69 W. Va. 276 | W. Va. | 1911
'Plaintiff is a trustee in bankruptcy. Defendants are creditors to whom the bankrupt paid debts in cash' within four months prior to the filing of the petition in bankruptcy, and at a time when defendants knew the bankrupt to be insolvent. By this equity suit in the state court, plaintiff seeks to- recover from defendants the sums so paid, for the benefit of the bankrupt estate. It is alleged that the payments constitute illegal and voidable preferences, recoverable by the trustee, under the national bankruptcy act. On demurrer, the circuit court dismissed the bill. Was that dismissal proper?
Defendants say that the bill cannot be maintained, because the acts alleged do not constitute illegal preferences under the statutes of this state. They also say that, even if preferences unlawful by the state law appeared, the allegations are insufficient to make a case for the setting aside of thle same. It is true that the bill does not present a case of preferences forbidden by state law. Mere payments of money in satisfaction of bona fide pre-existing debts are not declared to be preferences under the insolvency laws of West Virginia. But m]ay not plaintiff invoke the aid of the state court for the recovery of rights arising to him by the provisions of the national bankruptcy law? The bill expressly rests the demand for relief on rights arising under the bankruptcy act. It does not invoke a remedy by state law.
That a trustee in bankruptcy may sue in the state court to set aside preferences declared unlawful by'the bankruptcy act,
The state court of competent jurisdiction may enforce rights under the bankruptcy law as well as may some federal court that also has jurisdiction in the premises. The bankruptcy act is the law of the land. It is binding on all courts. The state courts have full power to enforce its mandates in all proceedings properly before them. “'Where rights conferred by the peculiar provisions of the bankruptcy act are involved, such rights are cognizable in the state court and the state court will enforce the bankrupt law wherever applicable.” Remington on Bankruptcy, sec. 1687.
The allegations of the bill present a case disclosing preferences that are clearly illegal and voidable under the bankruptcy law. Payments of money, though not expressly mentioned in the act, have been held to constitute preferences. Carson, Pirie et al. v. Title & Trust Co., 182 U. S. 438. They have been held to come within th!e meaning of “transfers.” Remington on Bankruptcy, sec. 1331. If a pajnnent is made within four months prior to the filing of the bankruptcy petition, for the purpose of enabling a creditor “to obtain a greater percentage
But, as we have seen, the remedy for the recovery of th'e property or money transferred as an illegal preference must be governed by the law of the forum in which suit is instituted for that recovery. Plaintiff sues in equity. Can a preference under the bankruptcy act. be avoided by such suit under the law and practice of this state? Clearly so., if the preference is by the transfer of title to property, such, as a conveyance or bill of sale. Suits in equity are proper in cases of'that character because they are more adequate and efficacious than actions at law, Equity must be called upon to set aside and avoid the illegal memorial of transfer. But is the equity forum the proper one when the preference to be avoided is one' growing out of a mere voidable payment of money? Is not a suit at law to recover that money quite as adequate and effective a remedy as the trustee in bankruptcy needs to accomplish all that is due to him ? Will not a suit at law itself completely avoid the preference? If plaintiff has an adequate remedy at law, he is barred from equity procedure. The bankruptcy act gives the trustee the right to recover the money — vests in the trustee title to the money that has b’een preferentially paid. The bankruptcy law says that the creditor has only received the money for the use of the trustee. Then may not the trustee most effectively sue for it by the ordinary action at law as for money had and received? What more can equity give him in such case than law?
The bill in this case presents only a demand for mere pecuniary claims. It asks nothing but a decree for money, simply ■because that money is legally due plaintiff. It presents absolutely no ground of equity cognizance. It makes no case of fraud; for the preference alleged is merely an unlawful one; not a fraudulent one. It seeks no accounting or discovery in relation to that which plaintiff claims, nor does it pretend to
That an action at law is the proper procedure in such a case as the one presented in the bill, is established by Laidley v. Laidley, 25 W. Va. 525, and Teter, Adm'r., v. Teter, 65 W. Va. 167. In the latter of these cases, it is held: “Ordinarily a court of law is the proper forum in which to establish a debt. For equity to interpose, there must be something more than a mere claim or demand; there must appear some equity in relation to such claim or demand — something remedial to plaintiff that the law does not give.”
The precise point now under consideration was before the supreme court of Michigan, in a case exactly like this one — a suit in equity by a trustee in bankruptcy to recover money preferentially paid creditors. Detroit Trust Co. v. Old National Bank, supra. The demurrer to tire bill was sustained. It was held: “'Equity does not take jurisdiction of cases where a suitor has a full, complete, and adequate remedy at law, unless it is shown that there is some feature of the case peculiarly within the province of a court of equity.”
In Dew York, when a trustee in bankruptcy seeks a money judgment only, to cover an amount alleged to have been paid as a preference, the action is one at law. Cohn, Trustee, v. Small, 120 App. Div. 211; Merritt v. Halliday, 107 App. Div. 596; Stern v. Mayer, 99 App. Div. 427; Coudert v. Jarvis, 188 N. Y. 584.
It is true that there are federal cases holding that an equity suit is appropriate, but they do not appear to be based on careful consideration of the subject. Pond v. Bank, 124 Fed. 992, relies on Wall v. Cox, 101 Fed. 403. The latter case was one growing out of a fraudulent sale of property, not a mere prefer
The demurrer to the bill was properly sustained. But the right to institute suits at law on the claims of the trustee in bankruptcy against the preferred creditors should have been saved by a reservation in the decree. The decree will now here be modified in that particular. As so modified, the decree will be affirmed, with costs to the appellee.
Modified and Affirmed.