62 N.Y.S. 618 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1900
There can be po doubt that Bishop should have been removed, if the assignment to him had sufficient vitality to enable a substituted assignee to maintain an action (under chap. 314, Laws of 1858) to set aside certain transfers alleged to have been made by the assignor, prior to the assignment, in fraud of his creditors. Bishop filed neither bond nor schedules ; and he did nothing under the assignment save turn over the assets in his hands to a trustee in bankruptcy. It appears that these transfers were made by Gray in the early part of September, 1898. Upon the third of the following October he made the assignment in question — which was non-preferential — for the benefit of creditors to Bishop. Upon the 19th day of January, 1899, a petition was filed in the proper Federal court to have Gray declared a bankrupt, and on the eighteenth day of the following February he was therein adjudicated a bankrupt. The question presented by this appeal is as to the effect of the bankruptcy proceedings upon the assignment. It is clear that the assignment, made as it was within the four months which preceded the filing of the petition, was an act of bankruptcy. The Bankruptcy Act of July 1, 1898, expressly so provides (30 U.. S. Stat. at Large, 546, § 3a, subd. 4). It is well settled in the Federal courts that the act suspends the operation of State insolvent laws when the petition is so filed within four months after the making of the assignment under the State law. (Matter of Bruss-Ritter Co., 90 Fed. Rep. 651; Matter of Sievers, 91 id. 366; Davis v. Bohle, 92 id. 325; Matter of Smith, Id. 135; Matter of Etheridge Furniture Co., Id. 329.)
When, however, the trustee seeks to avoid a fraudulent or any avoidable transfer by the bankrupt antedating the four months, lie •does so, not in the right conferred as a concomitant to the due operation of the system, but exclusively in the creditors’ common-law right. He is, with relation to these anterior transfers, so to speak, subrogated to that right. Such of these anterior transfers as any creditor might have avoided, he may avoid. Such as no creditor •could have avoided, he cannot avoid.
This construction lends harmony to the working of the system, while the opposite view tends to confusion. It certainly never was intended to have part of a bankrupt’s estate administered and distributed by the trustee in bankruptcy, and another part recovered and distributed by the assignee in a voluntary assignment. Whether property fraudulently transferred or its proceeds or value be recovered by the trustee or by the assignee, the effect upon their distribution in the same. In either case the avails must be distributed •equally among the creditors. It is, in effect, so provided in the State act of 1858, as well as in the Bankruptcy Act. It would be an anomaly to permit the assignee to sue for and reclaim this fraudulently transferred property for distribution by him after the trustee had, for the purpose of a like distribution, wrested from him the general assets of the bankrupt. The assignment is suspended pending action in the bankruptcy court upon the petition. When, however, the petition has been followed by an adjudication the assignment is superseded, and the assignee is thereupon required to turn over all the property in his hands to the trustee. The rights of action in question follow the supersession, and go to the trustee with the rest of the estate, and thereafter he is exclusively vested therewith for the purposes of the act.
if or was it intended to leave avoidable transfers antedating the
We think, therefore, that the trustee may avoid the transfers here alleged to be fraudulent, and that the" right to maintain an appropriate action to recover the property so transferred, or its value, is vested in him and in him alone.
■ The order appealed from wus right, and should.be affirmed, with costs..
Van Brunt, P. J., Rumbey, Ingraham and McLaughlin, JJ., concurred.
Order affirmed, with costs.'