115 F. 906 | N.D. Ala. | 1902
(after stating the facts). In Re Moore (D. C.) 112 Fed. 290, it was held that the waiver of exemption authorized by the laws of this state could not of itself confer any title, interest, or equity in the property of the debtor, and did not constitute a lien or pledge in any sense. That case differs from this, in that there the exempt property was claimed before a judgment or attachment. In view of the argument of counsel and the effect claimed for the levy on the exempt property in this case, some further discussion of the case seems proper.
The whole office and effect of a waiver of exemptions is to build up an estoppel which is quickened into being only by a judgment on the debt and the issue of execution in the statutory mode. An estoppel to claim property does not give the person in whose favor the estoppel runs a lien on that property. The judgment and execution alone give the waiver any operation; and the combined effect of the debt, waiver, judgment, and execution, so far as they give any virtue to the waiver, is merely to bring the estoppel into play. If any lien arises in this case it is because of a levy, if that levy can be lawfully followed by a judgment of condemnation. Any legal obstacle interposed between the levy and the right of judgment, so as to defeat condemnation, keeps the waiver in the background, and renders it wholly without influence. No Hen in a suit on a simple contract debt can ripen from a levy of an attachment, unless that levy can be followed by a judgment of condemnation. Riens thus obtained are “obtained through legal proceedings,” and are the mere creatures of proceedings in court. The preservation of the levy under the at
If subdivision “c” is not destroyed by subdivision “f,” it can have no effect in this case, since the debtor resisted the lien, and the creditors did not know he was in contemplation of bankruptcy. Without entering into any extended discussion on the subject, it seems to me that subdivision “f” destroys subdivision “c.” If subdivision “f” had been enacted in a subsequent independent statute, there would be little doubt that it was intended as a revision of the entire field of “liens obtained through legal proceedings,” and would necessarily amount to a repeal of the prior law on the subject, though there were no express words of repeal. In view of the known history of the enactment of the bankrupt law, and the fact that subdivision “f” is the latest utterance in point of time on the subject of liens obtained by operation of law, I feel compelled to hold that subdivision “f” of section 67 controls this case. Under that section the lien of the attachment “is null and void,” and the “property affected” is wholly “discharged and released therefrom,” and passes to the trustee “as a part of the estate of the bankrupt.” This construction is in harmony with the purpose of other provisions of the bankrupt law to have the whole estate, including the exempt property, pass to the trustee to be administered in the bankrupt court. For certain purposes the court takes possession of the exempt property, and the right of possession passes to the trustee for that purpose. The court is given express power to determine the exemption and to set apart the property to the bankrupt. Although the title to the exempt property does not pass to the trustee, yet, as the purpose of the bankrupt law is to protect it, and to save it to the bankrupt, to the detriment of creditors, the language of the act in section 67, subd. “f,” where it speaks of the property affected by the levy passing to the trustee, must be construed to mean that it passes to the trustee for whom it may concern, to be administered in the order that the language and policy of the bankrupt law command. It commands the trustee to set apart some of the property to the bankrupt, whose title is not intended tp be affected by its passing into the possession of the trustee, and to devote the rest to the payment of debts. It best comports with the language and policy of the bankrupt law to hold that it annuls “all liens,” with the exception stated therein, which are acquired against an insolvent’s property by legal proceedings within four months of the filing, and that it intended to destroy such lien upon exempt property as well as upon the other property of the bankrupt.
