54 F. 802 | 5th Cir. | 1893
(after stating the facts.) The assignment of errors covers substantially the merits of the case, and the case presents the question 'whether the claims of David E. Oalder under the act of congress approved October 1,1890, for allowance of bounty for the production of sugar earned on the plantations of John Oalder & Co. in the year 1891, passed to the creditors of John Oal-der & Co. and David E. Oalder individually, under the insolvent laws of Louisiana, by the cession of property made and accepted on the 15 th day of .February, 1892. Prior to 1890 the production of sugar was fostered by the government of the United States by a protective tariff, which imposed such duties upon imported sugar as practically enabled the producers in this country to obtain a price for the sugar produced by them, compensatory of the cost of production; it being well understood that, without the enhanced price resulting from the tariff, sugar in quantities could only be produced in the United States at a loss to the producer. In 1890 the government of the United States, without changing its policy in respect to sugar produced, changed the method of encouraging production by practically placing sugar upon the free list, and enacting the bounty system. The law granting the bounty, so far as it is material to this case, is as follows:
“231. That on and after July first, eighteen hundred and ninety-ono, and until July first, nineteen hundred and five, there shall be paid, from any mon*804 eys in. the treasury not otherwise appropriated, under the provisions of section three thousand six hundred and eighty-nine of the Revised Statutes, to the producer of sugar testing not less than ninety degrees by the polariscope, from beets, sorghum, or sugar cane grown within the United States, a bounty of two cents per pound,.and upon such sugar testing less than ninety degrees by the polariscope, and not less than eighty degrees, a bounty of one and three fourths cents per pound, under such rules and regulations as the commissioners of internal revenue, with the approval of the secretary of the treasury, shall prescribe.
“232. The producer of said sugar, to be entitled to said bounty, shall have first filed, prior to July first of each year, with the commissioner of internal revenue, a notice of the place of production, with a general description of the machinery and methods to be employed by him, with an estimate of the amount of sugar proposed to be produced in the current or next ensuing year, including the number of maple trees to be tapped, and an application for a license to so produce, to be accompanied by a bond in a penalty and with sureties to be approved by the commissioner of internal revenue, conditioned that he will faithfully observe all rules and regulations, that shall be prescribed for such manufacture and production of sugar.” 20 St. at Large, p. 583.
It is to be noticed that the bounty offered by tbe statute is for sugar thereafter to be produced, and to those producers only who shall accept the provisions of the act, and comply with its terms, as to taking out a license, giving bond in penalty, etc. In our opinion, the “bounty,” so called in the statute, is not a pure gratuity or donation by the government, but was intended to be, and is in fact, a standing offer of reward and compensation to sugar producers, to encourage and stimulate them in the otherwise losing business of producing sugar in the United States. It was intended to be, and is in fact, a guaranty of reimbursement to sugar producers accepting the terms of the statute, of part, at least, of the cost of production. When a producer of sugar accepts the offer, and complies with the statute, it would seem to be as much a contract as it is possible for any citizen to make with the government. All the elements of a contract are present, — the terms, the consideration, and the lawful object. It is true that the government can repeal the statute, and refuse to pay the bounty earned upon sugar that has been produced under the promise, and within the statute, but so could the government do with an admitted contract for any public work. The appellants contended in the circuit court, as in this court, that the bounty offered by the government of the United States was a pure gratuity, without consideration, revocable at pleasure, and, until payment of the same is actually made, is not property, but only a hope that may or may not be realized. The judge of the circuit court, in a very clear and well-reasoned opinion, discussed the case on this line, and, citing Williams v. Heard, 140 U. S. 529-531, 11 Sup. Ct. Rep. 885, held that sugar bounty earned was property. In the cases of Comegys v. Vasse, 1 Pet. 193, and in Williams v. Heard, supra, it was held that equitable claims against our own and foreign governments, not arising under any statute, and not allowed at the gate .of bankruptcy, were expectancies coupled with an- interest, and, as such, were property rights that passed under assignment in bankruptcy, under both the bankrupt laws of 1800 and of 1867. The claim of David R. Oalder, who accepted the terms of the act for the year 1891, for sugar produced during that year, is a claim arising under a contract, — a just
“The debtor shall annex to Ms petition Ms schedule,---that is to say, a summary statement of Ms affairs, and the losses he may have experienced, — mentioning the names of Ms creditors, their places oí residence, and the amount of their respective claims; and the schedule shall, besides, contain a statement of all Ms property, as well movable as immovable, and Ms rights and actions, (except those which hereinafter are secured to him,) together with a mention of the approximate value of the property by Mm assigned.” Section 1786, Rev. St.
“The debtor is not obliged to comprehend in his surrender any property that is not subject to be seized and sold on executions against Mm.” Section 1787, Id.
“Tlis debtor is not obliged to comprehend in his surrender any property that is not subject to be seized and sold in execution against him, but, with this exception, all Ms property must be surrendered.” Article 2183, Rev. Civil Code.
