242 F. 753 | 1st Cir. | 1917
The three appellees are the trustees in bankruptcy of the Schmick, Handle & Lumber Company, a Maine cor - poration adjudged bankrupt in the Maine District Court, February 6, 1914, upon an involuntary petition filed January 20, 1914. They were
The appellant, Hollingsworth & Whitney Company, a Massachusetts corporation, was the owner of timber lands in Maine. On Bald Mountain township, belonging to it, there wrere lying in the woods, when the above bankruptcy petition was filed, certain hardwood logs which had been cut under a contract further considered below, dated November IS, 1912, between it and Wilson E. Schmick. These logs and the right to remove them were claimed by the receivers as belonging to the estate in their custody.
The questions here presented require us, in the first place, to determine the true meaning and effect of a written agreement under seal between said receivers and said company, dated February 12, 1914, which appears in full in the opinion of the District Court. 236 Fed. 446, 448. After reciting that “unless the logs are forthwith hauled from the woods and manufactured into lumber they will become a total loss,” the parties mutually stipulated and agreed in substance as follows:
(1) That the company should advance the funds required to discharge labor liens on the logs, haul them off and load them on cars; and should thereafter sell them at the best obtainable prices.
(2) That the question of their ownership should be submitted as soon as possible, “for determination by the court or courts having jurisdiction thereof,” and that the net proceeds of the sales of the logs as above when received by the company should be paid over by it “to said receivers or their successors in authority, and be held in their hands as officers of the bankruptcy court, subject to the final judgment of the court or courts having jurisdiction of the premises.”
(3) That nothing in the agreement should “in any way prejudice any claim of ownership, right or title of either party * * * in or to said logs or the proceeds of the same * * * but said claim of ownership shall be determined by the court or courts having jurisdiction of the premises in all respects as if this agreement had never been made.”
It Is stipulated for the purposes of the present appeal that this agreement was approved by the District Court, and that the trustees in bankruptcy were duly substituted therein in the place of the receivers originally parties thereto.
The company had sold the logs and received the proceeds thereof as contemplated by the agreement, hut had not paid said proceeds to the receivers or trustees; whereupon the trustees, by a petition in the bankruptcy case filed October 31, 1914, asked that the company show cause why it should not be ordered to make such payment to them, in accordance with the agreement, “as officers of the bankruptcy court, to hold subject to the final judgment of flie court as to the ownership of said legs.”
Notified to show cause as above, the company appeared specially on the day fixed for hearing said petition, and moved to dismiss it, on the alleged ground:
*756 “That this court has no jurisdiction of said matter, and has no right or authority to make a sumrtfary order for the turning over of [said funds], nor has it any jurisdiction over the subject-matter mentioned in said petition and no jurisdiction summarily to grant the relief therein demanded, because it says that [said company] is now and always has been an adverse claimant of the subject-matter of the controversy, and that proceedings, if any, against it seeking the relief prayed for in the petition must be by plenary action and not by summary proceedings.”
The company’s motion to dismiss was denied on the same day (November 9,1914), and on November 21, 1914, it answered the above petition (expressly reserving its obj'ection that the court had no jurisdiction over it, or over the subject-matter of said petition). The material allegations in its answer were that the possession of and title to the logs and their proceeds were and had always been in the company, which asserted, as an adverse claimant, that the relief sought by the petition must be by plenary action, instead of summary proceedings. Further allegations, in the company’s answer were that it had, on April 2, 1914, notified the trustees of its readiness for a hearing according to the terms of the agreement of February 22, 1914, and asked them to join in a request to “the proper court” according to said- terms, that the trustees had refused to do so, and had thereby broken said agreement,' leaving it no* longer bound to carry out its part thereof.
The District Court ordered, on December 5, 1914, that the company pay over the proceeds in question to the trustees forthwith, as officers of the bankruptcy court, and that the trustees hold the proceeds so paid over, as such officers, “subject, however, to final determination of all questions as to the legal ownership of the same, in accordance with (the agreement of February 12, 1914), which said agreement was duly approved by the court.”
