9 S.E.2d 824 | Ga. | 1940
1. Where the owner of property has in his possession funds due under a contract for the erection of a house, which are claimed by the materialmen under an asserted equitable assignment from the contractor and by the trustee of the contractor, who has since been adjudicated a bankrupt, the owner may bring the funds into court and maintain a petition for interpleader to compel the conflicting claimants to litigate between themselves their respective rights thereto.
2. A Federal bankruptcy court has exclusive jurisdiction of all property of the bankrupt in its possession, but under the circumstances stated above the Federal bankruptcy court did not obtain possession of the funds in the hands of the owner, either actually or constructively, and the State court had jurisdiction to entertain a suit with respect thereto.
3. Having jurisdiction to entertain the suit, the State court had authority to enter such orders with respect thereto as were necessary to effectuate the purposes of the suit.
4. Leave to interplead a trustee need not be secured from the court of bankruptcy which appointed him, since an interpleader suit is not an interference with, and can not mature into a charge on, the assets of the bankrupt.
5. A trustee of a bankrupt represents all of the creditors in the collection of the assets of the bankrupt; and in a suit against a trustee to determine whether a fund is a part of the assets of the estate the creditors are not proper parties.
6. Since the evidence in the instant case showed that the materialmen were entitled to the fund in question by reason of an equitable assignment *461 from the contractor, made before the institution of bankruptcy proceedings, the court properly directed a verdict in their favor.
7. An assignment to materialmen of a fund subject to a statutory lien in their favor, though made within four months of bankruptcy and while the contractor is insolvent, is not a preference within the meaning of the Federal bankruptcy act.
8. After a decree has been entered, ordering the petitioner to pay the fund in question into court and ordering the claimants to interplead and set up their claims to the fund, a suit in interpleader becomes, in effect, a proceeding between the claimants alone as adversaries to determine who is entitled to the fund. Upon the trial in this case the verdict was properly limited to the determination of this issue.
In this situation Will Ed Smith filed in the superior court a petition for interpleader against the materialmen, the contractor, and the trustee in bankruptcy, alleging substantially the above-stated facts, and that he was a mere stakeholder and was not in collusion with any of the defendants, and praying that the defendants be temporarily and permanently enjoined from filing suit for recovery of their claims, that he be allowed to pay the balance due on the contract price into the registry of the court, that the defendants be required to interplead and set up their respective claims to the fund, that the materialmen be required to cancel of record their claims of liens against his property; and for general relief. The answer of the materialmen admitted substantially all of the allegations of the petition, and stated in detail the circumstances and alleged terms of the agreement of October 17, 1938, on which they based their claim to the fund in controversy. They alleged, that about October 17, they discovered that the contractor was drawing advances on his contract which they regarded as being out of proportion to the payments being made for material and labor, and decided that if the contractor were allowed to proceed with the construction *463 of the house as theretofore he would not only be unable to pay for the materials already furnished, but the materialmen would suffer an even greater loss; that in this situation they determined to recover such materials and supplies furnished by them as had not been incorporated in the house; that for this purpose they had a conference with the owner and the contractor, and made their position known; that after discussing the matter at length it was agreed by all the parties that the contractor should be allowed to supervise the completion of the house; that the owner should pay for all labor and materials necessary for its completion (the necessary supplies to be bought from the materialmen involved), and that the balance of the contract price, after deducting the cost of completing the house and the amount previously advanced to the contractor, should be paid by the owner directly to the materialmen in proportion to the amounts due to them; and that in pursuance of this agreement they allowed the use of the materials which were on the ground, furnished the additional materials required, abandoned any claim they had against the contractor, and looked only to the owner for payment in accordance with the agreement. They prayed that the prayers of petitioner be granted, that their liens against his property be transferred to the fund to be paid into court by him, and that "it be adjudged and determined that the plaintiff Smith, by reason of said agreement and understanding, became indebted to these defendants, . . and that said fund be applied to the payment of said indebtedness in accordance therewith." The bankrupt contractor filed an answer denying that it was agreed that the owner should pay the balance of the contract price directly to the materialmen, and claiming that this sum should be paid to his trustee in bankruptcy.
