196 F. 970 | W.D. Ky. | 1912
This action in equity by a trustee in bankruptcy was commenced on March 9, 1912, and upon a very elaborate statement in the bill the complainant prayed as follows, namely:
“(a) That the said defendants hereto, and each of them, be compelled to answer each and every allegation in this bill contained (but not under oath, which is hereby waived) as fully as if directly interrogated as to each.
“(b) That the aforesaid deed of conveyance from George Minims and wife to the Planters’ Trust Company of May 2, 1911, and of record in the aforesaid Todd county (Ky.) court clerk’s office in Deed Book .34, p. 264, be declared to he a mortgage, and that said mortgage be declared a preference denounced by the present Bankruptcy Act, and voidable by this plaintiff, and that said mortgage be annulled, vacated, set aside, and declared void, and that said realty bo declared to belong to this plaintiff free from said deed and from any claim or lien of any sort on the part of the defendants hereto, or either of them, and that said writing of May 2, 1911, between said Planters' Trust Company and said Minims be treated as part of the aforesaid deed, and in the same wise, and he so decreed against.
“(c) That this plaintiff have such further and other relief and decree in the premises as to the court may seem proper and required by the principles of equity and good conscience.”
This relief is sought under clauses “a” and “b,” § 60, of the Bankruptcy Act, which are as follows:
“(a) A person shall be deemed to have given a preference if, being insolvent, he has, within four months before the filing of the petition, or after the filing of the petition and before the adjudication, procured or suffered a judgment to be entered against himself in favor of aiiy person, or made a transfer of any of his property, and the effect of the enforcement of such judgment or transfer will be to enable any one of his creditors to obtain a greater percentage of his debt than any other of such creditors of the same class. Where the preference consists of a transfer, such period of four months shall not expire until four months after the date of the recording or registering of the transfer, if by law such recording or registering is required.
“(b) If a bankrupt shall have procured or suffered a judgment to be entered against him in favor of any person or have made a transfer of any of his property, and if, at the time of the transfer, or of the entry of the judgment, or of the reeordihg or registering of the transfer if by law recording or registering thereof is required, and being within four months before the filing of the petition in bankruptcy or after the filing thereof and before the adjudication, the bankrupt be insolvent and the judgment or transfer then operate as a preference, and the person receiving it or to be benefited thereby, or bis agent acting therein, shall then have reasonable cause to believe that the enforcement of such judgment or transfer would effect a preference, it shall be voidable by the trustee and he may recover the property or its value from such person. And for the purpose of such recovery any court of bankruptcy, as hereinbefore defined, and any state court which would have had jurisdiction if bankruptcy had not intervened, shall have concurrent jurisdiction.”
“That process issue herein against all the defendants; that they be required to appear herein and interplead, if any adverse claim they make or 'have against the plaintiff’s right, title, or interest in said land; that they be required to set up same herein, and it prays that the court adjudicate the same; it prays that its title to the said lands be established, and put at rest by a judgment of this court, and be forever quieted against any and every claim of the defendants adverse thereto, and finally it prays for its costs and all proper relief.”
This prayer is based upon section 11 of the Kentucky Statutes, which reads thus:
“It shall and may be lawful for any person, having both the legal title and possession of lands, to institute and prosecute suit, by petition in equity in the circuit court of the county where the lands or some part of them may lie, against any other person setting up claims thereto; and if the plaintiff shall be able to establish and does establish his title to said land, the defendant shall be, by the court, ordered and decreed to release his claim thereto.”
In Gordon v. Gilfoil, 99 U. S. at page 178, 25 L. Ed. 383, the Supreme Court said:
“The suggestion was that, as the proceedings in the order of seizure and sale were still pending in the district' court, the debt could not be prosecuted in the Circuit Court of. the United States. But it has been frequently held that the pendency of a suit in a state court is no ground even for a plea in abatement to a suit upon the same matter in a federal court. What effect the bringing of this suit via ordinaria may have had on the order of seizure and sale it is not necessary to determine. It is possible that it superseded it. But the pendency of that proceeding, when the suit was commenced, cannot effect the validity of the proceedings in this suit, nor-the jurisdiction of the court in repect thereof.”
