9 F.2d 43 | 8th Cir. | 1925
This controversy reaches this court both by appeal and by petition to revise. As questions of fact are involved in the review here Mid as only questions of law can be considered upon a petition to revise, the petition to revise is dismissed and the case considered as upon the appeal.
The appeal is from a decree affirming an order of a referee in bankruptcy upon what is, in effect, a petition for reclamation of property in the possession of the trustee. The property originally involved was a stock of merchandise belonging to the bankrupt, who conducted a store in a small town in Colorado. When the petilion in bankruptcy was filed, this merchandise was in possession of a state sheriff under an execution levied on a judgment secured in the state court by appellant. The trustee procured an injunction preventing sale under the above execution and an order requiring the sheriff to turn the merchandise over to him. Having thus obtained possession, the trustee sold the merchandise and is holding the proceeds to await the result of this petition of reclamation.
Several questions of law and others of fact have been presented hero but we find it necessary to determine but one question of fact, since that is decisive of the controversy. The rights of appellant are based solely upon the lien of the execution on the judgment secured by appellant in the state court. This judgment was secured and this execution levied within four months prior to filing the petition in bankruptcy. In our opinion, the bankrupt was, at those times, known to be insolvent by appellant. Therefore, the lien claimed is a preference, within the meaning of the Bankruptcy Act (Comp. St. §§ 9585-9656), and must be declared void as against the trustee.
The substance of the evidence as to insolvency and the knowledge of appellant as to such is as-follows:
The bankrupt was a merchant in the small town of Branson, Colorado. During fonr or five years ho had been engaged in business, he had accumulated a stock of merchandise,
This status was known to appellant. More than a- month before appellant secured its judgment in the state court, it knew that the bankrupt was involved and could not meet his obligations. Acting in conjunction with three other creditors, it sent an agent to Branson who stayed in this store, watched its sales and applied the cash receipts to its debts. In this way, more than one thousand dollars was secured and thus applied. The bankrupt was continuously up to the time the sheriff took possession, pleading with appellant for time and opportunity to work * out of his difficulties. It is clear that the agent was sent to Branson to watch the business, secure what payments he could and try to work out these debts owing by the bankrupt. It is clear,' also, that appellant got all the money it could from the operation of the, business and when it had so done sought to levy upon the entire stock to secure the balance due it and the three other creditors for which it was also acting. We have no doubt that the appellant knew the hopeless state of the bankrupt at that time.
The referee found that the bankrupt was solvent at the time of the levy. The trial court expressly declined to rule upon the question of insolvency, sustaining the referee upon other grounds, which we have not discussed. Appellant contends that this court must accept the finding of the referee as to solvency. This is an equitable proceeding and we may examine the entire record. Nor are we faced with the situation that the finding of the referee is affirmed by the trial court. We entertain no doubt of our right and duty to examine the record and determine this matter of fact therefrom. In its reply brief, appellant states that all of the evidence is not in the transcript. The certificate of the clerk is to the contrary.
The decree should be and is affirmed.