137 F. 668 | D. Del. | 1904
This is an application for the removal of the Security Trust and Safe Deposit Company, as receiver in bankruptcy of the United Button Company, adjudged' bankrupt by this court, and for the transfer of the proceedings in bankruptcy
“The District Court of Delaware first took jurisdiction; it adjudicated the corporation bankrupt; it is the court within the district of the domicile. These facts severally vest it with exclusive jurisdiction to proceed with the administration. * * * These views lead to the conclusion that the proceedings in this court should be stayed,-and that the corporation appointed receiver in the Delaware district should be appointed ancillary receiver in this district, and that the receiver heretofore appointed in these proceedings should transfer to such other receiver all property of the bankrupt within his control, upon payment of all expenses of administration in this district, so far as it has proceeded.”
Accordingly, the same judge, September 1, 1904, ordered that all proceedings under the involuntary petition filed in the southern district of New York against the bankrupt be stayed; that the petitioning creditors in that petition be restrained from taking any further proceedings under it; that the Delaware receiver be appointed ancillary receiver of the assets of the bankrupt in the southern district of New York with authority to take into its possession and custody all the property of the* bankrupt situated in that district, “subject to the payment of all indebtedness incurred properly by the receiver, Alexander, accordingly as this court shall determine and allow”; that Alexander forthwith surrender and turn over to the Delaware receiver'all the assets of the bankrupt then in his possession or under his control, “subject to the audit and allowance by this court of his accounts, but said Alexander, receiver, shall retain from the moneys in his hands the sum of ten thousand dollars ($10,000) as a fund to meet legal expenses, the balance thereafter to be paid to the ancillary receiver”; and that Alexander should forthwith “prepare and file his accounts as receiver herein; setting forth all expenses of administration in the southern district of New York so far as it has proceeded, and upon the allowance of such account by this court the same shall be a lien on all property delivered to the ancillary receiver pursuant to this order.” On the same day Judge Holt, in the District Court for the Southern District of New York, on the application of the petitioning creditors in the bankruptcy proceedings in that district, ordered that the Delaware receiver show cause September 14, 1904, why all proceedings under and by virtue of the order of that court made by Judge Thomas should not be stayed pending the presentation to and determination by this court of an application for an order removing the Security Trust and Safe Deposit Company as receiver, and staying all proceedings by virtue of its appointment and relinquishing the jurisdiction of this court in the premises to the District Court for the Southern District of New York. The foregoing proceedings re-
Courts of bankruptcy in the United States are authorized within their territorial limits to “adjudge persons bankrupt who have had their principal place of business, resided, or had their domicile within their respective territorial jurisdictions for the preceding six months, or a greater portion thereof,” and in certain other cases not germane to the matter in hand. Where for the required period one has had his domicile in one judicial district, his residence in another, and his principal place of business in a third, the courts of bankruptcy for the three districts respectively have concurrent jurisdiction over the institution of proceedings in bankruptcy against him, by reason of his domicile, residence and principal place of business. So concurrent jurisdiction exists if, for such period, his domicile or residence has been in one district and his principal place of business in another. The word “persons,” as used in the Bankruptcy Act, includes corporations except where otherwise specified. Section 2 (19) of the Bankruptcy Act (Act July 1, 1898, c. 541, 30 Stat. 546 [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 3421]) empowers the several courts of bankruptcy to “transfer cases to other courts of bankruptcy,” but does not prescribe the conditions or circumstances under or upon which such transfer may be made. Section 32 (30 Stat. 554 [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 3434]) provides:
“In the event petitions are filed against the same person, or against different members of a partnership, in different courts of bankruptcy, each of which has jurisdiction, the cases shall be transferred, by order of the courts relinquishing jurisdiction, to and be consolidated by the one of such courts which can proceed with the same for the greatest convenience of parties in interest.”