The questions before me are certified at the instance of Harlan and Sloan, creditors. They proved their claims before the hearing
The decisions, both of the courts of appeal and of the district courts, on this question, are conflicting; and it would unnecessarily incumber this opinion to attempt to review them. The question must be decided in the light of the decisions of the supreme court of the United States; particularly the cases of Bryan v. Bernheimer, 181 U. S. 188, 21 Sup. Ct. 557, 45 L. Ed. 814; Bardes v. Hawarden Bank, 178 U. S. 525, 20 Sup. Ct. 1000, 44 L. Ed. 1175; Hicks v. Knost, 178 U. S. 541, 20 Sup. Ct. 1006, 44 L. Ed. 1183; Mitchell v. McClure, 178 U. S. 539, 20 Sup. Ct. 1000, 44 L. Ed. 1182; and Mueller v. Nugent, 22 Sup. Ct. 269, 46 L. Ed.-(decided Jan. 20, 1902). It was a matter of doubt among the legal profession whether the decision in Bemheimer’s Case did not turn at last upon the fact that Bernheimer submitted himself to the jurisdiction. The supreme court of the United States in. Nugent’s Case decided that Nugent, the agent of the bankrupt, who had meddled with the property without right before the adjudication, could be subjected to the summary] jurisdiction, though he protested against it. Nugent’s Case also sheds light upon other questions which had heretofore been in doubt. The district court committed Nugent for contempt for not paying over money which belonged to the bankrupt. The circuit court of appeals: (44 C. C. A. 620, 105 Fed. 586) reversed the judgment of the district court. The court of appeals regarded Nugent as a stranger, so far as the jurisdiction of the district court was concerned. It held that,
In another part of the opinion, referring to this, the court said:
“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.”
In another place the court asks:
“Does the mere refusal by the bankrupt or his agent so to deliver up oblige the trustee to resort to a plenary suit in a circuit court or a state court, as the case may be? If it be so, the grant of jurisdiction to cause the assets of a bankrupt to be collected and to determine controversies relating thereto would be seriously impaired, and in many respects rendered practically inefficient. The bankruptcy court would be helpless, indeed, if the bare refusal to turn over could conclusively operate to drive the trustee to an action to recover as for an indebtedness, or a conversion, or to proceedings in chancery, at the risk of the accompaniments of delay, complication, and expense, intended to be avoided by the simpler methods of the bankrupt law. It is as true of the present law as it was of that of 1867 that the filing of the petition is a caveat to all the world, and, in effect, an attachment and injunction (Bank v. Sherman, 101 U. S. 407, 25 L. Ed. 866), and on adjudication title to the bankrupt’s property became vested in the trustee (section 70, subd. ‘e’), with actual or constructive possession, and placed in the custody of the bankrupt court.”
In Sherman’s Case, quoted approvingly above, the supreme court said:
“The bankrupt became, as it were, for many purposes, civiliter mortuus. * * * Those who dealt with his property in the interval between the filing of the petition and the final adjudication did so at their peril. They could limit neither the power of the court nor the effect of the final exercise of its jurisdiction. * * * Otherwise the efficacy of the act depended not upon its own language and meaning, but was only what others outside of the proceedings might choose to permit it to be.”
Certainly, the supreme court of the United States, in its last decision on the subject, did not deem that decision to conflict with the case of Bardes v. Hawarden Bank and the other cases noted, which1 deny to the court of bankruptcy jurisdiction over suits brought by trustees in bankruptcy to set aside fraudulent transfers of money or property made by the bankrupt to third parties before the insti
In Bardes’ Case, 178 U. S. 534, 20 Sup. Ct. 1004, 44 L. Ed. 1175, Mr. Justice Curtis is quoted as saying of two former cases that they are “an illustration of the rule that any opinion given here or elsewhere cannot be relied on as binding authority unless the case calls for its expression.” So the Case of Bardes and those following it are not to be construed as holding in any wise that the mere assertion of an adverse claim would oust the summary jurisdiction of a court of bankruptcy to ascertain (to use the language in Nugent’s Case) “whether any basis for such actually existed at the time of the filing of the petition,” or the further holding in Nugent’s Case that the court “would be bound to enter upon that inquiry.” It is apparent from reading the opinion in Nugent’s Case that the only adverse claim which could oust the summary jurisdiction was a claim which was not merely colorable. To use its language again, there must be an “actual basis” for the claim. This is only the application of the familiar principle regarding equity jurisdiction in cases where it is essential to injunctive relief to have a superior legal title or right to the defendant. A bare claim, a bare denial of the plaintiff’s right, no matter how positive, will not dissolve the injunction; but the defendant must go further and show facts in support of the denial, which at least give color of right in him, and make the contested matter of right between him and the complainant one of some fair doubt. There must be reasonable room for controversy.
