delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case presents the narrow issue of whether § lie of the Bankruptcy Act, 11 U. S. C. § 29e, bars at the end of *5 two years from the date of adjudication in bankruptсy an action brought by the trustee in bankruptcy to set aside and recover a preferential transfer.
On April 11, 1938, N. L. Rogers & Company, Inc., filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy and was duly adjudged a bankrupt on the same day. On March 3, 1943, the petitioner trustee filed a complaint under § 60 of the Bankruptcy Act, 11 U. S. C. § 96, against the respondent bank to set aside and recover payments totalling over $300,000 alleged to have been given illegally by the bankrupt to the respondеnt within four months prior to the filing of the bankruptcy petition. The District Court dismissed the complaint on the ground that the suit had been instituted more than two years subsequent to the date of adjudication in bankruptcy and hence was barred by § lie. It thus overruled the trustee’s contention that Illinois law allowed him five years in which to bring this action and that this five-year limitation was controlling since it fell within the provision of § lie allowing suits “within such further time as the federal or state law may permit.”
Two-year limitations on suits by and against trustees have long been integral parts of federal bankruptcy statutes. Section 8 of the Bankruptcy Act оf 1841, 5 Stat. 440, 446, 447, applied a two-year limitation on any “suit at law or in equity” by or against any assignee of the bankrupt. Courts held that this related only to suits involving claims held by the bankrupt before assignment, rather than to suits on claims arising after the bankruptcy proceedings began, 1 but its applicability as to rights accruing tо the assignee on the date of the assignment by virtue *6 of the Bankruptcy Act apparently was not raised or determined.
Section 2 of the Bankruptсy Act of 1867, 14 Stat. 517, 518, which was reenacted in substantially the same form in Revised Statutes § 5057, placed a similar limitation on any “suit at law or in equity ... by or against such as-signee . . . touching the property and rights of property” of the bankrupt. Here again the limitation was held to apply only to suits growing out of disputes and transactions prior to assignment.
2
Dushane
v.
Beall,
Section lid of the Bankruptcy Act of 1898, 30 Stat. 544, 549, provided that “Suits shall not be brought by or against a trustee of a bankrupt estate subsequent to two years after the estate has been closed.” State and lower federal courts explicitly and uniformly held that this two-year limitation controlled the trustee’s right to set aside and recover preferential transfers under § 60 of the Act. 3 But courts differed as to whether § lid or state statutes of limitation applied to causes of action inherited by the trustee from the bankrupt or the bankrupt’s creditors. 4
*7 It was this conflict under § lid of the 1898 Act that was primarily responsible for the framing of the new § lie in 1938. This latter provision, which is controlling in this case, settles the problem by stating in part that “A receiver or trustee may, within two yeаrs subsequent to the date of adjudication or within such further period of time as the federal or state law may permit, institute proceedings in behalf of the estate upon any claim against which the period of limitation fixed by federal or state law had not expired at the time of the filing of the рetition in bankruptcy.”
In light of the judicial construction and application of analogous provisions in earlier bankruptcy acts, it is significant that Cоngress in § lie failed to enlarge the time for bringing suits arising under the Bankruptcy Act by making state statutes of limitation of longer duration applicable to such fеderal causes of action. None of the prior provisions had been construed so as to apply state statutes of limitations to actions by trustees based on claims arising under the bankruptcy statutes. And the courts had frankly and unmistakably imposed the two-year limitation of §lld of the 1898 Act, which is the immediate predecessor of § lie, to suits by trustees to set aside and recover preferential transfers. The legislative background and history, as well as the language of § lie, are barren of any basis for concluding that Congress intended to make suits of this nature subject to longer limitations imposed by stаte laws. 5 Congress could have *8 expressly restricted the field within which the two-year limitation was to be operative had it so wished. Its failure to do so cannot be ignored.
Thе-actual language used in § lie is clearly appropriate to an action under § 60. Section lie is not limited by its words to actions inherited by the trustee; nor does it discriminate against actions by the trustee accruing to him under the Act. It provides simply that the trustee must bring action on any claim in behalf of thе estate within two years subsequent to the date of adjudication or within such further time as the federal or state law permits, provided that such law did not bar the action on the date when the petition was filed.
Here the only applicable law is § 60 of the Bankruptcy Act, which generates the cause of action and which contains no time limitations as to actions brought pursuant thereto. And since the trustee's right to set aside and recover preferential transfers relates to transactions occurring prior to the filing of the petition and since this right did not accrue before the datе on which the petition was filed, such an action obviously cannot be excluded from the limitation on the ground that it was barred by federal or state lаw at the time the petition was filed. Hence the trustee was bound to “institute proceedings in *9 behalf of the estate” to set aside and recover any preferential transfers “within two years subsequent to the date of adjudication.” More than two years having elapsed between the date оf adjudication and the commencement of the suit in this instance, the courts below properly held that the action was barred under § lie.
Inasmuch аs the federal Bankruptcy Act has created the liability and has also fixed the limitation of time for commencing actions to enforce it, we hаve no occasion to consider the trustee’s arguments concerning the applicability and construction of the Illinois statutes of limitation. Cf.
Campbell
v.
Haverhill,
The judgment of the court below is
Affirmed.
Notes
See
In re Conant,
5 Blatch. 54, Fed. Cas. No. 3086;
Stevens
v.
Hauser,
See
Bowen
v.
Delaware, L. & W. R. Co.,
Davis
v.
Willey,
Among those cases holding that § lid applied are
Isaacs
v.
Neece,
H. Rep. No. 1409 (75th Cong., 1st Sess.) p. 20, stated that “A new provision in subdivision e permits receivers and trustеes within 2 years after the adjudication to institute suits on claims against which the period of limitation fixed by federal or state law had not expired at *8 thе time of the bankruptcy or within such further time as the federal or state law may permit.”
S. Rep. No. 1916 (75th Cong., 3d Sess.) p. 13, stated: “The provisions of the existing law in regard to suits by or against trustees have been revised and modified, and receivers are included. The period of limitations in respect to such suits has beеn restricted in the bill to 2 years after the date of adjudication instead of 2 years after the date of the closing of the estate.”
See alsо Joint Hearings before the Subcommittees of the Committees on the Judiciary (72d Cong., 1st Sess.) on S. 3866, Part 4, pp. 932-933; 6 Journal of Nat. Assoc, of Referees in Bankruptcy 65; 1 Collier on Bankruptcy (14th Ed.) 1186.
