CUMBERLAND GLASS MANUFACTURING COMPANY v. DE WITT AND COMPANY
No. 191
Supreme Court of the United States
Argued March 10, 1915. Decided May 10, 1915.
237 U. S. 447
ERROR TO COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MARYLAND.
MR. JUSTICE DAY, while not differing from the general views taken by the court, is of opinion that the nature of the inquiry under § 15 made it proper that all the questions should be answered.
MR. JUSTICE MCREYNOLDS took no part in the consideration or decision of this case.
CUMBERLAND GLASS MANUFACTURING COMPANY v. DE WITT AND COMPANY.
ERROR TO COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MARYLAND.
No. 191. Argued March 10, 1915.—Decided May 10, 1915.
A plea of former judgment in a Federal court adjudicating a right of Federal origin, asserts a right which if denied makes the case reviewable here under § 237, Judicial Code. Deposit Bank v. Frankfort, 191 U. S. 499.
The effect of a composition proceeding as provided in the Bankruptcy Act is to substitute that proceeding for the bankruptcy proceeding and in a measure to supersede the latter, and, when the composition is confirmed, to reinvest the bankrupt with all his property free from claims of his creditors.
Composition proceedings arise from the bankruptcy proceedings and this part of the statute is to be construed with the entire act. Wilmot v. Mudge, 103 U. S. 217.
The restoration of his estate to the bankrupt after a composition restores to him the right of action upon choses in action. Cf. Stone v. Jenkins, 176 Massachusetts, 544.
The object of the set-off provision in § 68-a of the Bankruptcy Act is to permit the statement of accounts between the bankrupt and his creditor with a view to the application of the doctrine of set-off between mutual debts and credits; it is permissive rather than mandatory, does not enlarge the doctrine of set-off and cannot be invoked where the general principles of set-off would not justify it.
The set-off provision in § 68-a of the Bankruptcy Act is not self-
After composition had been affirmed by the Bankruptcy Court against the opposition of a creditor, a claim against whom by the bankrupt had been scheduled as an asset, the creditor, without applying to the District Court to set off the mutual claims, accepted the composition dividend, after which the bankrupt sued on the scheduled claim. Held that:
The effect of the composition was to reinvest the bankrupt with all of his assets including the right to maintain a suit on the choses of actions including this claim against this creditor.
There was no automatic set-off under § 68-a of the Bankruptcy Act.
The effect of the composition was not to extinguish the claim of the bankrupt against the creditor on his claim against the latter and there was no adjudication that could be pleaded as res judicata in a Federal court, and the state court did not err in respect to any Federal question in rejecting the plea of res judicata.
120 Maryland, 381, affirmed
THE facts, which involve the construction and application of certain provisions of the Bankruptcy Act in regard to appeals of mutual claims of the bankrupt and the creditors, are stated in the opinion.
Mr. Henry H. Dinneen and Mr. Arthur L. Jackson for plaintiff in error.
Mr. Thomas G. Hayes and Mr. Lewis W. Lake for defendant in error.
MR. JUSTICE DAY delivered the opinion of the court.
Defendant in error, Charles De Witt, trading as Charles De Witt & Company, plaintiff in the court below and hereinafter spoken of as the plaintiff, brought his action in the Superior Court of Baltimore City, Maryland, to recover of the Cumberland Glass Manufacturing Company, hereinafter called the Glass Company, upon the ground that De Witt, having entered into a written contract with the Mallard Distilling Company of New
Summing up the defenses made in the state court, the Maryland Court of Appeals said (120 Maryland, 386) “The defendant interposed three pleas—first that it did not commit the wrong alleged; secondly, limitations; thirdly res judicata, based upon certain proceedings had in the United States District Court for Maryland, and particularly set out in the pleas.”
The Federal question, which is the basis of jurisdiction here, arises upon the plea of res judicata to which a demurrer was sustained in the Maryland court of original jurisdiction which judgment was affirmed by the Court of Appeals. This presents a Federal question because the plea of former judgment in a Federal court adjudicating a right of Federal origin, asserts a right which if denied made the case reviewable here under
From this plea, it appears that the plaintiff, trading as Charles De Witt and Company, was adjudicated a bankrupt in the United States District Court of Maryland, on the eighth day of February, 1910; that in the list of creditors, plaintiff listed the Glass Company as a creditor in the sum of $790.03 (which claim was upon a
Further, “that under and by virtue of the provisions of
As it was the effect of the judgment of the state court to deny this plea of res judicata, it will be necessary to consider somewhat the nature of the proceeding.
