61 W. Va. 584 | W. Va. | 1907
The Ruhl-Koblegard Company complains of a decree of the circuit court of Webster county dismissing its bill filed for the purpose of setting aside two alleged fraudulent conveyances of lots of land situate in the town of Addison, to Maggie E, Gillespie, the wife of James M. Gillespie, and seeking to subject the same to the payment of a debt claimed to be due to it from the last named defendant. The record of the cause discloses that by two certain deeds dated the 18th day of August, 1894, and the 16th day of October, 1897, re
There are several reasons advanced by the appellees in support of the decree of the circuit court, but the main questions arising are, whether or not the discharge in bankruptcy of the defendant, James M. Gillespie, is a bar to the plaintiff’s claim, and whether not after the adjudication in bankruptcy only a trustee appointed therein could maintain a suit to set aside fraudulent conveyances.
The determination of both of these questions depends entirely upon the construction of the Bankruptcy Act of 1898. By section 17 of that Act it is provided that a discharge in bankruptcy shall release a bankrupt from all his provable debts, except a certain specified class. Therefore, there are only two inquiries to make, first, is the plaintiff’s debt a provable One in bankruptcy, and, second, is such debt included in' the specified exceptions ? There certainly can be no question,
And again, the right of the creditor to prosecute this suit is challenged, it being contended that such right is vested solely in the trustee. At the outset it may be well to remark that it is urged by the appellant that no trustee was elected, Whether this is so or not we cannot determine, 'because certain orders of the bankruptcy proceeding, copied into the record, by which it is claimed this fact appears,
These lots, as will' be observed, were conveyed to the female defendant prior to the passage of-the Bankruptcy Act, and several years before the filing of the petition in bankruptcy. The plaintiff’s claim was presented and proved in the bankruptcy proceeding, and it became the duty of the trustee, if these lots in controversy were the property of the bankrupt, to bring and prosecute such proceedings as were necessary to subject them to the payment of his debts, and if the trustee failed to do this, the plaintiff had the right to and it was its duty, if it desired to subject this property to the payment of its debt, to apply to the court for relief in this respect. “The negligence or refusal of a trustee to bring a suit to set aside such a conveyance is not sufficient to enable a creditor to maintain a suit in his own name.” Loveland on Bankruptcy, section 158.
It is contended by counsel for the - appellant that section 67c of the Bankruptcy Act of 1898 vests in trustees in bankruptcy the right to bring suits to attack fraudulent conveyances only when such conveyances are made within four months prior to the filing of the petition in bankfuptcy. “ All property transferred by the bankrupt in fraud of his creditors vests in the trustee. There is no four months’ limitation on this class of transfers.” Love-land on Bankruptcy, section 158. The limitation period of four months fixed by section 67c was not intended to cover
We find the decree of the circuit court fully sustained by reason and authority, and it is therefore affirmed.
Affirmed.