On November 21, 1952, an involuntary petition in bankruptcy was filed against the Basile Shipping Company. Prior thereto in October 1952 the defendant had instituted proceedings in Honduras to foreclose a mortgage dated November 9, 1951 on two of the debtor’s ships located there. At the request of certain creditors a temporary restraining order was granted on January 26, 1953, enjoining the foreclosure of the mortgage for thirty days after the appointment of a trustee in bankruptcy. Following their appointment, the trustees on February 9, 1953, brought a plenary suit under §§ 67 and 70 of the Bankruptcy Act, 11 U.S.C.A. § 1 et seq., in the district court seeking, inter alia, that the aforesaid mortgage be declared invalid and paid off, and that pending a determination of the con *646 troversy the defendant be restrained from proceeding in Honduras with the foreclosure of the mortgage. By order of February 24, 1953, the district court denied the injunction 'pendente lite on the ground that the trustees had failed to show that irreparable injury to the bankrupt’s estate would result if the injunction were not granted, and this appeal from the order followed.
The trustees in bankruptcy contend that the district court erred in requiring a showing of irreparable damage before issuing the injunction, and that as trustees in bankruptcy they need only demonstrate that there is a fair probability that the mortgage is invalid or has been repaid in full to entitle them to an injunction against its foreclosure. Principal reliance is based on In re Lustron Corp.,
7
Cir.,
Thus, under the above decisions the district court clearly did not err in denying the injunction
pendente lite
in the absence of proof of irreparable injury. Cf. Brehme v. Watson, 9 Cir.,
Accordingly, the order is- affirmed-..
