19 F. 337 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern New York | 1884
This is an action brought in the district court of the United States for the Northern district of New York, by the plaintiffs in error against the defendants in error. The first pleadings of the plaintiffs calls itself a complaint and is sworn to as a complaint. It sets forth the copartnership of Albert Jewett and William Johnson, as Jewett & Johnson; an indebtedness of the firm to the Plicenix Mills, a corporation, of $6,208.51, for goods sold and moneys advanced; the adjudication of the corporation as a bankrupt; the appointment of the plaintiffs and said Johnson as its assignees; an assignment to them; the death of Johnson; the insolvency of Jewett; the want of copartnership assets of Jewett & Johnson to pay any part of said debt; the absence of any other remedy for the plaintiffs tO' collect the debt, except against the estate of Johnson; the granting of letters of administration on his estate to the defendants Angelina 0. Johnson and Stephen B. Johnson; the non-payment of any of the debt; and its existence as a debt against the estate of Johnson, enforceable by the plaintiffs. The prayer is for judgment against Jewett, surviving partner, and against the other defendants as administratrix and administrator, for $6,208.51, witli interest. Jewett put in a separate answer containing three distinct defenses, to which the plaintiff put in a replication, which treated the answer as consisting of three pleas, and itself contained two separate pleadings, each of which concluded to the country. The other defendants put in a separate answer containing five separate defenses, to which the plaintiffs put in a replication, which treated the answer as consisting of five pleas, and itself contained five separate pleadings, each of which concluded to the country. Each of the replications speaks of the' plaintiffs’ initial pleading as a “declaration.
It is urged for the plaintiffs in error that in regard to the representatives of Johnson the suit is‘ in the nature of a suit in equity, as the complaint alleges the insolvency of Jewett. The answer to this is .that the plaintiffs, by their pleadings, have treated the action throughout as a suit at law. By section 4979 of the Revised Statutes jurisdiction is given to the district courts of suits at law and in equity brought by an assignee in bankruptcy against any person claiming an adverse interest touching any property or rights of the bankrupt transferable to or vested in the assignee. Under the rulings of the supreme court in Jenkins v. International Bank, 106 U. S. 571, [S. C. 2 Sup. Ct. Rep. 1,] the present suit is either a suit at law or a suit in equity, within the provisions of section 4979. If
It is urgod that the trial by the court took place as it would have done in an equity suit; and that, as the case is one reviowable in one or the other of the two modes, the objection to the mode may be waived by the other side, and such waiver has taken place in this case. Some authorities under the state practice in New York are referred to. But the question is one of jurisdiction. The agreement of parties cannot authorize this court to revise a judgment of the district court in any other mode of proceeding than that which the law prescribes, nor can the laws or practice of a state, in regard to the proceedings of its own courts, authorize this court or the district court to depart from the modes of proceeding and rules prescribed by the acts of congress. Kelsey v. Forsyth, 21 How. 85, 88; Merrill v. Petty, 16 Wall. 338, 347; U. S. v. Emholt, 105 U. S. 414, 416.
As the district court had jurisdiction of the subject-matter and of the parties, and as there is no error in the record, and as nothing found in the bill of exceptions can be considered, the judgment must be presumed to be right, and must be affirmed, with costs. Campbell v. Boyreau, 21 How. 223, 227; Town of Lyons v. Lyons Nat. Bank, 19 Blatchf. C. C. 279, 289; [S. C. 8 Fed. Rep. 369.]
S. C. 8 Fed. Rep. 369.