“There are also tights which are merely personal, that cannot be made liable for the payment of debts, and therefore no contract respecting them comes within the provisions of this section. These are the rights of personal servitude; of use and habitation; of usufruct of the estate of the minor child; to the income of dotal property; to money due for the salary of an office, or wages, or recompense for personal services.” Article 1992, Rev. Civil Code.
The appellants contend that, under these statutes, Calder’s claim for bounty for sugar produced in 1831 did not pass to Ms creditors, because, they say, said claim was not subject to be seized and sold on execution; it was not placed upon the schedule as surrendered by the insolvent, and the claim is one for personal services, and therefore specifically exempt under section 1787. The limitation contained in section 1787 clearly applies to property exempt from execution, and does not include property which, although not exempt from execution, there is a difficulty, legal or physical, in seizing under execution. As a matter of Louisiana law, the claim of Calder against the government is one subject to seizure on execution; and while the officers of the government cannot be garnished, nor funds in their hands attached, there is no difficulty whatever, under the Louisiana .practice, in levying an execution upon 1he claim, and selling the same according to law. La. Code Pr. art 647; Flower v. Livingston, 2 Mart. (N. S.) 615; Harris v. Bank, 5 La. Ann. 538; Rightor v. Slidell, 9 La. Ann. 606; McDonald v. Insurance Co., 32 La. Ann. 596; Levy v. Acklen, 32 La. Ann. 545. In the case of West v. His Creditors, 8 Rob. (La.) 123, it was held by the supreme court of the state of Louisiana that the claim of
“The evidence shows most conclusively that this was a debt owing to West by the Mexican government, not only previous to the surrender of his property, in 1821, but to his application for a respite, in 1819. By refusing or neglecting to put it on his bilan at the latter period, or not surrendering it in 1821, when ordered, he has not acquired any right to it, nor can he, by putting the debt on his schedule when he went into bankruptcy, take it away from the syndic of the creditors, and deprive them of a fund out of which they are entitled to be paid. This debt was in fact as much given up as any other, in 1821. The books in which the entries were made, relating to it, were given up. Efforts were made to collect it, or get it recognized by the debtor. They were fruitless for a long time, but at last successful.”
It is well settled, under the insolvent laws of Louisiana, that all the debts, rights, and property of an insolvent making a cession pass to his creditors by the surrender, whether placed on the schedule or not, and the syndic may sue to recover them. . West v. His Creditors, supra; Lawrence v. Guice, 9 Rob. (La.) 219; Dwight v. Simon, 4 La. Ann. 490; Bank v. Horn, 17 How. 157; Geilinger v. Philippi, 133 U. S. 246-255, 10 Sup. Ct. Rep. 266. In the recent case of Butler v. Goreley, 146 U. S. 303, 13 Sup. Ct. Rep. 84, the supreme court affirmed the doctrine of Williams v. Heard, supra, and further held that section 3477 of the Revised Statutes of the United States, which prohibits transfers or assignments of claims upon the United States until after the allowance, the ascertainment of the amount due, and the issuing of a warrant for the payment thereof, and then provides that they shall be freely made and executed in the presence of two attesting witnesses, does not apply to assignments in insolvency, nor to other transfers by operation of law.
We are of opinion that the claim of Calder for bounty under the statute of the United States is a claim for reward and compensation, and ripened into a vested interest by compliance with the statute, and the actual production of sugar thereunder. While sugar may be, to some extent, produced by personal services, in the guise of labor, it is, in1 the main, produced by the cultivation of lands, and the use of expensive machinery; and it is a well-known fact that, under the present methods of raising sugar, capital and credit are both required to meet the necessary outlays for seed, labor, supplies, and machinery, and it would materially hamper the business if the proceeds of the crop, whether in bounty or otherwise, are not available to meet the demands of creditors who, it may be, have furnished the means which in reality produced the crop. It would therefore tend to defeat the acknowledged object of the statute to give it the narrow construction that the bounty offered for the production of sugar was intended as a mere recompense for personal services. Case v. Taylor, 23 La. Ann. 497, cited by appellants, does not appear to be applicable. In that case Taylor had leased from the state a public canal, binding himself to make certain improvements, pay over to the state certain rents, and
As to the present question, the claim, although in the name of David E. Calder, as holding the license, is really for sugar produced on the plantations of John Calder & Co., cultivated by that firm, and it should not be restricted to a claim for recompense for the personal services of David R. Calder. We are of opinion, therefore, that none of the contentions of the appellants are well taken; and we hold that the claim.of David E. Calder against the United States for bounty for sugar produced upon the plantations of John Calder & Co. during the year 1891 is property that passed by the cession in the insolvency proceedings to the syndics of John Calder <& Co. and David E. Calder individually, as a fund to be applied to the payment of creditors. The application of appellees to amend the decree of the circuit court by reinstatiug the injunction against the assistant treasurer, on the authority of Clark v. Clark, 17 How. 315, as approved in Phelps v. McDonald, 99 U. S. 298, cannot be considered, as complainants di A not appeal.
The decree appealed from is affirmed, with costs.