The natural import of this provision is that where a court relinquishes jurisdiction of a petition in involuntary bankruptcy, under the circumstances stated, the case shall be transferred to and be consolidated with the other petition or petitions by such one of the courts having concurrent jurisdiction as can proceed with the case “for the greatest convenience of parties iri interest.” General Order 6 (89 Fed. v, 32 C. C. A. ix) in bankruptcy is as follows:
“In case two or more petitions shall be filed against the same individual in different districts, the first hearing shall be had in the district in which the debtor has his domicile, and the petition may be amended by inserting an allegation of an act of bankruptcy committed at an earlier date than that first .alleged, if such earlier act is charged in either of the other petitions; and in case of two or more petitions against the same partnership in different courts, each having jurisdiction over the case, the petition first filed shall be first heard, and may be amended by the inserting of an allegation of an earlier act of bankruptcy than that first alleged, if such eárlier act is charged in either of the other petitions, and, in either case, the proceedings upon the other petitions may be stayed until an adjudication is made upon the petition first heard; and the court which makes the first adjudication of bankruptcy shall retain jurisdiction over all proceedings therein until the same shall be closed. In ease two or more petitions shall be filed in different districts by different members of the same partnership for an adjudication of the bankruptcy of said partnership, the court in which the petition is first filed, having jurisdiction, shall take and retain jurisdiction over all proceedings in such bankruptcy until the same shall be closed; and if such petitions shall be filed in the same district, action shall be first had upon the one first filed. But the court*672 so retaining jurisdiction shall, ii satisfied that it is for the greatest convenience of parties in interest that another of said courts should proceed with the cases, order them to be transferred to that court.”
The word “individual,” as used in the above general order, has been held by Judge Thomas, in a branch of the pending litigation, correctly, as I think, to be equivalent to “person,” and as such to include a corporation. The effects of the genera} order in connection with the provisions of the Bankruptcy Act is, among other things, to make it the duty of the court retaining jurisdiction of the case by reason of the domicile of the alleged bankrupt, “if satisfied that it is for the greatest convenience of parties in interest,” that another court having concurrent jurisdiction should proceed with the case, to order it to be transferred to such other court. Assuming that the bankrupt had its principal place of business, not in Massachusetts, where its product was manufactured, but in the city of New York, this apphcation turns on the question whether the petition, affidavits and exhibits, and the argument of counsel, have satisfied the court that the transfer of the case to the District Court for the Southern District of New York would be “for the greatest convenience of parties in interest.” Unquestionable jurisdiction of the case, owing to the domicile of the bankrupt, existing here, the burden of satisfying this court that the greatest convenience of the parties in interest requires a removal of the case to New York, rests upon those seeking such removal. It is not going far to say that on general principles of policy a court having taken cognizance of a case within its undoubted jurisdiction should not abandon to other tribunals the performance of the duty it has assumed unless it has clear warrant for so doing. The Bankruptcy Act does not define or describe “greatest convenience” or “parties in interest,” as those phrases are used in section 32 and general order 6. Both expressions are elastic and largely indefinite. It is manifestly too narrow a construction of the phrase “parties in interest” to restrict it merely to unsecured creditors in bankruptcy. The bankrupt is not only literally but substantially a party in interest. A creditor holding security which is sought to be set aside by the trustee in bankruptcy is also a party in interest. And it probably may be stated with accuracy that all persons whose pecuniary interests are directly affected by proceedings in bankruptcy are, within the true meaning of section 32 and general order 6, parties in interest. What may be for the greatest convenience of parties in interest does not necessarily depend upon only one factor or circumstance entering into the„situation. Proximity of the place of business of the bankrupt to the court entertaining proceedings in bankruptcy, though a circumstance sometimes entitled to weight is by no means conclusive, and the same may be said with respect to proximity to the place of manufacture. Proximity of a majority of the creditors of the bankrupt in number or in the amount of their claims is a circumstance which should also be duly weighed. And the same may be said with at least equal force of a majority of the debtors of the bankrupt in number of in amount. Nor is the element of expedition or of economy in the administration of the estate in bankruptcy to be lost