113 F. 889 | 9th Cir. | 1902
after stating the case as above, delivered the opinion of the court.
The attachment was issued and levied more than four months prior to the institution of the proceedings in bankruptcy, but the judgment was made and entered within less than four months prior to such proceedings. The question presented on the appeal is whether the appellee’s lien was dissolved by the proceedings in bankruptcy, by virtue of section 6yi of the bankruptcy act, which provides as follows:
“That all levies, judgments, attachments, or other liens, obtained through legal proceedings against a person who is insolvent, at any time within four months prior to the filing of a petition in bankruptcy against him, shall be deemed null and void in case he is adjudged a bankrupt, and the property affected by the levy, judgment, attachment, or other lien shall be deemed wholly discharged and released from the same.”
The appellee undoubtedly obtained a lien by virtue of his attachment. Under the statute of Oregon, the attached property is held as security for the judgment, and the law goes so far as to provide that, as against third persons, the attaching creditor “shall be deemed a purchaser in good faith and for a valuable consideration of the property, real or personal, attached.” Hill’s Ann-. Laws Or. § 150. Was the lien so obtained by the attachment lost or merged in the judgment, so that it can be said that the lien under which the appellee made his claim against the bankrupt estate was “obtained” by the judgment? If so, under the plain provision of the bankruptcy act it must be declared null and void. It is not disputed that, if no judgment had been taken, the attachment lien would have been at the time of the institution of the
We are aware of decisions which are not in harmony with this view. In re Lesser (D. C.) 108 Fed. 201, Brown, district judge, held that the provisional lieu acquired by an attachment more than four months prior to the filing of a voluntary petition in bankruptcy by the defendant is discharged where the judgment is not obtained until within four months prior to the filing of the petition. The court, in reaching this conclusion, was moved by the consideration that the attachment Hen, under the law's of Connecticut, was but a provisional lien, only to be made effective through a judgment, levy, or demand, and by the opinion entertained by the court that all judgments obtained within the prescribed period were within the ban of the statute, and that unless a valid judgment could be rendered, and a valid levy could be made, no method remained to enforce the ¡irovisional lien. So, in Re Johnson (D. C.) 108 Fed. 373, Wheeler, district judge, held that the lien provided for under the statutes of Vermont does not become perfect as a charge upon the attached property until the recovery of the judgment and tlie taking in execution, and that, since the statute declares such judgment and levy void, a creditor, without them, has no perfect lien, and that the judgment and levy are wholly inoperative to perfect what was theretofore an imperfect lien. Lowell, district judge, however, in Re Blair (D. C.) 108 Fed. 529, held that by the statutes oí Massachusetts an attachment creates a lien, and that the purpose of section 67f is to declare void only liens obtained by judgments, attach
“Where, however, the lien is created by the attachment, the judgment and levy create no new or additional lien, but only enforce a lien already existing. Hence in this case the levy and execution did not affect the property attached with a lien avoided by the bankrupt act, but only enforced a lien already existing, which lien the bankrupt act expressly protected.”
With these views, and with those of the court herein appealed from¡ we agree,
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.