Charles F. Boyd Company, Inc., was adjudged bankrupt on August 20, 1920. The Director General on February 3, 1921, filed claims amounting to $2,213.70 for freight, stox-ag-e, and demur-rage accruing to the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Company during federal control. Afterwards oxx February 27, 1922, the Director General by petition claimed priority over general creditors in the distribution of the assets. No point seems to have been made before the referee or the District Court that the claim for priority was not pi’operly set up. If demurrage, freight, and storage charges in favor of the Director General are debts due to the United States, and as such are entitled to priority, the priority was inherent in the debts, and required recognition by the court when called to its attention at any time before distribution of the assets. The referee reported against the claim of priority, and the District Judge confirmed his report.
We are unable to agree with the referee and the District Judge that the debts due to the Director General were not debts due to the United States of the character given priority by section 3466 of the Revised Statutes (Comp. St. § 6372). The Supreme Court has decided otherwise. In Du Pont v. Davis (April 7, 1924)
The. question of priority of debts, other than taxes, owing to the United States in the distribution of bankrupt estates is one of difficulty. It is not to be decided on the general doctrine of priority of debts due the sovereign, for the Congress has undertaken to cover the whole subject by statutes. The act of 1797 (R. S. § 3466 [Comp. St. § 6372]), provides:
“Whenever any person indebted to the United States is insolvent, or whenever the estate of any deceased debtor, in the hands of the executors or administrators, is insufficient to pay all the debts due from the deceased, the debts due to the United States shall be first satisfied; and the priority hereby established shall extend as weil to cases in which a debtor, not having sufficient property to pay all his debts, makes a voluntary assignment thereof, or in which the estate and effects of an absconding, concealed or absent debtor are attached by process of law, as to cases in which an act of bankruptcy is committed.”
By virtue of this statute the United States
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had a preference in the payment of its debts under any of the conditions mentioned in the statute, but not in a- distribution which for any reason did not come within the statute. United States v. Oklahoma,
The bankruptcy statute of 1867 (R. S. § 5101) provided the following order of priorities :
“In the order for a dividend, the following claims shall be entitled to priority, and to be first paid in full in the following order:
“First. - The fees, costs, and expenses of suits, and of the several proceedings in bankruptcy under this title,' and for the custody of property, as herein provided.
“Second. All debts due to the United States, and all taxes and assessments under the laws thereof.
“Third. All debts due to the state in which the proceedings in bankruptcy are pending, and all taxes and assessments made under the laws thereof.
“Fourth. Wages due to any operative, clerk, or house servant, to an amount not exceeding fifty dollars, for labor performed within six months next preceding the first publication of the notice of proceedings in bankruptcy.
“Fifth. All debts due to any persons, who, by the laws of the United States, are, or may be, entitled to a priority, in like manner as if the provisions of this title had not been adopted. But nothing contained in this title shall interfere with the assessment and collection of taxes by the authority of the United States or any state.”
Thus not only taxes, but all debts due the United States, were given priority over all other liabilities, except costs and expenses of bankruptcy proceedings. In other words the priority given all debts due to the United States by R. S. § 3466, was sanctioned and re-enacted by the bankruptcy statute of 1867 (14 Stat. 517). As the court said in Lewis, Trustee v. United States,
What limitation, if any, in the distribution of bankrupt assets, did the subsequent Bankruptcy Act of 1898 (Comp. St. §§ 9585-9656) put upon the general priority given the United States under the previous statutes? The act of 1898 was intended to cover completely all matters of adjudication, administration, discharge, priorities, and distribution of assets. The statute and rules made under it supplanted and annulled all previous inconsistent statutes and rules of the courts of common law and equity. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. Bray,
The statute provides the following order of priority:
(a) The court shall order the trustee to pay all taxes legally due to the United States, state, county, district, or municipality in advance of the payment of dividends to creditors.
(b) Debts to have priority, except as herein provided, and to be paid in full, and the order of payment shall be: “(4) wages due to workmen, clerks, traveling or city salesmen or servants, which have been earned within three months before the date of the commencement of the proceedings; and (5) debts owing to any person who by the laws of the states or the United States is entitled to priority.”-
The Congress thus took from debts due the United States, other than taxes, the priority given such debts along with taxes by the act of 1867 by leaving out of the act of 1898 other debts in providing for priority, of taxes. This seems too clear for discussion ; and so the court decided in Guarantee Co. v. Title Guaranty Co., supra. There it was held that the act of 1797, R. S. § 3466, the bankruptcy statute of 1867 (R. S. 5101) and the bankruptcy statute of 1898 must be considered in pari materia, and that in bankruptcy proceedings the act of 1898 superseded section 3466, R. S., so far as the two statutes were inconsistent.