Now, then, when the trustee of the bankrupt claims property to which another sets up' title, and asks the assistance of the court of bankruptcy, the court, to use the language of Nugent’s Case, “is bound to enter upon that inquiry.” If, as the supreme court says, “it is bound to enter upon that inquiry,” and “in doing so undoubtedly acted within its jurisdiction,” is not the court, if it finds the claim merely colorable, bound to direct the surrender of the property to the trustee? Clearly, the court is “bound to enter upon the inquiry,” and, if the facts in the particular case show that the detention is without color of right, then it is bound to take and administer the property. It is safe to say that a claim like that here is without color of right when upon the undisputed facts, as matter of law repeatedly construed by the highest court in the United States, the claim is baseless. Subdivision “f,” § 67, of the bankruptcy law, declares that “all levies, judgments, attachments or other liens obtained by legal pro
In weighing the effect of the adjudication upon the attaching court’s possession by reason of annullment of levy, we must not confound title and right of possession. The legal title is often in one man and the right of possession in another. It is true the bankrupt’s title passes to the trustee “as of the date of the adjudication,” but where forbidden liens, which the law annuls, are concerned, the adjudication determines the right of possession, not only “as of the date of the adjudication,” but within four months prior to the filing of the petition. In the eye of the law no right of possession can result from the void levy; and the possession, as well as the right of possession, thus acquired, are, by force of the statute and adjudication, put either in the bankrupt or trustee; for the attaching creditor can take nothing by his void levy. If the possession and right of possession at the time of the void levy remain by force of the statute in the bankrupt, the trustee, who takes subject only to valid liens, has a right of possession which relates back to the void levy, since he succeeds to the rights of the bankrupt. So, the void levy, the only process by which the attaching court can claim possession, is converted by the adjudication into a levy upon the possession of the trustee, which, as against forbidden liens, was prohibited by law the very moment the lien
It is said that comity prevents one court from interfering with property in the possession of another court. This is a wise and salutary rule repeatedly enforced by the supreme court of the United States, and respected by all lovers of law and order. No one bows to the rule more profoundly than the writer of this opinion. But the question is not one of comity or concurrent jurisdiction. It is a question of the supremacy of the constitution and laws of the United States, to which state and federal courts alike must bow. It is no new thing in our jurisprudence for a state court, which had concurrent jurisdiction of the subject-matter with the federal court, and first obtained jurisdiction, to lose that jurisdiction, and have that jurisdiction by operation of “the supreme law of the land” vested exclusively in a federal court, which enforces the transfer of the res • into its own custody. Our removal laws are familiar instances of this loss of jurisdiction by one court after that court has acquired such jurisdiction, and the gain of its jurisdiction by another court. The sections of the act cited inevitably give the district courts of the United States the exclusive jurisdiction to administer the estate of an insolvent, as against liens and attachments acquired against insolvents by legal proceedings, at any time within four months prior to the filing of the petition, with exceptions named not here material, if he be adjudged bankrupt; for, in the language of the statute, “the property affected by the levy, judgment, attachment, or other lien shall be deemed wholly discharged and released from the same,” and “shall pass” to the trustee as a part of the estate of the bankrupt. As to suits to obtain liens upon an insolvent’s property, brought before adjudication, but within four months of the filing, the only jurisdiction which can remain in the attaching court is to hold on to the suit; and if discharge is not granted, or granted and not pleaded, to render a judgment in personam. Its jurisdiction over the rem is taken away by the adjudica
