174 F. 654 | 4th Cir. | 1909
This is a controversy over the distribution of a fund arising from the sale of a stock of merchandise belonging to the bankrupts which, on February' 20, 1906, was mortgaged to the appellant, B. 1. Simmons. So far as affected by the bankrupt law, it is conceded that, as to the Sil,958.89 loaned at the time the mortgage was executed, the mortgage is not invalidated by the bankrupt law (Act July 1, 1898, c. 541, 30 Stat. 544 [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 3418]). The question in controversy arises from the fact that the mortgage was kept off the record until April 5, 1906, a period of over 40 days, and there are creditors of the bankrupt who became such in the interval between the execution of the mortgage and its recording whose claims exceed the amount of the fund.
The statute of South Carolina enacts that mortgages of real or personal property shall be valid, so as to affect subsequent creditors, whether lien creditors or simple contract creditors, only when recorded within 40 days; but the subsequent recording shall operate as notice to all creditors who become such after the date of the recording. Section 2436 of the Civil Code of South Carolina of 1902. This act, therefore, creates a class of creditors who are not affected by the mortgage, while all others take rights which are subordinate to it. That class is those who have become creditors between the date of the mortgage and the date of its record, and that without regard to whether they are “lien creditors or simple contract creditors.” If there is a fund to be distributed among creditors, and some take subordinate to a lien, and there are others who are not affected by the lien, the result must he that those who are not affected by the lien are paid first, and the lien creditor is postponed to them. This was the ruling of the learned District Judge in Re Cannon, supported by
The assignments of error on this appeal are in effect that the judge below should have held that Simmons, the mortgagee, was entitled to share in the fund with the subsequent creditors. This contention must be upon the theory that he was as to his debt a subsequent creditor. This, we think, is an obviously strained and untenable construction. Simmons’ debt and the mortgage to secure it were created simultaneously, and the debt cannot be said to have been subsequent to the mortgage. The only sensible meaning to be given to the words “subsequent creditors,” used in the statute, is that they are creditors who became such subsequent to the execution of the mortgage. The South Carolina statute governs the rights of the respective parties. By that statute, and the construction placed upon it by the South Carolina counts, the mortgage is good without recording as to the bankrupt and as to all creditors whose rights accrued prior to its execution, and it is of ño effect as to those creditors, whether simple contract or lien creditors, whose rights accrued between the execution of the mortgage anc its recording. The ruling below gave effect to the statute.
In Piester v. Piester, 22 S. C. 139-143, 53 Am. Rep. 711, the question was whether the holders of the bonds secured bjr the mortgages should share ratably with the subsequent creditor because of the statute fixing the order in which a decedent’s debts should be paid out by his estate; and the lower court so held, but the appellate court reversed the lower court on that point, and approved the ruling that, so far as the rights of creditors who come within the category of subsequent creditors were concerned, the unrecorded mortgage should be treated as nonexistent.
The sole error assigned upon this appeal, and which is properly before us to be considered, is that the District Court should have held that the mortgagee ought to have been allowed to share as a subsequent cx-editor ratably with the creditors to whom the bankrupt became indebted after the date of the mortgage. This we think would have been error, and the court was right in not so ruling.
Affirmed.
PRITCPIARD, Circuit Judge, dissents.