It is argued, however, that priority is given the United States next in order to debts for wages, by section 64b (5), being Comp. St. § 9648: “Debts owing to any person who by the laws of the states or the United States is entitled to priority.” This grade of priority is not given to the United States by virtue of R. S. § 3466, unless *863 the United States falls under the designation of “any person.” The statute itself gives this definition: “(19) ‘Persons’ shall include corporations, except where otherwise specified, and officers, partnerships, and women, and when used with reference to the commission of acts which are herein forbidden shall include persons who are participants in the forbidden acts, and the agents, officers, and members of the board of directors or trustees, or other similar controlling bodies of corporations.” Section 1, cl. (19), Bankruptcy Act of 1898 (Comp. St. § 9585 [19]).
The failure to include the United States and the states in the definition could not have been inadvertent. The United States and the several states of the Union are not persons, and are not commonly thought of as persons, and if it had been intended that “persons” should have such a comprehensive and unusual moaning as to include them, the framers of the definition would have said so.
Again, when the Congress had already dealt with claims of the United States under the name of the United States, and had deliberately limited its priority to taxes, it is hardly reasonable to attribute to the Congress an intention to deal again with the claims of the United States and include them in a provision relating to debts of “any person.”
It will be noticed further that the language of subdivision (5), section 64b, of tbe act of 1898 is taken almost literally from the corresponding subdivision of the Bankruptcy Act of 1867, and in the absence of the expression of a contrary intention the language should be held to have the same meaning in the latter statute as in the former from which it was taken. In the act of 1867 “persons” in subdivision (5), It. S. § 5101, could not have been intended to include the United States because all the debts due to the United States had been provided for and given priority over all other debts of any kind by subdivision (2) of the same section.
The record of the passage of the Bankruptcy Act of 1898 is significant. The bill as passed by the Senate contained the following priorities:
“Sec. 9. That the following debts shall have preference in the order named, over other debts in the distribution of the estate of the bankrupt, to wit:
“First. Debts due to servants or laborers employed by the bankrupt. • * •
“Second. Taxes or revenues due the United States.
“Third. Taxes due any state or territory or the District of Columbia.
“Fourth. Taxes due any county. * * *
“But none of such debts shall be recognized or paid unless duly proved and allowed as prescribed in reference to other debts and claims against the bankrupt.”
All that followed the enacting clause of the Senate Bill was struck out by the committee of the House, and the House Bill with about 80 amendments was substituted. The original House Bill, as introduced and referred to the committee, contained the following as to priorities:
“Sec. 64. Debts which have priority: (a) Debts owing to the United States, a state, a county, a parish, or a municipality, after being proved and allowed, shall have priority only in the event and to the extent that they constitute a lien upon the property of the estate.”
The committee changed this section to the form in which it was enacted in the act of 1898. Thus it appears that after consideration of the question the Congress struck out a provision for priorities of all lien debts owing to the United States, the states, and municipalities, and substituted for it a provision in the act of 1898 limiting the priority of the .United States, the states and municipalities to taxes.
As it seems to us, the analysis of the statutes and the record of the passage of the act of 1898 require the holding that the law-making power of the United States has limited its priority in bankruptcy • to its claim for taxes. This conclusion is opposed to the high authority of the Circuit Court of Appeals of the Second Circuit (In re Tidewater Coal Exchange,
Judge Rose, in the District Court of Maryland, expressed assent to these authorities (In re Atlantic, G.
&
P. S. S. Co.,
We find no binding authority opposed to the conclusion that the United States has no priority in bankruptcy except for taxes. On the contrary, we venture to think it is supported by' the reasoning and conclusion of the court in Guarantee Co. v. Title Guaranty Company,
For the reasons stated, and on the authority of Guarantee Co. v. Title Guaranty Company, supra, and the views expressed by the Chief Justice and Justices Van Devanter and Clarke above quoted, we hold that, in bankruptcy, debts due to the United States other than for taxes have no priority over general creditors. No sound principle of public policy can be invoked in support of preference to the federal government and to the states over citizens in the collection of ordinary debts. On the contrary, the contractual operations of the federal government and of the states have become so extensive and so involved .with the business of private citizens that priority to the federal government and to the states, except for taxes, would operate as an oppressive hardship on other creditors of bankrupts.
Affirmed.
