The Naylor Manufacturing Company, a corporation doing business in this district, was adjudicated a bankrupt on July 22, 1903. The Fairbanks Company, a New Jersey corporation, filed a petition claiming certain personal property, which it alleges it leased to the bankrupt, and asked for an order awarding this property, which consisted of machinery, to it. The referee found that the bankrupt was the bailee of this property, and, it having been sold by the trustee, awarded to the defendant the sum of $297.65, the proceeds of the sale. The trustee objected to the finding of the referee, and upon his petition the referee certified to this court the two following questions: (1) Is the contract in question a bailment or conditional sale, and is the petitioner entitled to the proceeds of the sale of the machinery, or have such proceeds become the property of the bankrupt estate? (2) Was the contract, if a bailment, between the Naylor Manufacturing Company and Fairbanks Company, void by reason of the noncompliance by the Naylor Manufacturing Company with the provisions of the Pennsylvania act of April 22d, 1874 (P. E. 108), it being a corporation organized under the laws of the District of Columbia, and not having filed a statement of its affairs with the Secretary of State and Auditor General as required by this act?
It is conceded that the agreement between the Fairbanks Company and the bankrupt, dated March 11, 1903, is a bailment of the property in question, but as this property had been in the possession of S. Elmer Naylor, the predecessor of the Naylor Manufacturing Company, bankrupt, from August, 1902, to February, 1903, when he transferred it to the Naylor Manufacturing Company, and held by it until' the execution of the bailment, that under the evidence adduced before the referee the original transfer was a sale, and that the subsequent change made by the execution of the contract of bailment was not binding upon the trustee in bankruptcy.
While it is true the evidence does not show the exact terms of the original contract, yet the evidence, both oral and documentary, is uncontradicted that the property was held by Naylor as bailee, and the circumstances-were such as to confirm this conclusion. Before this machinery was transferred to the bankrupt corporation, the consent of the Fairbanks Company was necessary, and obtained through a conference with them. All this shows that the actions of both parties from the beginning were such as to indicate they regarded the original
Great reliance is placed upon the case of Swing v. Munson, 191 Pa. 582, 43 Atl. 342, 58 L. R. A. 223, 71 Am. St. Rep. 772, but an examination of this case shows that it was an effort on the part of the trustee of an insolvent corporation organized and doing business in the state of Ohio to collect assessments against a policy holder in the state of Pennsylvania, it not having previously complied with the laws of the state of Pennsylvania requiring foreign insurance companies to register before effecting insurance within the state, and it was held that Swing, the trustee, could not recover. But this is, an entirely different proposition from the question involved in this case. Here the foreign corporation came into the state of Pennsylvania, and began business, entered into the contract with the Fairbanks Company for this property without having previously registered; and the decisions of the courts of Pennsylvania are uniform in holding that a corporation under such circumstances, while it will not be permitted to enforce its contracts in a state without complying with the registration laws, will not be permitted to take advantage of its own wrong in failing in such compliance when found here doing business, and it is endeavored by residents of the commonwealth to enforce contracts against them.
The findings of the referee are sustained.