76 F.2d 209 | 5th Cir. | 1935
On August 7, 1928, Henrietta E. Cunningham was adjudged bankrupt in the Northern District of 'Texas. Her estate included lands located in the Western District of Arkansas which were subject to a mortgage given to secure a debt. A short time after the bankruptcy adjudication and an order requiring the sale, by the trustee, of all the bankrupt’s property were made, the appellee, Hobbs Tie & Timber Company, bought that mortgage from the then owner thereof, paying $30,000 therefor, and in December, 1928, brought suit in an Arkansas state court for the foreclosure of that mortgage; the bankrupt and the trustee of the bankrupt estate being made parties defendant to the suit. On the petition of the bankrupt and the trustee that suit was removed to the United States District Court for the Western District of Arkansas. In that court the right of the appellee to maintain its foreclosure suit was unsuccessfully resisted, and that court rendered a decree of foreclosure and sale. From that decree an appeal to the United States Circuit Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit was taken. That court certified to the Supreme Court the question of appellee’s right to maintain the foreclosure suit in the circumstances stated. 282 U. S. 734, 51 S. Ct. 270, 75 L. Ed. 645. The decision of the Supreme Court was to the effect that the Arkansas foreclosure suit was not maintainable save by consent of the bankruptcy court; arid the decree of the District Court for the Western District of Arkansas was reversed, and the ■ cause was remanded to that court, for further proceedings in conformity with the opinion. Isaacs v. Hobbs Tie & T. Co., 282 U. S. 734, 51 S. Ct. 270, 75 L. Ed. 645. Following the remandment of the foreclosure suit, the appellee filed in the court below a petition which asserted that it was entitled as of right to proceed with its foreclosure in the suit pending in Arkansas, and prayed the court’s consent to do so. The denial of that petition by the court below was affirmed by this court, without prejudice to the right of petitioner (appellee here) to further apply to the bankruptcy court for such relief as it may be advised it can show itself entitled to. Hobbs Tie & Timber Co. v. Isaacs (C. C. A.) 61 F.(2d) 1006. While the last-mentioned proceeding was pending on appeal, the appellee filed in the court below its petitition praying that it be permitted to proceed with its foreclosure suit in the Western District of Arkansas, and for all other relief to which petitioner is entitled. That petition contained allegations to the effect that since 1928 the trustee in bankruptcy has failed to pay taxes on the mortgaged lands, that appellee has paid such taxes, amounting to more than $5,000, to prevent the forfeiture and sale of such lands because of nonpayment of taxes, that the value of said lands is far less than the amount of the debt secured by the mortgage thereon, that the trustee in bankruptcy has been in possession of said lands since 1928, has been unable to sell those lands or any part thereof, and is now attempting to sell some of the timber on said lands and some of the land in small parcels and for small prices. To that petition the appellant interposed an “answer, set-off and counterclaim,” which, after answering allegations of the petition, set up a counterclaim which charged in effect that appellee’s conduct in instituting and prosecuting the foreclosure suit and asserting its claim to the mortgaged property in the possession of the trustee in bankruptcy constituted contempt of court; and the appellant prayed that he “recover, for the use and benefit of the estate herein, the sum of, to-wit, $150,000.00
By its decree the court sustained the ap-pellee’s exceptions to the master’s report, and adjudged:
“That the petitioner, Hobbs Tie and Timber Company, has a valid subsisting lien debt on the property described in its petition, not barred by limitation, the amount of which is in excess of the value of the land, which lien it is entitled to foreclose, and- petitioner be and is hereby granted leave to foreclose its said lien in any court of competent jurisdiction and/or to proceed with its foreclosure suit in the Western Judicial District Court of Arkansas, Fort Smith Division thereof, as it may be advised, and to make B. K. Isaacs as Trustee in Bankruptcy herein a party defendant therein.
“That the estate in bankruptcy has no equity .in said property and the said Trustee is directed to relinquish and surrender said property as burdensome to the estate and disclaim interest therein in any foreclosure suit begun or prosecuted by the petitioner. That the order of Court heretofore entered authorizing the Trustee to sell the assets of the estate in bankruptcy insofar as it embraced" and/or related to said property be and it hereby is set aside.
“That the petitioner is not guilty of contempt of court; that the acts of petitioner complained of by the Trustee do not constitute grounds, nor does any pf them constitute a ground, for imposition of fine or recovery of penalties or damages against pé-titioner as for contempt of court.
“That the Trustee in Bankruptcy be and hereby is denied recovery against petitioner on account of each and. everything set up and/or prayed for in his pleadings, and the petitioner be denied recovery against the Trustee other than as he.reby specifically decreed except in the plea and claim of petitioner for an accounting and ascertainment and recovery of damages against the Trustee for alleged conversion of a part of its mortgage security which is pretermitted and left open for further consideration, also the matter of taxing the costs is left open for later determination.”
The decree is complained of only in so far as it had the effect of disallowing the counterclaim based on the charge that ap-pellee was guilty of contempt. The brief of counsel for the appellant contains the statement: “It may be assumed that the property in controversy is now worth less than the lien against it and but for the contempt of the appellee the judgment would be right.”
What was relied on' as constituting contempt was the institution and prosecution by the appellee of -its foreclosure suit, and its conduct in having watched parts of the 12,311 acres of unhábited timberlands covered by the mortgage held by it, while those-lands were in the possession of the trustee, for the purpose' of becoming informed of the removal from those lands of timber or other things thereon. No evidence indicated that the' appellee in any way interfered with-the trustee’s possession of the mortgaged land, or procured the levy of any writ or process on those lands or any part thereof, or attempted to thwart or obstruct any order or process of the bankruptcy court. No evidence adduced fur
It appears that, upon the removal of' the foreclosure suit to the District Court for the Western District of Arkansas, the principal object of the appellant was to secure a postponement of the foreclosure in order to afford to the appellant and his counsel further time to make investigation as to the most favorable method of making a sale of the mortgaged property, and because the economic conditions existing at that time (December, 1928, and January, 1929) made it impossible and impracticable to sell the mortgaged land for anything near its value. When, after the question of appellee’s right to proceed with its foreclosure had been resisted for several years, the appellee made the former application to the bankruptcy court for leave to foreclose its mortgage in the District Court for the Western District of. Arkansas, which application was passed on by this court, the appellant, in resisting that application, recognized that it was impracticable to sell the ' land in a body for enough to pay the mortgage debt, and suggested the plan of trying to sell the land in small tracts of forty acres and upwards, and in some instances if possible to sell the timber separately, reserving the land, the counsel for the appellant being examined as a witness and stating: “The idea of the. Trustee at this time is that an equity exists in the property if it is handled in that manner. How long it will take to accomplish that purpose, it is impossible to tell, but the prospects are increasing and the activity in the way of getting offers and getting down to the point of making a deal is increasing and it should not take more than a reasonable time, considering the amount of land and the amount- of money ■ involved, to dispose of it. * * * ” At the time the appellee filed the petition under which the -decree appealed from wás rendered, it appears that appellant did not seriously contend that the mortgaged land could be sold for enough to pay the mortgage debt, and relied on its charge that the appellee was guilty of .contempt of court, and on the contention that- for that offense the appellee should by the judgment of the court be required to pay the appellant an amount-¡greatly -more than twice the value which the evidence indicated the mortgaged land possessed when the ''.foreclosure suit was instituted, when the -decr.ee appealed from was rendered, or at any intervening time. No evidence indicated that the for
That decree is affirmed.