105 F. 581 | 6th Cir. | 1901
On the 23d day of March, 1900, E. B. Nugent was adjudicated a bankrupt upon the .petition of the Wayne Knitting Mills and others, his creditors, filed February 19, 1900, and the matter was referred to a referee. Shortly thereafter Arthur E. Mueller was appointed trustee of the bankrupt’s estate. On the 7th of April following, the trustee obtained an order upon the bankrupt from the referee requiring him to show cause why he should not be required to pay over to the trustee two sums, — one of $4,133.45, which it was alleged the bankrupt had received upon a mortgage of his house and lot in Louisville, and another of $10,100, alleged to have been received by him upon the sale of a stock of goods with which he had been doing business in that city. In.the bankrupt’s response he stated that the moneys were in the hands of his son, W. T. Nugent, and that it was' impossible for him (the bankrupt) to pay the money to the trustee. Upon the hearing this response was held by the referee to be insufficient, and the bankrupt was ordered to pay the funds mentioned into the hands of the trustee. Upon the bankrupt’s failure to do this, he was adjudged guilty of contempt by the referee, and the matter was reported to the court, with a recommendation that the bankrupt be committed for his contempt. Upon a suggestion that the bankrupt was of unsound mind and approaching senile imbecility, the court declined to make the order and discharged him. On the 13th day of April, 1900, the trustee presented to the referee a petition for an order to show cause against William T. Nugent, the present petitioner for review. In that petition the trustee alleged that the bankrupt pretended that the proceeds of the mortgage and stock of goods were in the possession of William T. Nugent, who had been ordered to appear and testify; that the latter concealed himself, and could not be found by the marshal. It was further stated that it was “shown by the evidence herein” that the said William T. Nugent was authorized by the bankrupt to receive the said moneys, and that the bankrupt pretended that the money was intended to be used in the payment of creditors and starting another business elsewhere. The trustee further stated in his said petition that he did not know whether the money was in the hands or under the control of E. B. Nugent or William T. Nu-gent, but he was fearful it would be dissipated unless an . injunction should be issued against William T. Nugent, restraining him from disposing of any part thereof, and an order made that he pay the said moneys into the hands of the trustee; that, as the trustee believed, the said moneys were part of the estate of the bankrupt, and that, if they came into the hands of said William T. Nugent at all, they did not come to him “as a common or simple debtor,” “but that said sum is á fund belonging to this estate, and should be in the hands” of the trustee. Whereupon the trustee prayed that an order for an injunction, restraining William T. Nugent “from disposing of
“Ánd, thereupon, pursuant to the orinion of the court filed herein on the 1st instant, it is the judgment of the court that William T. Nugent, for his ■contempt aforesaid, be imprisoned and confined in the county jail of Jefferson county, Kentucky) until he shall deliver or pay to Arthur E. Mueller, the trustee herein, said sum of $14,233.45, or otherwise satisfy the said trustee with respect thereto; and the court reserves the right and power to suspend or set aside the judgment and sentence upon the delivery, payment, or satisfaction aforesaid. To all of which the respondent, William T. Nugent, excepts.”
In pursuance of this order the respondent was committed to the county jail. Upon his petition the proceedings were certified to this court for review. The petition for review by the district judge prayed Only for the review of the order of the referee ordering the respondent to pay the sums of money mentioned to the trustee, and it is the .action of the district judge upon that petition which is the subject of our review; but as the validity of the referee’s order requiring the payment of the money, and the order finding the respondent guilty of contempt, and the authority of the judge to order the imprisonment, depend upon the previous proceedings, the whole of the proceédings must necessarily be considered.
It must be admitted that the circumstances shown by the record would, unexplained, tend strongly to indicate that the petitioner was a party, and perhaps the principal party, to a fraud upon the creditors of the bankrupt. But if he was under no valid requirement to make defense, and show such explanatory facts, if they exist, as would relieve the present appearances, and he has failed to do so in -consequence of his reliance upon his objection that the proceedings were without lawful authority, it would be premature to pass judg,ment on the merits of the case.
The question of the legality of the proceedings is twofold: First, ' whéther it is competent for the court in bankruptcy to adopt this summary' method of getting the assets of the bankrupt in, under- circumstances such as these; and, second, if such authority existed, whether it was duly exercised in the present case. It is needless to -say that if the facts are as found by the referee the fund in ques- ' tion was of the assets of the bankrupt, and that upon his. qualification the trustee became vested with the title thereto as of the date of the adjudication of 'bankruptcy, and the right to its possession. :But the question is, how may he recover such possession? If the ''circumstances are such that the bankrupt himself, but for his barik- : rupt’cy, could not recover the fund by a summary proceeding against .one who withholds it from him, is there any provision in the bankrupt act which entitles the trustee to resort to it? The person in pos
But it is urged that the respondent was the agent of the bankrupt, and that his possession was that of the bankrupt, and that, as the bankrupt could be compelled to turn over the fund, so might his agent. This argument again confounds the actual with the theoretical conditions, and it is with the former that we are necessarily concerned. Let it be conceded that in the eye of the law the possession of the agent is that of the principal; yet if, as matter of fact, the agent withholds the property of his principal, the latter must have recourse to the ordinary legal remedies, and in a proper court. The fiduciary relation between them gives the principal no extraordinary remedy to compel the agent to deliver the property, which he holds to his master. That relation may affect the determination of the court when its jurisdiction has been properly invoked, but that is another matter. The case with which we have to deal is one where the bankrupt transferred the assets before the petition in bankruptcy was filed, and the trustee has never had possession, and where his right is given by the retroactive operation of the law resulting from the adjudication in bankruptcy. How the matter would stand where the assignee has obtained possession of the assets, and a third person dispossesses him or otherwise meddles with the assets, is a different question, and is subject to different considerations, into which we have here no necessity to go.
• Our conclusion that these proceedings are invalid for lack of sufficient authority from the law also makes it unnecessary to .consider whether, if such authority existed, the petition to the referee for the order to show cause was sufficient to found the proceedings against the respondent, and whether the proceedings taken thereon were regular or otherwise. It results that the order of the district court for the commitment of the respondent should be reversed, and the 1 order to show cause made by the referee, together with his order requiring the respondent to pay the trustee the money under his control, as well as the order adjudging the respondent to be in contempt, should be vacated and set aside.