Under
The nature of composition proceedings is nowhere better stated than by Judge Lowell in In re Lane, 125 Fed. Rep. 772, 773, in which it is said:
“The case of composition is in some respects exceptional. It is a proceeding voluntary on both sides, by which the debtor of his own motion offers to pay his creditors a certain percentage of their claims in exchange for a release from his liabilities. The amount offered may be less or more than would be realized through distribution in bankruptcy by the trustee. The creditors may accept this offer or they may refuse it. For the purposes of the composition all the creditors are treated as a class, and the will of the majority is enforced upon the minority, provided the decision of the majority is approved by the court. Except for this coercion of the minority, the intervention of the court of bankruptcy would hardly be necessary. Section 12-e (30 Stat. 550 [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 3427]) provides: ‘Upon the confirmation of a composition, the consideration shall be distributed as the judge shall direct, and the case dismissed. Whenever a composition is not confirmed, the estate shall be administered in bankruptcy as herein provided.’ Composition is thus treated, even in the act, as in some respects outside of bankruptcy. In the ordinary case of distribution by a trustee, the debtor‘s whole property, save that which is exempt, is applicable to the payment of his debts and belongs to his creditors, and not to him, until their claims have been satisfied. After adjudication there is no voluntary offer to pay by the bankrupt, and no bargained release by the creditor. The creditor takes all his debtor‘s property whether the debtor likes it or
not. . . . The bankrupt‘s rights of property arise only in the event of a payment of his creditors in full. If a creditor will not prove his claim, the bankrupt does not take that creditor‘s share, but it goes to swell the dividends of creditors more diligent. Section 66 of the act (30 Stat. 564 [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 3448]) has the same purpose, and does not apply to composition. But if the composition is paid the creditors have no further claim upon the debtor or his property. In a composition the creditor gets, not his share of the bankrupt‘s estate, but what he bargained for, and he has no right to claim more.”
The effect of the composition proceeding is to substitute composition for bankruptcy proceedings in a certain sense, and in a measure to supersede the latter proceeding, and to reinvest the bankrupt with all his property free from the claims of his creditors. True the composition proceedings arise from the bankruptcy proceedings, and this part of the statute is to be construed with the entire act. Wilmot v. Mudge, 103 U. S. 217. That the restoration of the estate to the bankrupt restores to him his right of action upon choses in action there is no question. Stone v. Jenkins, 176 Massachusetts, 544.
With this general view of the nature and effect of composition proceedings, we come to a consideration of
It hence appears that the object of this section was to give the District Court the right to apply the established principles of set-off to mutual credits, when its action was invoked for that purpose.
The language of the act indicates the necessity of action by the court, for the statute provides that “the account shall be stated” and the one debt set off against the other and the balance only allowed to be paid. This statute recognizes the nature of set-off, as established in common law and equitable procedure.
“By the civil law, when there are cross-claims between a plaintiff and defendant which are so connected with each other that the establishment of one can legitimately defeat, reduce, or modify the other, the defendant is always entitled to insist that his own claim shall be liti-
gated with that of the plaintiff; that both shall be disposed of by one sentence; and that the plaintiff‘s recovery shall be limited to what he shall be entitled to, if anything, as the result of adjusting both claims and striking a balance, if necessary, between them; and he does this by bringing a cross-action (reconventio). Mutual debts do not, indeed, properly constitute cross-claims by the civil law, for they extinguish each other ipso jure, and the party alone in whose favor the balance is, has a claim which can be enforced by action, and his claim is only to the extent of such balance. Therefore a defendant who, at common law, would have recourse to a statutory set-off, would not, by the civil law, bring a cross-action, but he would plead payment (compensatio). Nor is a defendant, who has a genuine cross-claim, bound to assert it by a cross-action; he may assert it by a wholly separate and independent action. How, then, does a cross-action differ from one which is not a cross-action, and which nevertheless is brought by a defendant against a plaintiff? It is conceived that the essential difference is in the judgment. If a defendant wishes to have his own claim and the plaintiff‘s disposed of by one sentence, in the manner before stated, he brings a cross-action. If he wishes to have his own claim disposed of by a separate sentence, and without any reference to the plaintiff‘s claim, he brings a separate action. In the latter case he may of course choose his own time for suing, and his own court, and may prosecute his action slowly or speedily, as he sees fit, and without any reference to the plaintiff‘s action; but in the former case, as he wishes to have his action and the plaintiff‘s disposed of together, he must comply with the conditions necessary for that purpose.” Langdell, Equity Pleading, § 118.
