This is an appeal from an order and decree of a Court of Probate, passed upon the petition of the plaintiff, a creditor, adjudging the defendant, a person engaged chiefly in farming and the tillage of the soil, to be an insolvent debtor, and appointing a trustee in insolvency to take possession of, manage and dispose of his estate as provided by the insolvency laws of this State. The person so declared an insolvent debtor appeals for the sole reason that the Court of Probate was without jurisdiction or authority to make the order and decree, since the statutes of the State purporting to confer such jurisdiction and authority were rendered inoperative by reason of the existence of the Federal Bankruptcy Act then in force. This reason of appeal is demurred to, and the question thus presented reserved for our advice.
It is undoubted law that the enactment by Congress
*603
of the Bankruptcy Act of 1898 suspended and held in abeyance during its existence all insolvency laws of the several States then in existence or subsequently passed conflicting therewith.
Sturges
v.
Crowninshield,
In consonance with this principle we have held that our' State courts were without jurisdiction in voluntary insolvency of a farmer, since the Federal Bankruptcy Act provides for the distribution of his estate among his creditors by proceedings in voluntary bankruptcy.
Rockville National Bank
v.
Latham,
The case now before us presents a different situation and a more difficult question. The proceedings, in the course of which the order and decree appealed from were passed, were in involuntary insolvency, while the Bankruptcy Act expressly excepts farmers, as well as wage-earners and debtors owing less than $1,000, from the category of those who may be adjudged involuntary bankrupts. Bankruptcy Act, §4. The question we have to determine thus becomes narrowed to one whether or not the provisions of our State law providing for involuntary insolvency are suspended and rendered inoperative as to farmers by the existence of the Federal law which provides for the voluntary but not involuntary bankruptcy of that class of persons.
*604 The question thus presented has not, as far as we are aware, been before the Supreme Court of the United States for authoritative determination, and we are left to answer it with only such help as may come from the few decisions of the State and inferior United States courts which have had occasion to give utterance to their views upon the subject. These decisions are not in full accord.
In
Littlefield
v.
Gay,
The defendant cites
Parmenter Mfg. Co.
v.
Hamilton,
Closser v. Strawn, 227 Fed. Rep. 139, 146, is another case referred to by the defendant. It was a case in the District Court of the western district of Pennsylvania, involving a question arising out of the voluntary assignment by a farmer under the Pennsylvania laws. In the course of his opinion the district judge made a correct statement of the pertinent principle that, the Bankruptcy Act being in force, no farmer who declined to avail himself of its provisions could avail himself of the insolvency Act of Pennsylvania, and then added, “or be subjected to the requirements of that Act.” For this last obiter dictum assertion he assigns no reason beyond that contained in the general proposition that where Congress has exercised its power over a subject the control of the States over that subject is prohibited. He seems to have assumed that what Congress has done as respects the insolvent condition of farmers, wage-earners, and small debtors, amounts to an exercise of control over that whole subject.
Cases either expressly, or by plain implication, holding a contrary doctrine, include
Old Town Bank
v.
McCormick,
It is undoubted law that the Federal Act does not suspend the operation of State laws in so far as the latter affect classes of persons which are expressly excepted ■from the operation of its provisions, or which those provisions do not reach. Such classes include municipal, railroad, insurance and banking corporations, which the Act expressly excepts.
Sturges
v.
Crowninshield,
The pertinent questions thus are: Does the Federal Act, in the purpose and intent of its framers, cover the field which these cases, situations and conditions occupy? Did Congress intend to bring them within its purview and make its provisions in view of them and to govern them? If so, the Federal Act is paramount and exclusive: if not, it does not invade the province of State legislation, and leaves such legislation free to provide for them. As Chief Justice Marshall, referring to insolvency matters, said in
Sturges
v.
Crowninshield,
Ik would thus appear that the crucial inquiry in this ease is as to the intent of Congress in framing the provisions of the Bankruptcy Act, and that intent must be gathered from the language of the Act examined in the light of the subject with which it deals and the remedial purposes of legislation upon that subject. *608 Its remedial provisions are extended to the farmer, in that the door of voluntary bankruptcy is open to him. On the other hand, it is expressly provided that he may not be adjudged an involuntary bankrupt. Did Congress, in so legislating, intend to cover the whole field of his insolvent condition, and intend to provide in his case and in that of the wage-earner and the small debtor, who were classed with him, that the only means of securing the equal distribution of his assets among his creditors should be through the medium of voluntary bankruptcy, or was its intent and purpose to leave the matter of securing such distribution upon the initiative of creditors untouched, and therefore subject to the regulation of the States? By the exception of municipal, railroad, insurance and banking corporations from the operation of both voluntary and involuntary bankruptcy provisions, as made .in § 4, it clearly was not intended that there should be no State regulation as to those corporations when insolvent, and therefore none at all. Shall a different intent be drawn when the farmer, wage-earner and small debtor are excepted from the operation of its involuntary operations only? Shall we say that the one exception implies no intent to legislate for persons within the classes named while the other exception does? If so, it must be for the sole reason that some provision was made for the latter class, that is one permitting them to become voluntary bankrupts.
We take it to be well settled that the intent to supersede the execution of State powers in respect to matters not covered by direct Federal legislation is not to be inferred from the mere fact that Congress has seen fit to circumscribe its regulations and to occupy a limited field.
Savage
v.
Jones,
*609
Judge Taft, in
Leidigh Carriage Co.
v.
Stengel,
Upon this aspect of the case the following observations in
Geery’s Appeal,
We are of the opinion that Congress did not intend to bring the situation, created by the unwillingness of insolvent farmers, wage-earners and small debtors, to submit themselves of their own volition to the jurisdiction of the Federal bankruptcy courts for the equal distribution of their estates among their creditors, within the purview of the Bankruptcy Act, or to cover the field created by that condition, not unlikely to arise, and that the provisions of our State legislation regulating such situations and conditions are, therefore, not suspended and rendered inoperative by reason of the existence of the Bankruptcy Act.
The Superior Court is advised to enter up judgment sustaining the demurrer to the defendant’s reasons of *611 appeal, dismissing the appeal and affirming the order and decree appealed from.
Costs in this court will be taxed in favor of the plaintiff.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