In view, however, of many decisions since rendered enforcing the rule of comity between courts of concurrent jurisdiction, it would be vain to inquire whether that language is to be taken literally in any case not strictly in personam.
Whatever other courts have said our present inquiry must bear close relation to the following propositions laid down by the Circuit Court of Appeals of this circuit in Phelps v. Mutual Reserve Fund Life Association, 112 Fed. at pages 464, 465, 50 C. C. A. at page 351, 61 L. R. A. 717, where it was said:
“It Is a rule of almost universal application that between courts of the same .sovereignty and concurrent jurisdiction the court which first acquires jurisdiction of the controversy or of the res should be suffered by every other court to decide every question within the sphere of the pending cause, and to continue in the possession of the subject-matter of the controversy until every question before it shall be decided and the res discharged from its control. This rule has its foundation, perhaps, in comity; but the fruits of its recognition have been so beneficent, when applied to coxirts of concurrent jurisdiction created by different sovereignties, as to justify the conclusion that it is not only a rule of comity, but one of necessity. The eases are numerous which recognize its binding force and illustrate its wide application. No useful purpose will be subserved in making quotations from them.”
Did the state court first “acquire jurisdiction of the controversy”? Is the claim presented by the bill in this case “within the sphere of the cause” pending in the Todd circuit court? — are the two dominant questions which must be determined upon a consideration of the relief sought by the two suits, respectively, as indicated by the prayers above set forth in connection with the statutes upon which the separate suits are founded. Nor must we fail to bear in mind that this is not a controversy involving a mere pecuniary liability, but is one at least quasi in rem, although no seizure of a res has actually been made. The controversy affects the title to a res — the land — and all the evils which might result from conflicting judgments respecting that res by two courts of different sovereignties but of concurrent jurisdiction over the subject-matter are at least possible. ,It may be that there is a difference in the phrase “having both the legal title and possession of lands,” used in section 11 of the Kentucky Statutes, and the averments of the petition filed in the Todd circuit court, •wherein the plaintiff in that suit asserts “that it is the owner of and is now in the possession of the” real estate, but whether this departure in the pleading from the precise language of section 11 is material for present purposes we shall not inquire, though we hardly think it can be.
It appears from the transcript of the record in the state court suit which accompanies the plea that a defendant in that suit, namely, W. G. Davis, trustee, the complainant in this action, filed an answer therein at the December term, 1911, in which he put in issue all the material averments made against him in the petition of the Planters' Trust Company, the plaintiff in that suit. Davis, the trustee, in his answer in the state court, after admitting the adjudication in bankruptcy of Minims & Parham and his own appointment as their trustee, proceeds to aver that within four months next preceding the adjudication the bankrupt, Mimms, and his wife, had conveyed the real estate in controversy to the Planters’ Trust Company by a deed which on its face purported to convey it in fee simple at the price of $60 per acre, but that said bankrupt, being at that time and previously thereto indebted to the Planters’ Trust Company in large sums, simultaneously with the execution of the deeds received from the said Planters’ Trust Company another writing, whereby the latter agreed to sell the land back to the said bankrupt vendor within a limited period at the same price, and the trustee proceeds to aver that in reality the parties did not intend that the deed should convey the fee-simple title, but intended that the two papers together should create a mortgage on the land to secure the payment of the antecedent indebtedness, and therefore, as the mortgage was void under the Bankruptcy Act, the title to the laud passed to him. The last-described writing is set forth in full in the answer of the defendant, Davis, trustee. True, these allegations were made in support of that part of the answer of the
The pleading of Davis, trustee, filed in the state court, further states:
“Defendant says by reason of tbe aforesaid that tbe plaintiff tbe Planters’ Trust Company is not tbe owner of said real estate, and is not now in possession of same, and bas never been tbe owner of said real estate under said alleged deed of conveyance, and bas never bad tbe possession or any possession thereof.