In the present case, the Glass Company made no attempt to invoke the action of the District Court in the bankruptcy proceedings. If it had the right to do so,
We have no means of knowing what the court would have held had it been asked to order a set-off of the bankrupt‘s claim for damages against the creditor‘s claim upon a promissory note. (See Libby v. Hopkins, 104 U. S. 303; In re Becker Bros., 139 Fed. Rep. 366; Palmer v. Day, 2 Q. B. 618; and the discussion of the subject in Morgan v. Wordell, 178 Massachusetts, 350.) We need not, therefore, inquire what that court would have done had its action been properly invoked, nor whether the Glass Company could have refused the amount of the composition and applied to the District Court for an order of set-off, nor what would be the right of the Glass Company had it refused to take the composition and undertaken to set off its debt when sued in this case. Indeed, the Glass Company in this suit denied and contested the validity of the plaintiff‘s claim. Nor need we discuss the right of the Glass Company to set off this claim had it tried to do so in the state court.
The question arose in that way in Wasey v. Whitcomb, 167 Michigan, 58, in which a suit was brought by the trustee in bankruptcy to recover upon a claim in the
There is lacking in this case the first and most essential element of res judicata; namely, former judgment of a competent court, adjudicating the matter in controversy between the parties, yet res judicata in the bankruptcy court by the former proceedings was the sole contention of Federal right here put in issue.
As already said, it appears in this plea, that the Glass Company took the amount of the composition, twenty per cent. of its full debt, after the composition had been carried by the majority of the creditors, and approved by the court. If, as is now contended, set-off had been automatically worked between these opposing claims, one would substantially have satisfied the other, and the Glass Company would be in no position to claim or receive the dividend that it did receive in the composition. It certainly cannot maintain these inconsistent positions. This point was adjudicated under the former Bankruptcy Act, which for this purpose is substantially the same as the present one, in the case of Hunt v. Holmes, decided in the District Court of Massachusetts, 16 N. B. Rep. 101; S. C., Fed. Cas. 6,890, in which the opinion was by Judge
So, in this case, although the composition was carried, as the plea avers, against the objection of the Glass Company, it made no attempt to have the set-off adjudicated in the bankruptcy court, made no opposition to the confirmation of the composition as was its right if it saw fit to do, and took and holds its proportion of the composition offered, in the same manner as other creditors.
As the only Federal question is presented because of the alleged res judicata in the District Court, and for the reasons stated that plea was not good, it follows that there is no error of a Federal nature in the judgment of the Court of Maryland, and the same is
Affirmed.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WHITE, with whom concurred MR. JUSTICE HUGHES, MR. JUSTICE LAMAR and MR. JUSTICE MCREYNOLDS, dissenting.
I am unable to conclude that the plaintiff in error, the
I am admonished that it may be that my view is obscured by what seems to me the wrongful result which the judgment below accomplishes, that is, allowing De Witt as a result of the bankruptcy to hold on to and enforce as against the Glass Company his surrendered claim for damages while at the same time treating the bankruptcy as having relieved him of the duty of paying for the goods bought; that is to say, not confining him to doing that which he contemplated when he refused to pay for the goods, to set off his alleged claim for damages against the price, but permitting him to obtain the goods of the company practically without paying for them and at the same time to recover the full amount of his damage claim.
The views which control my judgment in the case are covered by two general propositions which I state separately.
(a) Did the bankrupt law confer upon the Glass Company the right to have the scheduled claim against it for damages when liquidated set off against the debt which it proved for the price of the goods by it sold? That the comprehensive provisions of §§ 68a and b of the bankrupt law relating to set-offs and counter claims are coincident with the scope of the act and therefore give the power to the bankruptcy court to determine whether or not the right of set-off exists as between all and any claims required to be surrendered as assets of the estate on the one hand and all debts proved against the estate on the other is, I submit, self-evident, for to hold to the contrary would deprive the bankruptcy court of authority to exert its powers over matters to which its jurisdiction in the nature of things
(b) Was the effect of the composition to prevent the set-off or to relieve the duty concerning it expressly commanded by the statute?
