In re Spalding Cotton Mills

193 F. 554 | N.D. Ga. | 1912

NEWMAN, District Judge.

In the matter now before the court it appears that W. J. Kincaid was acting chairman of the board of directors of the Spalding Cotton Mills at the time the petition in bankruptcy was filed against the Mills in this court, and a few days before the petition in bankruptcy was filed-lie, having certain moneys in his hands belonging to tlie Mills, paid himself $1,000, which he claimed was due him, and now claims was due him, first, under a contract, and, if not, then on quantum meruit. The trustee appeared before the referee by a petition to require him to turn the money thus paid to himself over to the trustee. ' The referee found against Kincaid, and directed that he pay the money over, and this action is brought before the District Court for review.

The first question made in this case, andfor determination by the court, is whether or not this is a matter in which the summary jurisdiction of the court could be invoked, or whether the matter is one in which the respondent to the rule is entitled to have a plenary suit brought- against him, and his rights as against. the bankrupt estate determined in such a suit. The case of Mueller v. Nugent, 184 U. S. 1, 22 Sup. Ct. 269, 46 L. Ed. 405, is the authority upon which this case largely turns. In that case the son of the bankrupt had collected for his father certain moneys only a few days before the petition in bankruptcy was filed, and a large part of it only a few hours before, and on the same day ./that the bankruptcy petition was filed. Rule was first instituted against the bankrupt, and that was dismissed, and a rule brought against the son, who held the money for his father. Jn the opinion of the Supreme Court it is said on the particular question here:

“There was no pretense that at the date of the filing of this petition in bankruptcy this money of the bankrupt, §4,133.45 oí which had been collected a few ■ days, and §10,100 a few hours, before, was held subject to any adverse claim, or that the right or title thereto had been passed over to another. The position now taken amounts to no more than to assert that a mere refusal to surrender constitutes an adverse holding in fact, and therefore an adverse claim when the petition was filed; and to that we < annot give our assent. But suppose that respondent had asserted that he had the right to possession by reason of a claim adverse to the bankrupt; the bankruptcy court had the power to ascertain whether any basis for such a claim actually existed at the time of the filing of the petition. The. court would have been, bound to enter upon that inquiry, and in so doing would have undoubtedly acted within its jurisdiction, while Its conclusion might have been that an adverse claim, not merely colorable, but real, even though fraudulent and voidable, existed in fact, and so that it must decline to finally adjudicate on the merits. If it erred in its ruling either way. its action would be subject to review, in this case, however, respondtnt asserted no right or title to the property before the referee, and the circumstances under which he held possession must be accepted as found by tlie referee and the District Court.”

It will be seen that it is held that the District Court, in a case like this, should enter upon the inquiry to see whether «.there is a real adverse claim, and if it finds that it exists, and is not merely colorable, *556even though it may he fraudulent and voidable, it should proceed no further, but leave the matter to be determined in a plenary proceeding between the trustee and the adverse claimant.

Nugent had - collected the money for the bankrupt, as has been stated, only a few hours before the petition in bankruptcy, was filed, and made no claim to it whatever, which makes a very different case from the case at bar. . Here, before the bankruptcy proceedings were instituted, Kincaid had paid himself, and, at the time the petition was filed, held it> not as chairman of the board of directors, but for himself individually, with an adverse claim, which is not only set up, but is very strenuously and4 earnestly asserted. Whether his claim should be sustained hereafter is not a matter for determination, or even for pAp ei c\■fiPktl rlí^fP

In Jaquith v. Rowley, 188 U. S. 620, 23 Sup. Ct. 369, 47 L. Ed. 620, where a similar question was discussed, the Supreme Court, after referring to the Nugent Case, in the opinion says this:

“In other words, Nugent’s Case simply holds that, where the agent held money belonging to the bankrupt, to which he made no claim, but simply refused to give up the property, which he acknowledged belonged to the bankrupt, the bankruptcy court liad power, by summary proceedings, to order him to deliver such property to the trustee in bankruptcy.”

The cases decided in the District Courts, I think, support the view that, in a case like the one now before the court, the rights of the parties should be determined by a plenary proceeding by the trustee against the adverse claimant, and not by summary proceeding such as that now before the court.' They are all collated in 3 Remington on Bankruptcy, §§ 1863, 1864 (pp. 572, 573), and in Collier on Bankruptcy (8th Ed.) § 23, pp. 399-401.

The action of the referee is disapproved, without prejudice to the right of the trustee to proceed ¡against W. J. Kincaid in such way as he may be advised by plenary proceeding.

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