after stating the facts, delivered the opinion of the court.
In
Doe
v.
Childress
(
In Scott v. Kelly (22 id. 57), it appears that the assignee in bankruptcy became a party to an attachment suit in a State court, commenced shortly before the defendant was declared a bankrupt. The attachment was issued and levied after-.the *574 adjudication. The assignee claimed the attached property, but the decision in the State court was adverse to him. Upon writ of error to this court, we said-that “ the assignee in bankruptcy voluntarily submitted himself and his eights to the jurisdiction of the State court. Being summoned, he appeared without objection, and presented-his claim for adjudication by that court. No eifort was made to remove the litigation to the courts of the United • Statés. It is now too late to object to the power of the State court to act in the premises and render judgment.!’
In
Eyster
v.
Gaff
(
These doctrines were further elaborated in Claflin v. Houseman (93 id. 180), where it was held that the assignee in bankruptcy', under the act of 1867, had authority to bring a suit in the State courts, "wherever those courts were invested with appropriate j urisdiction .suited to the nature of the case. See also Jerome v. McCarter, 94 id. 734 ; McHenry v. La Societe Francaise, 95 id. 58.
The principles announced in the foregoing cases would seem to be decisive of the main questions arising on this appeal, and we are of opinion that the decree below cannot be sustained. It rests, necessarily, upon the ground, that immediately upon the assignment of the bankrupt’s property to his assignees, the State court of chancery — although the attachments therein were sued out more than four months preceding the bankruptcy— had no jurisdiction to determine the relative rights of the attaching creditors and the assignees in ■ bankruptcy, or ■ to order a sale of the attached property, and apply the proceeds to the satisfaction of the debts of those creditors. But no such position can be maintained. It was competent for the assignees, .upon their appointment and qualification, by appropriate proceedings, directed against individual creditors, Suing in other courts, to have brought all the property in which the bankrupt had an.interest, including that attached in the suits in the State courts, under the direct control of the bankruptcy court, to be disposed of under its orders, with due - regard, however, to the previously acquired rights and equities, .in whatever way arising, of all the creditors of Kaufman. But they were not bound to pursue that course. . Consistently with the bankrupt law, as interpreted by this court, they were at liberty to appear in the State court, and assert there whatever rights they, as assignees, had in the attached property. Electing to pursue the latter course, they voluntarily submitted to the jurisdiction of the State court, which had ample authority to adjudicate, between the attaching creditors and the assignees in bankruptcy, upon all matters arising in the suits before it. Without questioning (as they do not now) the debts of the attaching creditors or the validity of their attachments, the *576 assignees became parties defendant in tbe equity suits. • They neither filed nor offered to file any formal pleading. Nor did they advise the chancery court of the attachment of Fried-lander, Stich, & Co. in the law court. They left that court to adjudge what were their rights in the property attached. Its final decree secured to them whatever surplus might remain after applying the proceeds of sale to the demands of the attaching creditors. If the bankrupt owed the attaching creditors the sums by them respectively claimed, and if the attachments were so issued and levied as, under the laws of the State, to create a valid lien upon the property, it is clear that the State court gave the assignees all that could have been awarded them.
It results from what has been said, that the sale, under that decree, — whoever became the purchasers of the attached property, whether third persons or parties to the suits, — divested the assignees of whatever interest or title they had in the property. That decree, having been passed by a court of competent jurisdiction as to parties and subject-matter, and never having been modified by the court which rendered it, or by any court having authority to review its action, the assignees áre precluded from asserting in any other court any interest or-title whatever in the property thus sold. Had the present suit been instituted directly by the assignees, for the purpose of setting aside the sale made under the order of the State court, and of procuring another sale of the attached property, under the orders of the court in bankruptcy, the proceedings in the State court would have been a conclusive answer to such an action;
Plainty, therefore, the'present suit by Friedlander, Stich, & Co. is an attempt to invoke the jurisdiction of the District Court sitting in bankruptcy, to the end that they may establish, as against other creditors of Kaufman, their priority of lien upon property, in which, as we have seen, the assignees can now assert no right or interest for the benefit of general or unsecured creditors. Whether appellees have such priority of lien in virtue of their attachment in the law court; whether the proceedings in that court were such as, under the laws of Tennessee, gave them a lien superioi to that acquired by the *577 respective attaching creditors in the suits in the chancery-court; whether, by reason of their petition addressed to the chancellor of the latter court, and his action thereon, they became, in any proper sense, parties to those suits, or bound by the decree therein rendered, or, whether their rights were altogether unaffected by that decree, — are all questions in which the assignees have now no interest. These questions concern only the respective attaching creditors in the law and chancery- courts, aird for the determination of them the present appellees may not invoke the jurisdiction-or aid of the bankruptcy court. The decree, and the sale thereunder, withdrew the attached property from the assets of the bankrupt. The property brought less than the claims of the attaching creditors ; and since the assignees cannot question,'collaterally, the proceedings in the State court, to which they voluntarily became parties, they have.no possible interest in this litigation. It is, we repeat, a contest exclusively between attaching creditors as to priority of liens upon property in the disposition of which, so far as we can “ascertain from the present record, the assignees' have-not the slightest pecuniary interest.
The decree1 of the Circuit Court will be, therefore, reversed, with directions that the petition-of Friedlander, Stich, & Co.-, filed in the District Court sitting in bankruptcy, be dismissed Avith costs to the present appellants, but Avithout prejudice to any claim they may assert, by any proper proceedings in a court of. competent jurisdiction, to a prior lien as against appellants, or others, upon the property levied upon by the attachment in the law. court of Memphis; and it is
So ordered.
