This case is now before the court upon a petition to superintend and revise, in matter of law, proceedings of the District Court of the United States for the Northern District of West Virginia, at Parkersburg. The respondents herein have moved the court to dismiss this petition to superintend and revise, for the reason that the relief sought, if obtainable, must he by an appeal; but after mature consideration of the same we are of opinion, for the reasons stated by this court in the case of Morgan v. First National Bank of Mannington, 145 Fed. 466, 468, 469, 76 C. C. A. 236, that the motion should be denied.
On the 4th day of February, 1909, a petition in involuntary hank
In the progress of the administration of the bankrupt’s estate, the petitioner herein, the Ritchie County Bank, presented and filed before the referee a claim of $6,400, based upon three notes remaining unpaid, and secured under the trust deed aforesaid. To the allowance of this debt as a preferred claim the trustee in bankruptcy excepted,
The learned judge of the District Court, in an able and elaborate opinion (174 Fed. 859), reviewed the facts and discussed the law applicable to the case. After careful consideration, we concur in and adopt the conclusions reached by him. In our view, it is entirely clear under the decisions of the state of West Virginia, as announced in the recent case in the Supreme Court of Appeals of that state of Gilbert v. Peppers, 65 W. Va. 355, 64 S. E. 361, that a conveyance of a shifting stock of goods, or of other personal property of a transitory character, and which changes in the use and handling thereof, left in the possession of the grantor, who is allowed to control and dispose of the same at his will, is void per se, and on its face, and hence can form no basis as security for payment of a debt. Knapp v. Milwaukee Trust Co., Trustee, etc., 216 U. S. 545, 30 Sup. Ct. 412, 54 L. Ed. 610. Wc think it is equally well settled by the decisions of the Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia that, where property of the same class as last herein stated is conveyed under like conditions and treated in the same way, along with other property of a permanent nature, as here, and the transitory property forms, as it does in this case, a material part of what is conveyed, the deed, as respects both classes of property, is equally void. Gardner v. Johnston, 9 W. Va. 403; Claflin v. Foley, 22 W. Va. 441; Livesay v. Beard, 22 W. Va. 585; Shattuck v. Knight, 25 W. Va. 590, 600; Landeman v. Wilson, 29 W. Va. 703, 2 S. E. 203. The case of Shattuck v. Knight, 25 W. Va. 590, supra, a decision of Judge Green, will be found to contain a full and interesting review of the decisions of Virginia and West Virginia covering this class of conveyance, where some portions of the property are transitory and some are not.
Affirmed.