and that West be required to reimburse the creditors in said amount, and. that he be required to rely upon and proceed under his mortgage security to obtain satisfaction of his own debt, and that a lien be declared upon the homestead for the payment of said thousand dollars.
Byrd and bis wife answered and denied all the allegations of the complaint, and .alleged that the payment was made by Mrs. Byrd with her individual funds.
West answered and admitted the receipt of the thousand dollars, but denied knowing that the money belonged to the trustee in bankruptcy, but he admitted that he knew the creditors had filed the petition at the time the payment was made to him. He prayed that, in the event he was required to refund the money, his lien he declared superior to that of the other creditors, and that his'lien on the homestead be foreclosed for the full amount of said indebtedness.
The question of fact in the case is whether the thousand-dollar payment was made with funds belonging to Mr. Byrd or with the funds of his wife; and the court expressly found the fact to be that the money belonged to him. We concur in this finding, and announce that conclusion, without attempting to review the testimony leading -thereto.
Having made this finding, the court below directed West to repay to the trustee in bankruptcy, the plaintiff in the action, the thousand-dollar payment, and then granted West the relief prayed by him in his cross-complaint.
Counsel for Byrd insists the decree should be reversed, even though that finding is made from the testimony, on the following grounds:
1. That the filing of an involuntary petition in bankruptcy does not operate as an attachment of the propertjr of the bankrupt until adjudication.
2. That the bankrupt had the right at any time, up to the date of adjudication, to convert non-exempt assets into exempt property.
3. The indebtedness to West, secured by a vendor’s lien on the homestead, was past due, and West had the right to receive payment and Byrd had the right to make the payment up to the date of adjudication.
4. The court erred in undertaking to give to the trustee in bankruptcy a lien upon the joint homestead property of Byrd and his wife, or in attempting to sub-rogate the creditors to the rights of West, since Mrs. Byrd was not a party to the bankruptcy proceeding.
We think the finding that the payment was made with Byrd’s money is decisive of the question stated, because the payment was made after the petition had been filed, and West had notice thereof when he accepted the payment.
We think it immaterial that Byrd was adjudged a bankrupt upon an involuntary petition, rather than upon his own voluntary petition, for the fact adjudged was that he was a bankrupt, and this adjudication was made upon a petition filed before the payment was made.
An involuntary petition was filed in the case of Acme Harvester Co. v. Beekman Lumber Co.,
We have quoted thus at length "because the questions there decided are conclusive of the points raised by appellant; and upon the authority of that case we hold that the filing of a petition by Byrd’s creditors operated to impound the money then in his possession, and he could not defeat their right to have it applied towards the satisfaction of their demands.
It appears that Byrd and his wife took title to their homestead as tenants by the entirety, and it also appears that Mrs. Byrd was not a party to the bankruptcy proceeding. We think, however, that, notwithstanding these facts, no error was committed in adjudging a lien on the homestead to the extent of the thousand-dollar payment. The effect of the decree below is to adjudge that Byrd .con'd not put the money in property which was itself beyond the reach of creditors, and to compel its disgorgement. West had a lien on the homestead to secure the payment of the $1,250 and the interest thereon. The court adjudged the thousand dollars was wrongfully paid West by Byrd, because of the pendency of the bankruptcy proceeding, and we concur in that view. West should therefore pay this thousand dollars to the trustee in bankruptcy, and when he has done so the payment to him is annulled and his debt is left unimpaired, as is also his security. It is to be assumed that West will refund the. thousand dollars to the trustee, as the court directs; and it is in the event only that he does not do so that the trustee is given the right to enforce the lien of West to the extent of this payment.
In other words, Byrd is denied the right of having the mortgage on his home reduced by the payment which he wrongfully made to West, and the creditors are awarded the benefit of this payment, and their right thereto is worked out either through West or against the property itself. This decree does Mrs. Byrd no injustice, although she was not a party to the bankruptcy proceeding, because she has no right to have the mortgage lien on her home discharged, in whole or in part, by a payment of money by her husband to which his creditors are entitled.
The decree of the court below is therefore affirmed.
