98 Mo. App. 530 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1903
This is an action of replevin to recover certain personal property consisting of men’s .knit, felt and rubber boots. The plaintiff is a manufacturing company incorporated under the laws of the -State of Indiana.
The cause was submitted to the circuit court upon .an agreed statement of facts which was to the effect: (1) That Huyssen & Holm were partners engaged in the boot and shoe business in this State; that they procured the goods described in the plaintiff’s petition on a written order in which, amongst other things, it was recited that, “the title and property in all the goods herein mentioned shall remain in the vendor until fully paid for or sold in due course of business by the buyer, and if payment for the same shall not be promptly made when due, or, if at any time before the same shall be fully paid for or sold in the due course of business by "the purchaser, the purchaser shall become insolvent or shall, in the opinion of the vendor, be in danger of insolvency, or the vendor, in its judgment, shall for any
Upon the facts agreed the finding and judgment was for the plaintiff; and after an unsuccessful motion for a néw trial, the defendant appealed.
The defense pleaded and relied on by the defendant in his answer was, that at the time of the commencement of the action the property, the possession of which it was thereby sought to recover, was in the custody of the law and under the control of the United States District Court, and that therefore.the State court in which the action was brought was without jurisdiction. And so the question thus presented is, whether or not the replevined property was in custodia legis, or whether or not such property may be taken from the custody of the trustee under the writ of replevin issuing out of a State court?
Whether or not the property at the time was in custodia legis must be determined with reference to the Bankruptcy Act of 1898. By section 2 of that act, the district courts of the United States are made courts of bankruptcy with such jurisdiction at law and in equity as will enable them to exercise original jurisdiction in bankruptcy proceedings, to adjudge persons bankrupt; to allow and disallow claims against bankrupt estates;
It will be seen from an examination of the various sections of the Bankrupt Act that a scheme is therein provided whereby the estate of a bankrupt is by the United States district courts, through the various officers named in the act, to be taken into custody and fully administered by it for the benefit of all the creditors proving their claims in accordance with their respective rights and privities. The several officers therein 'named who, under the orders and directions of the court, are to conduct the administration .of such estates, are but the arms of the court to be used by it in effectuating and carrying out the scheme so provided by the act. The manifest purpose of the act was to provide for the discharge of honest debtors, who have become insolvent,
Here, it appears from the facts agreed that the defendant as receiver of the bankrupt’s estate under an' order of the district court, took possession of the property of the bankrupts, including that in issue, and later on, when appointed trustee of the estate of the bankrupts, the title to such property, by operation of law, passed to him as such trustee, to be administered under the direction of the court for the benefit of creditors, so that it was in custodia legis. When property is in custodia legis, the officer holding it is the mere hand of the court: his possession is the possession of the court, and to interfere with his possession is to invade the jurisdiction of the court. Many cases might be cited illustrating the application of this doctrine.