We find no error in the order made December 5, 1914, nor in any of the proceedings prior thereto. No determination of the further question whether said proceeds belonged to the bankrupt estate or to the company was involved therein or prejudiced thereby. Nor had any particular method been up to that time prescribed for the determination of said question.
Coming next to the proceedings which followed said order, $16,~ 128.86 was paid over to the trustees in compliance therewith on December 24, 1914, which sum they have since held in their official custody, and is apparently conceded to be the true amount of net proceeds realized from the above sales of the logs by the company. The next step was a petition by the trustees filed in the bankruptcy case May 12, 1915. In this they represented that they had requested the company to “present to this court” any claim to said fund which it had or claimed to have; but said request has not been complied with. They asked the court to order the company so to present any such claim, to fix the time within which it should be so presented, and in default of such presentation to order any and all claims by the company to said fund forever barred. The court set a date for hearing the petition and ordered notice to the company of such hearing.
May 28, 1915, the company, appearing under protest, moved to dismiss said petition, alleging that the court “had no jurisdiction of said matter” and had “no right or authority to make” a summary order such as the petition sought. It further alleged, as above, that it held the logs as adverso claimant and was still adverse claimant of their proceeds. It denied that the proceeds constituting the fund in the trustees’ hands was subject to the court’s jurisdiction as property of the bankrupt estate. It averred that it had not, by the agreement of February 22, 1914, consented to the court’s jurisdiction in summary proceedings, but only to a plenary suit for the proper determination of the title to the fund; also that, in the absence of said agreement, there could have been no resort to summary proceedings for the purpose sought, and that the company was prejudiced by the trustees’ resort to such proceeding contrary to the terms of said agreement. It submitted that the court could not let the trustees take the proceeds under said agreement and then permit further proceedings to be taken by them in violation of it.
This motion to dismiss was heard and denied by the court May 28, 1915, and on the same day the company was ordered to answer the petition. In its answer, filed accordingly July 5, 1915, it again asserted that the court “had no jurisdiction over it or over the subject-matter” of the petition. It repeated, under the heading “Answer in Lieu of Demurrer,” the same objections in substance as had been made
With regard to the above orders of May 28, 1915, the first objection to be considered is the company’s denial of jurisdiction in the court either over it or over the subject-matter of the trustee’s petition then before it.
To the extent that said petition sought compliance by the company with the terms of the agreement it had made with officers of the court, for the purposes of the case wherein they had been appointed, it is clear from what has been said that no such denial of jurisdiction can be maintained. It was for the court to determine the proper construction of such an agreement, and to require performance by the company of any undertaking which it found the company to have thereby assumed. The only question here open to the company is as to the true meaning of the agreement which the trustees sought to enforce.
(1) The “questions” to which the agreement refers are questions of title to the property therein described, custody whereof was thereby expressly given to officers of the bankruptcy court, claiming said property as part of the estate in their charge. They were to keep it in their possession pending the determination of said questions, which by the express terms of the agreement were to be determined “as between said receivers or their successors and said * * * company, and any other party or parties.” The principle that possession lawfully obtained, by officers of the bankruptcy court, of property claimed by them, draws to that court jurisdiction of all questions of title thereto or liens thereon, is so well established that we must regard it as recognized and as- ' sumed by the parties for the purposes of their agreement, unless clear indications of a contrary intent can be found in its terms. We find no such indications in the words “court or courts having jurisdiction,” which occur’three times in the agreement; these are adapted to provide for the case of an appeal by either party from an adverse determination. If the bankruptcy court was to have possession of the property, it thereby became so obviously the “court having jurisdiction” of the questions to be determined as to render the supposition unreasonable that determination by some other court was contemplated. ■We cannot suppose it intended by the agreement that the officers of
There are 81 assignments of error in all, and all are sufficiently disposed of by what has been said above, which also warrants the conclusion that the questions raised by such assignments may properly be determined upon the appeal, and not upon the petition to revise, also pending.
In No. 1229 the petition to revise the action of the District Court in the matter of law is dismissed, without costs.
In No. 1241 the decree of the District Court appealed from is affirmed, and the appellees recover their costs of appeal.