106 F. 653 | 4th Cir. | 1901
On the 27th day of October, 1899, the appellant filed his petition in bankruptcy in the district court of the United States for the district of West Virginia, and in due time he was adjudged a bankrupt by that court. Prior to his being so adjudged a bankrupt, in the year 1889, a suit in equity, had been instituted against him and others by 'Susan C. Dent in the circuit court of Barbour county, W. Va., the object of which was to set aside as fraudulent a certain deed made by him to trustees, bearing date January 14, 1889, and assailing as fraudulent certain debts therein secured. The creditors of appellant were made parties to said suit, and an amended bill was filed, in which it was alleged that the complainant, Dent, had recovered a judgment at law against appellant for the sum of $10,000, with interest and costs. The prayer of the bill was that the real estate mentioned therein as the property of-appellant, being the same as was described and conveyed in the trust deed, might be sold, and the proceeds applied to the payment of said judgment, and in satisfaction of the liens existing on said land. The history of that case, extending, as it does, through years of hard-fought and well-contested litigation in said circuit court, as well as in the supreme court of appeals of West Virginia, while of great interest, is still not essential to the proper understanding and decision of the appeal now to be decided by this court. It is sufih cient to say that, at the time of the adjudication of the appellant as a bankrupt, it was still pending in and undisposed of by the circuit court of. Bar hour county.
The errors* assigned are that “it was error to hold that the district court had not jurisdiction of the matters alleged in the appellant’s bill of complaint,” and that “it was error to dismiss the complainant’s bill, and not grant the relief prayed for, for the reason that the matters therein were of equitable cognizance and entitled the complainant to the relief asked for.”
Had the trustee, in the discharge of his duty to the creditors of appellant, found it proper to have taken action looking to the annulment of the decree directing the sale of the bankrupt’s property, or the prevention of the sale thereunder, he would have been compelled, under' the statute as it now is, to have sought the aid of the circuit court of Barbour county, within the jurisdiction of which the land is situated and the bankrupt is a resident. The evident intention of congress was not to deprive the courts of the states of the jurisdiction they had, previous ■ to the enactment of the bankruptcy law, over the property of those adjudicated bankrupts; and, this be: ing so apparent, we will not be justified in holding that impliedly a jurisdiction exists in favor of the bankrupt, so far as the district courts of the United States are concerned, that did not exist previous to the passage of said law. If jurisdiction is claimed, on account of the subject-matter of the suit, and because of the question® of equitable cognizance embraced therein, and not as ancillary to the bankruptcy proceedings, then the suit should have been instituted in the circuit court of the United States; due regard having been given to the citizenship of the parties.
But, independent of this, the order dissolving the injunction and dismissing the bill was proper, for other reasons. Conceding the
It follows from what we have said that we are of the opinion that appellant’s assignments of error are without merit. If there is error in the decree of the circuit court of Barbour county, as is charged in appellant’s bill, the remedy is by appeal to the supreme court of appeals of West Virginia, and not by intervention in the bankruptcy proceedings. The fact that one of the creditors of the appellant, whose debt had been allowed by the decree of the circuit court of Barbour county, had prior to such allowance proved said debt in the bankruptcy proceedings pending in the court below, did not operate to deprive the state court of its jurisdiction over the controversy as to which it had for years exercised control. We find no error in the decree appealed from, and it is affirmed.