This is an original petition to this court, filed pursuant to the provisions of section 24, cl. “b,” of the bankruptcy act of July 1, 1898, c. 541, 30 Stat. 553 [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 3432] , to revise, in matters of law, certain involuntary bankruptcy proceedings in the court below. Those proceedings were initiated by the filing in that court by three corporations — Crane Company, Dexter, Horton & Co., and Washington National Bank of Seattle — of a petition entitled, “In the Matter of J. C. Caskey, J. C. Waugh, E. A. Freeman, and H. D. Freeman, Copartners Doing Business under the Name and Style of the North Avon Lumber Company, Bankrupts,” in which it is alleged, in substance, that Caskey, Waugh, and the two Freemans, for the greater portion of six months next preceding the filing of the petition, had their principal place of business at North Avon, in the county of Skagitt, state of Washington, and that all of them, except Caskey, during the same time resided at Mt. Vernon, in Skagitt county; that Caskey dur
The answer of Waugh not only put in issue the averments of the petition, but set up, among other things, the following affirmative defense: That he (Waugh), about August, 1902, owned certain machinery, wagons, horses, and other property'which had been used by him in cutting lumber near Mt. Vernon, in Skagitt county, Wash., and had been selling the lumber to Caskey, then a resident of Seattle; that thereupon Caskey agreed with him (Waugh) that if the personal property mentioned was removed to a new mill site near North Avon, in the county of Skagitt, and the respondent Waugh were to acquire certain lands and timber near there, a corporation should be formed with a capital stock of $16,500 (the estimated value of the property), and that Caskey would pay to Waugh $5,500, whereupon one-third of the capital stock of such corporation should become the property of Caskey; that in accordance with that agreement the personal property mentioned was moved to the new mill site, which was leased to Waugh, and who also
Upon the coming in of the answers and the motion of Caskey, the petitioners filed a motion for an adjudication of bankruptcy, which motion, it appears from the record, came on regularly for hearing upon the petition, the answers, and the motion of Caskey, after which the court “adjudged and decreed that said motion that said respondents be adjudged bankrupts be, and the same is hereby, overruled,” whereupon the respondent Waugh moved the court for a judgment of dismissal of the petition, which motion was denied, to which ruling .the respondent Waugh reserved an exception. The court thereupon, upon motion of the petitioning creditors, referred the cause to a referee in bankruptcy, “with power and authority and the direction of this court to try the issues presented by the pleadings filed herein with a jury, if a jury be demanded by either party, and to make such findings and orders therein as the findings of the jury and the law of the case shall warrant, and to take such other and further action herein as may seem meet and proper.” To which action of the court the respondent Waugh also excepted.
Two questions are presented and argued on the present proceeding: First, was it the duty of the court below to enter a decree dismissing the proceedings upon its decision, based upon the pleadings, that the petitioners were not entitled to a decree that the parties proceeded against were bankrupts? And, second, did it err in making the order of reference above set out ? An affirmative answer to the first question will, as a matter of course, dispose of the second, also.
Rule 37 of the rules established as general orders in bankruptcy of the Supreme Court November 20, 1898 (18 Sup. Ct. x), provides that:
“In proceedings in equity instituted for the purpose of carrying into effect the provisions of the act, or for enforcing the rights and remedies given by it, the rules of equity practice established by the Supreme Court of the United States shall be followed as near as may be.”
The sole question, therefore, that was presented to the court below, was one of law — that is to say, whether the answers presented a good defense to the petition' — and when the court refused, as it did, to adjudicate the respondents bankrupt, it in effect held the answers sufficient in law to defeat the application of the petitioners. There was no question of fact to try, by jury or otherwise, and the respondents were entitled to a final decree dismissing the petition. In re Sanford Fork & Tool Co., 160 U. S. 247, 16 Sup. Ct. 291, 40 L. Ed. 414, and cases cited therein.
The District Court is therefore directed to vacate the order of reference and all proceedings subsequent thereto, and to enter a decree dismissing the petition, at the petitioner’s cost.