The only theory upon which this question can be answered in the affirmative must be the conception that a composition completely terminates bankruptcy and that therefore whatever rights or duties arose from the bankrupt law which were not fully executed when the composition took place passed out of existence and therefore the
In West v. Baker, 1 Ex. D. 44, the facts were these: West was adjudicated a bankrupt and a composition was accepted by his creditors and the bankruptcy was annulled. Under a provision of the bankrupt act on the approval of the composition the property was turned over to a trustee, presumably for his security as he had advanced the sum necessary to enable the bankrupt to pay to his creditors the amount offered in composition. This trustee then in the name of the bankrupt sued one Baker to recover an amount claimed to be due from Baker for work and labor done for him by West before the bankruptcy. By way of defense it was pleaded that before the adjudication in bankruptcy West was indebted to Baker for debts and damages which were provable in bankruptcy against the bankrupt estate and which could have been set off in bankruptcy against the claim of West and therefore the defendant, Baker, was entitled as a defense to the suit to set off his claim against the one which the trustee in the name of West sought in the suit to enforce. A demurrer to the plea was overruled, the views of the court being stated as follows:
“Kelly, C. B. . . . The whole estate of the bankrupt was undisposed of; and the Court has power under the 81st section, in the case of an adjudication being annulled, to order that the property of the debtor shall vest in such person as the Court may appoint, or, in default of such appointment, revert to the bankrupt. This latter has not been done; but the court has transferred the whole estate of the bankrupt to the plaintiff, no doubt in consideration of the plaintiff having guaranteed a dividend of 7s. 6d. in the pound. Does this transfer
entitle the plaintiff to recover debts freed from the right of the debtor to set off such claims as the present? I think not; because in bankruptcy the debtor could have set off this very claim; and if the Court has transferred to the plaintiff all the authority itself had, that was to sue the defendant subject to the right to set off not only any specific sum, but any claim to unliquidated damages provable under bankruptcy. If this were otherwise, much injustice would be done. I apprehend the substance of the clauses of the Act is, that what passed to the plaintiff was a right to receive debts, but subject to the right to set off counter claims whether of specific sums or of unliquidated damages provable in bankruptcy. . . . “Cleasby, B. . . . The question is, whether the effect of the 28th section was to alter the status of the defendant because of the substitution of a scheme of settlement for the bankruptcy. On looking at the section the effect appears to be that, instead of the trustee dealing with the estate, the creditors shall be at liberty to accept a composition. This, though accompanied by the annulling of the bankruptcy, does not take the matter out of the Bankruptcy Court, so as to prevent the general rules of bankruptcy applying, or alter the position of the parties except so far as it may be altered by the agreement they have come to to take the composition instead of the estate. By § 28 the provisions of a composition or general scheme made in pursuance of the Act may be enforced by the Court in a summary manner, and are to be binding on all the creditors so far as relates to any debts due to them and provable under the Bankruptcy Act. That clearly shows that the Bankruptcy Court still retains the scheme under its control, and therefore it is subject to the ordinary rules of that court as to set-off.”
In Ex parte Howard National Bank, 2 Lowell, 487, S. C., Fed. Cas. No. 6,764, without going into detail, the case was this: There was a bankruptcy and a composition.
“I have treated this as a case between an assignee and a creditor, because the bankrupt in a composition case stands, as to set-off, in the position of an assignee; if none has been appointed.” In other words, treating the allowance of the composition as having, so to speak, irrevocably stereotyped the rights of the parties in conformity with the bankrupt law and to the end that its purposes might be carried out, the bankrupt holding under the composition was treated for such purposes as but an assignee in bankruptcy and therefore so far as set-off was concerned as having no greater right under the composition than existed in the bankruptcy in favor of the estate at the time the composition was made.
These cases as well as the principles upon which they rest clearly make manifest the fact that it was not only within the power but it was the duty of the court below as an inevitable result of the liquidation of the claim against the Glass Company which it made to treat the set-off as accomplished since that result was necessary to give vitality to the order of composition and to secure the right of set-off which inhered in the nature of the title given by the bankruptcy court to the bankrupt as the
This in my judgment leaves it necessary only to consider the assertion that even although the right was secured by the bankrupt law and even although that right was preserved by the composition and inhered in the very nature of the title which the composition passed, it nevertheless does not here exist because of what was done at the time the composition was adopted. This rests upon the theory that as the Glass Company took the dividend upon its claim and did not insist upon a liquidation of the claim in damages held by the bankrupt estate, it therefore waived any right to future set-off concerning said claim. I must confess I find difficulty
For these reasons I dissent, and am authorized to say that Mr. Justice Hughes, Mr. Justice Lamar, and Mr. Justice McReynolds concur in this dissent.
