218 F. 45 | 5th Cir. | 1914
The averments of the bill, as it was amended, show the following among other facts; In or about the year 1898, the defendant Staley and one Barnsdall formed a partnership for the mining of oil and gas mining lands, thereafter actively conducting and carrying on such partnership business, acquiring oil and gas lands, leases, and leaseholds, their respective interests in the several properties acquired not always being equal, and mining, developing, and operating the same in the firm name of Staley & Barnsdall;
“In the event of one or more but not all of the members of a partnership being adjudged bankrupt, the partnership property shall not be administered in bankruptcy, unless by consent of the partner or partners not adjudged bankrupt; but such partner or partners not adjudged bankrupt shall settle the partnership business as expeditiously as its nature will permit, and account for the interest of the partner or partners adjudged bankrupt.”
The plain language of this provision negatives the existence of a right of the court as a court of bankruptcy to draw to itself the administration of the partnership estate when only one of the partners has been adjudged bankrupt, except in the event of the partner or partners not adjudged bankrupt consenting to its doing so. The right in such a case of a solvent partner to have the partnership business administered elsewhere than in bankruptcy is absolute unless waived by him. Collier on Bankruptcy (8th Ed.). 137. The provision by no means excludes the power of the bankruptcy court over the interest in the partnership property of the bankrupt member of the firm, after that interest, if any, shall have been ascertained and set aside. In the instant case the solvent partner did not waive its right to keep the administration of the partnership property out of the bankruptcy proceeding. On the contrary, prior to the institution of that proceeding
The contention has been made in argument that the decree appealed from finds support in the ruling made in the case of United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. Bray, 225 U. S. 205, 32 Sup. Ct. 620, 56 L. Ed. 1055. That case did not involve the question of the right secured to a solvent partner by the above-quoted provision of the statute. The matter dealt with in the part of the opinion in that case which is relied on was a suit against a trustee in bankruptcy, the purpose of which was to control the disposition of a fund in his possession, admittedly belonging to the bankrupt’s estate, and unquestionably subject to administration in the bankruptcy proceeding, and to determine to what extent and in what order the several creditors should participate therein. Plainly, it does not follow, from the decision that that claim should have been asserted in the bankruptcy proceeding, that such a claim as that asserted by the plaintiff in this case, relating, as it did, to the administration of partnership property, which, without the plaintiff’s consent, was beyond the reach of the bankruptcy proceeding, could properly be required to be asserted nowhere except in that proceeding. An effect of the statute was to forbid the court so to attempt to draw into the bankruptcy proceeding the administration
The decree appealed from is reversed, and the case is remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with the conclusions above stated.