174 Ga. 612 | Ga. | 1932
As will be seen from the foregoing statement of facts, the fund in hand for distribution by the court was derived solely from a sale of the assets of the Peoples Hardware Co., which had not been adjudicated to be bankrupt. The trustee in bankruptcy claimed this fund as the representative of Folsom & Tillman Hardware Co., for the reason that the assets, of the Peoples Hardware Co. had been assigned to the Folsom & Tillman Hardware Co. to secure an indebtedness due by the Peoples Hardware Co. to the bankrupt, Folsom & Tillman Hardware Co. The Peoples
A trustee in bankruptcy is entitled to have all that the bankrupt has, but he is not entitled to anything to which the bankrupt would not be entitled. Before the Folsom & Tillman Hardware Co. was adjudicated a bankrupt, that corporation assigned and transferred to the Atlanta Plow Co. two of these notes. Hnder the Civil Code (1910), § 4376, these notes which were transferred to the Atlanta Plow Co. have a preference over any of the remaining indebtedness to the Folsom & Tillman Hardware Co., evidenced by notes of this same series. The code section provides that “The transfer of notes secured by a mortgage or otherwise conveys to the transferee the benefit of the security. If more than one note is secured and the mortgagee transfers some and retains others, the holder of the transferred notes lias a preference over the mortgagee if the security is insufficient to pay all the notes.” In this ease the fund in hand is insufficient to pay the notes which were transferred to the Atlanta Plow Co. We are therefore of the opinion that the entire fund should be awarded to that corporation. Investors Syndicate v. Thompson, 173 Ga. 303 (158 S. E. 30). This code section was construed by Judge Newman in re R. II. Elrod & Son, 315 Fed. 353, in a proceeding in bankruptcy. In that case Wood & Blakey was indebted to R. II. Elrod for the purchase-money of a stock of goods and storehouse, in the sum of $3,750. This indebtedness was evidenced by three promissory notes, two for $1,000 each and'the third for $750. Among other securities Wood & Blakey gave a security deed to a described storehouse and lot. Afterward R. H. Elrod & Son, being indebted to Arnold Grocery Co., transferred to said company the purchase-money note for $750 as collateral security for the payment of the indebtedness. There was no formal transfer in writing of the security or any part thereof by Elrod to the Arnold Grocery Co. Both firms were adjudicated bankrupt. The referee conceded that the question involved § 4376 of the Civil Code of 1910, but was of the opinion that, in order for the transferee of the transferred note to take and obtain any benefit from the security deed, there must have been an assignment and conveyance of the title to the land given to secure
We are only called upon to decide whether the court erred in decreeing that the fund in hand should be awarded .to the trustee in bankruptcy for distribution to the creditors of Eolsom & Tillman Hardware Co., which would restrict the Atlanta Plow Co. to a dividend of 4.54 per cent. As to this, we are of the opinion that under the provisions of tlie Code, § 4276, the Atlanta Plow Co. is entitled to the entire fund.
Judgment reversed.