When the attaching court, after the adjudication is formally brought to its notice by a party to the record by timely plea, ruthlessly disregards it, and proceeds, in violation of the law of the land, to enter judgment of condemnation, what comity does it extend to the court of bankruptcy? There is no reason to suspect that it would pay any attention to a request to surrender possession, and no reason in such a case why the request should precede the order. On the happening of the contingencies mentioned in subdivision “f,” the jurisdiction of the state court is taken from it as completely as when there has been a removal from state to federal courts by a party “entitled to removal.” In such a case it has many times been held that the jurisdiction of the state court “absolutely ceased, and that of the circuit court of the United States immediately attached”; that the state court was “without further jurisdiction”; its rightful jurisdiction comes to an end. Crehore v. Railway Co., 131 U. S. 243, 9 Sup. Ct. 692, 33 L. Ed. 144. The jurisdiction of the state court over the attached property in this case, whatever it might have been, has ceased and determined. The levy is void. The court’s orders with reference to the possession of the property are void. The original levy being void, the court, having no further jurisdiction, cannot make any further order except to stay the suit. It cannot protect the officer or party acting or claiming under such orders if made. He becomes a trespasser as to the property without a shadow of legal claim to the property or to its possession whenever he refuses to deliver on demand of the rightful owner, the trustee, or the receiver. It seems, therefore, to follow conclusively from the principles stated that the court of bankruptcy in the cases of attachments mentioned in subdivision “f,” not only has the jurisdiction, but is under duty, to take the property from the possession of one who, though originally holding for the state court, has, by reason of its loss of jurisdiction over the rem, become a mere bailee for the true owner, whenever, on proper demand, such bailee refuses to surrender possession. It is entirely illogical to contend in such a case that the court of bankruptcy interferes, in any legal sense, with the possession of the state court.
The collection and distribution of the assets of the bankrupt estate in a sense involves the administration of a trust. The court to which the administration is confided has the inherent power, apart from the special jurisdiction conferred by the bankrupt law, if need be, on its own motion, to punish mere intermeddlers by summary process. It can make no difference that the jurisdiction is invoked by the trustee, the receiver, or the bankrupt himself, so long as the person against whom the power of the court is invoked is a mere inter-meddler, or one who claims to hold or take possession under a claim which in law is purely colorable. Such proceedings are not “suits” in the ordinary meaning of the term, nor in the sense in which the word is used in subdivision “b” of section 23. They come, rather,
The aptness of the remark quoted from Nugent’s Case that the bankruptcy court “would be helpless, indeed, if the bare refusal to turn over could conclusively operate to drive trustees to an action to recover,” etc., is strikingly illustrated by the facts of this case. Tune was adjudicated a bankrupt three days after the levy. He promptly appeared and pleaded the adjudication before the judgment of condemnation. The justice, after a little delay, proceeded to render judgment of condemnation notwithstanding the adjudication, and the constable, indemnified by creditors who were unwilling to stay judgment in their suit, in obedience to the bankrupt law, was about to sell the property. It was exempt under the laws of the state until a valid condemnation was had. The attachment — the court’s only title to possession — had been annulled, and the supreme law required that the property be delivered to the trustee. ' But for the interposition of this court, the raft of logs, which was practically the only disposable property of the bankrupt, would have been sold, and the owner driven to a lawsuit with the plaintiff, or a suit on the constable’s bond,— neither of which might have been fruitful, — to get the proceeds of a sale of the exempt property, which it was the duty of the bankrupt court to set apart to him, and which could have been determined there with little cost and delay. If such proceedings cannot be prevented by the court of bankruptcy, it would soon become a mere auditor of the debts of the bankrupt, and go through the formal ceremony of discharging him, while other courts would administer and distribute the property and determine the rights of the creditors therein.
The creditors can take nothing from their exception to the order of the referee, which is in all things confirmed.