205 F. 240 | 1st Cir. | 1913
This appeal is brought by a trustee in bankruptcy. The judgment he seeks to reverse granted a petition brought by the bankrupt’s mother for an order directing the trustee to convey to her certain real estate, which, having long ago paid the bankrupt for it, she has since occupied as hers, but the record title to which has been inadvertently left in him.
The facts material to our decision were alleged in the petition, and admitted by a “demurrer,” which was heard and sustained by the referee, in the first instance. A petition for review brought the matter before the District Court in the same form, and it was there agreed by the parties that judgment upon the demurrer should be final so far as the District Court was concerned; the trustee thus waiving his right to answer the petition in the event of the demurrer being over
The material facts are thus stated in the opinion of the learned judge of the District Court:
“Some ten years before Snelling’s bankruptcy the petitioner orally purchased. of him certain real estate, which she .has since been in exclusive possession of, and upon which she has made valuable improvements. She paid for the property in full, but by inadvertence * :s * no conveyance was ever made to her, so that the legal title still stands in the bankrupt’s name.”
The trustee relies upon the additions made to section 47a (2) by the amendments of 1910. Act June 25, 1910, c. 412, § 8, 36 Stat. 840 (U. S. Comp. St. Supp. 1911, p. 1500). Without amending section 70a, there w.ere then inserted in section 47a, a section purporting to deal, not with the title, but with the duties of trustees, provisions vesting-trustees with certain “rights, remedies and powers’-’ as to the bankrupt’s property. These are differently defined according as the property in question is “in the custody or coming into the custody of the bankruptcy court” or “not in the custody of the bankruptcy court.” The first inquiry is: In which of these categories does the property here in question belong? The District Court held the land not in its •custody, and the trustee contends that this was error.
The trustee relies here upon Mueller v. Nugent, 184 U. S. 1, 14, 22 Sup. Ct. 269, 275 (46 L. Ed. 405), and insists that:
“On adjudication, title to tne bankrupt’s property became vested in the trustee (sections 21e, 70), with actual or constructive possession, and placed in the custody of the bankruptcy court.”
We are unable to adopt this construction of the provisions referred to. If, in most states, they would accomplish the result for which the trustee contends, they would do so because under the laws of those states a judgment creditor with an unsatisfied execution has rights which he could not claim under Massachusetts laws. We find no decision which has adopted such a construction when the local law applying has been like that applying here. In Sparks v. Weatherly, 58 South. 280, the Supreme Court of Alabama held that a bankruptcy trustee could not maintain a bill to reach and sell land held adversely under an unrecorded deed from the bankrupt, given more than four months before the bankruptcy, notwithstanding the provisions of section 47a as amended; the state law giving a judgment creditor no lien before his execution had been delivered to the sheriff, and it not appearing that the trustee represented any judgment creditor with a lien and without notice of the unrecorded deed.
We agree with the learned District Judge in finding nothing in the Bankruptcy Act, as it stands at present, which must be understood to give a trustee the full beneficial ownership of land whereof the bankrupt has the bare legal title only, or as impairing the right of the equitable owner, under the law of the state, to hold such land against all claims except those of an actually attaching or levying judgment creditor, and against those claims if the creditor can be charged with notice. There can be no doubt that the present petitioner’s rights in the land include everything except the bare legal title, in view of her having once paid the bankrupt in full for all his interest in the premises, and having subsequently, from a time so long anterior to the bankruptcy, exercised all the apparent rights of ownership.
The judgment of the District Court is affirmed, and the appellee recovers costs in this court.