Keegan v. King, 96 Fed. Rep. 758, was where a trustee had possession of certain fixtures scheduled by the bankrupt and had advertised the personal property of the bankrupt, including the fixtures, for sale, and a stranger brought a suit in the. State court to restrain the trustee from selling the fixtures' and to establish the title' to the property against the trustee. In the course of the opinion of the court disposing of the case it was said: 1 ‘ After this court has taken possession of property through its receiver and trustee-as the prop
White v. Schloerb, 178 U. S. 542, was where, after the referee had taken possession of the stock of goods in the store of the bankrupts and had caused the entrance to it to be locked up, a writ of replevin of some
And so it has been adjudged that property taken and held by a marshal on a writ of attachment from a court of the United States directing him to attach the property of one person could not be taken from his possession on a writ of replevin on behalf of another person who claimed the- attached property as his own. Freeman v. Howe, 24 How. 450; Peck v. Jones, 7 How. 612;. Buck v. Colbath, 3 Wall. 334; Covell v. Heyman, 111 U. S. 176; Nugent’s case, 118 U. S. And similar rulings have been made in the following cases: Kirk v. Kane, 87 Mo. App. 274; State ex rel. v. Netherton, 26 Mo. App. 414; Smith v. Railroad, 151 Mo. 391; Marx v. Hart, 166 Mo. 503; Green v. Tittman, 124 Mo. 372; State ex rel. v. Six, 80 Mo. 61; Bank v. Owen, 79 Mo. 429. And this comity between the Federal and State courts is necessary to prevent scandals from unseemly conflicts of jurisdiction and to promote the decent and orderly adminis
The Bankruptcy Act is the supreme law of the land enacted in pursuance of an express grant of constitutional authority and all matters embraced in that act must be controlled and governed by it. The jurisdiction given by the second section of it to the district courts in bankruptcy proceeds is necessarily exclusive. • And this seems to be the result of the authorities to which we have been referred by appellant. In re Cunningham, 9 Cent. Law Journal 208, and cases cited; In re Anderson, 23 Fed. Rep. 482 (pp. 489-490, 495 and post); In re Smith et al., 92 Fed. Rep. 135; In re Francis-Valentine Co., 93 Fed. Rep. 953; In re Richard, 94 Fed. Rep. 633; Kreegan v. King, 96 Fed. Rep. 758; In re Cobb, 96 Fed. Rep. 821; In re Endl, 99 Fed. Rep. 915; In re Chambers, Calder & Co., 98 Fed. Rep. 865; In re Wells, 114 Fed. Rep. 322; Bryan v. Bernheimer, 181 U. S. 188; In re Tune, 115 Fed. Rep. 906.
The sale under which the bankrupts acquired the possession of the property in controversy was conditional. If the plaintiffs did not pay for the property the title was not to pass except to so much thereof as was sold by the bankrupts in the due course of business. The bankrupts had the power to transfer the same and it may be that such property while in their possession was subject to be levied upon and sold under judicial process against them, and it may, too, be that under the provisions of section seventy of the Bankruptcy Act the title to such property passed to the trustee. Carter v. Hobbs, 92 Fed. Rep. 594; and it may also be that such conditional sale was, as to creditors, void under our statute. R. S. sec. 3412; Collins v. Wilhoit, 108 Mo. 451; Landis v. McDonald, 88 Mo. App. 335. But the determination of these questions in a case like this falls
But it is contended that under section 4463 Revised Statutes the property was not in custodia legis but if this contention be conceded, still, the plaintiff was not entitled to recover because of the exclusive jurisdiction of the bankruptcy court of the question of title which it was sought to have determined by the State court in the action of replevin. We do not understand that the statute just referred to has overthrown dhe rule of comity prevailing between two courts exercising even concurrent jurisdiction where one of them has acquired jurisdiction of the res by a proceeding in rem before it, or where the property is in its custody through one of its officers. It is true that since the ruling of the Supreme Court of this State in Mohr v. Langan, 162 Mo. 474, it has been authoritatively settled that as 'to parties to a replevin suit or their grantees or privies, the property is in custodia legis pending the determination of that suit and can not be sold by the party in possession or levied upon by either party or their privies, but that as to third ‘persons the pendency of the replevin suit does not place the property in custodia legis and does not. bar their right to proceed against it by proper judicial process to establish their rights. But the application of this rule can not be appropriately invoked in a case like this. The property here was not placed in the possession of the trustee of the bankrupts’ estate by an officer under a writ of replevin. His possession was acquired under the Bankrupt Act and is a proceeding authorized
The general rule is that where one claims property in custodia legis he must intervene in the court having the custody of it. State v. Netherton, 26 Mo. App. 414; Metzner v. Graham, 57 Mo. 404; Carter v. Hobbs, ante. And no reason is seen for a departure from this rule of practice jn the present case.
It follows that the general finding of the court upon the facts agreed was erroneous, -and accordingly the judgment will be reversed.