“Defendant, still answering, says, further, that long prior to tbe institution of this suit on tbe 31st day of October, 1911, to wit, on tbe 29th day of August, 1911, certain creditors of George Mimms and certain creditors of tbe firm of Mimms & Parham instituted their respective proceedings in tbe federal court in tbe United States District Court for tbe Western District of Kentucky in tbe Owensboro division, seeking to have the said George Mimms and the said firm of Mimms & Parham adjudged bankrupts, and that tbe said Mimms and tbe said firm were, pursuant thereto, duly adjudged bankrupts, as is heretofore herein fully alleged, and this trustee, in regular order, pursuant to said adjudication, was elected trustee; that he reported to tbe referee to whom this cause was referred tbe facts and circumstances relative to tbe history of tbe title to tbe real estate hereinbefore fully described; and that, upon orders duly made, a suit bas been instituted in tbe said District Court before tbe honorable referee in bankruptcy, reciting all said facts and seeking to set aside tbe alleged conveyance from the said George Mimms to tbe firm of Mimms & Parham, and that said suit is now pending in said court, and the plaintiff herein and all necessary parties hereto are before tbe court in that proceeding.
“He says, further, that there is involved in tbe said proceeding in tbe said federal court, not only tbe question as to the title to tbe real estate, but that that court has in its custody and jurisdiction all tbe personal estate of the said bankrupts George Mimms and the firm of Mimms & Parham; that be is advised that it will be contended by plaintiff herein that in its alleged purchase of real estate it canceled certain indebtedness and obligations between George Mimms and itself, for which it bad security by liens of some kind on personal' property, and. that, in tbe event tbe deed is set aside, plaintiff will then endeavor to go back on personal property and assert its claim and lien thereon, and that for this reason equity demands that this said court relin-*975 quisli all alleged jurisdiction herein and abate this action pending the action in the aforesaid United States court.
“Defendant denies each and every allegation of plaintiff’s petition herein relative to the claims of V. G. Davis as an individual; but says, on the contrary, that he acts in this matter as trustee as is alleged in plaintiff’s petition, and not otherwise.
“Wherefore, having fully answered plaintiff’s petition, defendant prays judgment that this cause be abated, and that it await the action and proceeding in (he United States District Court; that finally said cause be dismissed, and stricken from the docket, and for his costs and all proper and equitable relief to which he may be entitled in the premises.”
As will be seen, the “suit” in this court referred to in the foregoing- extract was brought before the referee in the bankruptcy proceeding proper. That officer rendered a judgment therein. A review by the court of this judgment was sought, and after a full hearing the ruling of the referee was reversed and set aside on February 3, 1912, upon reasons stated in an opinion reported in Re Mimms & Parham (D. C.) 193 Fed. 276, wherein the character of that “suit” was fully described. Briefly stated, the reason upon which the court acted was that the summary proceeding before the referee in the bankruptcy case was not authorized by law, and gave the referee no jurisdiction over the property because it was claimed adversely by the Planters’ Trust Company, under which state of case the controversy could only be litigated in a plenary suit inter partes. Indeed, it was altogether clear that-the referee had no jurisdiction to entertain or determine the “suit” referred to. After the judgment to which we have referred Davis brought this suit.
The claim was also made by the trustee in his answer in the state court that the bankruptcy court had acquired jurisdiction of all the bankrupt’s estate, and that the title thereto passed to the trustee at once. This, as a general proposition, might be quite true, but it nevertheless leaves open the question of what were, in fact, the bankrupt’s assets and property. The contentions now between the parties relate to that question, one claiming one way and the other the contrary in respect to the land. The situation being thus somewhat fully stated, we come to the question, “What is within the sphere of the cause?” in the state court — the one first commenced? Of course, if that suit had been to recover specifically named property, or if it had been one seeking to enforce a lien upon definitely described real or personal estate, or if it had been a suit for the distribution of assets, either of a partnership or of an insolvent person, or if it had been one upon other kindred causes of action, there could be no doubt that the case came within the ruling in Phelps v. Mutual Reserve Fund Rife Association. This case is not as simple as any of those to which we have alluded, and our difficulties have grown out of the provisions of section 11 of the Kentucky Statutes and section 60 of the Bankruptcy Act when considered in connection with the facts as we have stated them. As the suit in the Todd circuit court was begun first, the sufficiency of. the plea under consideration must primarily be considered under section 11 of the Kentucky Statutes, and we must ascertain whether one who has the legal title and the possession of lands can quiet his title thereto against such claims as that