W. B. Smith, the trustee in bankruptcy, filed a motion to dismiss the petition, on the grounds that the balance of the contract price was an asset of the estate of the bankrupt of which the Federal bankruptcy court had exclusive jurisdiction, that the petitioner had not obtained the consent of the bankruptcy court or the trustee to bring the suit, that the State court had no authority to enjoin the trustee from bringing suit against the petitioner, etc. He filed a plea in bar, on the ground that the contractor had been adjudicated a bankrupt, and therefore he and his estate were exempt from suit until the question of his discharge was determined. *464 The trustee also demurred generally and specially, and filed an answer. After a hearing, the court overruled the trustee's motion to dismiss, the plea in bar, and the demurrers, and ordered the defendants to interplead and set up their respective claims to the fund which the petitioner was allowed to pay into the registry of the court. The order recited that the petitioner and his property were thereby discharged from any liability to the defendants, and that the claims of the defendants should be transferred to the fund deposited in court, and provided for cancellation of the liens of the materialmen upon the payment of the fund into court. The trustee excepted pendente lite to these orders. Thereafter the trustee and the bankrupt filed amendments alleging that the contractor had obtained his discharge in bankruptcy, and that the materialmen were thereby prevented from establishing their liens.
On the trial, after evidence for all parties had been submitted, the court directed a verdict for the materialmen, and entered a decree prorating the fund among them. The court overruled the trustee's motion for a new trial, and the trustee excepted, assigning error also on his exceptions pendente lite.
1. "Whenever a person shall be possessed of property or funds, or owe a debt or duty, to which more than one person shall lay claim of such a character as to render it doubtful or dangerous for the holder to act, he may apply to equity to compel the claimants to interplead." Code, § 37-1503. There is no merit in the contention that a petition for interpleader would not lie under the facts of the instant case. It appeared that upon the completion of his house the owner had expended all, except approximately $1700, of the contract price for materials and labor used in its construction. The contractor and the materialmen laid claim to this sum. The amount of the balance of the contract price was not in dispute, and neither of the claimants contended that the owner was liable for any amount above this sum. The only question was to whom he should pay it. The materialmen contended that under an oral agreement reached on October 17, 1938, the contractor agreed that the owner should prorate this sum among them; while the contractor denied that he agreed to such an arrangement, and contended that he was entitled to payment under *465
the terms of the original contract. It was not contended that under the alleged contract of October 17 the owner incurred any independent liability to the materialmen. His position was that of a person owing a debt to which the materialmen and the contractor were adverse claimants. There were no facts to show that he was a wrong-doer. Such cases as Tyus v. Rust,
"Before one occupying the situation of a stakeholder can call upon adverse claimants of a fund in his hands to interplead, he must satisfactorily show to the court that their claims have such a `foundation in law as will create a reasonable doubt' as to his safety in undertaking to determine for himself to whom the fund belongs." Franklin v. Southern Railway Co.,
2. It is contended that the State court did not have jurisdiction to entertain this suit, since at the time it was filed the contractor had been adjudicated a bankrupt in the Federal bankruptcy court, where he scheduled the fund in controversy as one of his assets and scheduled the claims of the materialmen among his debts. The constitution of the United States vested authority in Congress to establish uniform laws on the subject of bankruptcies throughout the United States; and the power of Congress is paramount in matters relating to this subject. In pursuance of this authority it has enacted laws of uniform operation throughout the nation, and has designated certain courts as courts of bankruptcy. Among the courts which it has so designated is the United States district court. Although this court is one of limited jurisdiction, its jurisdiction is unlimited in respect of its power over proceedings in bankruptcy which Congress has specifically made subject to its jurisdiction. Congress, however, has not seen fit to confer upon it exclusive jurisdiction to adjudicate every question which may arise in connection with the estate of a bankrupt. Its jurisdiction of property of a bankrupt of which it has acquired possession is exclusive. Murphy v. John Hofman Co.,
It is urged that the court of bankruptcy obtained such constructive possession of the fund in controversy as to give it exclusive jurisdiction thereof. The plaintiff in error stresses the fact that the bankrupt was in possession of a duplicate copy of the original contract at the time he filed his petition in bankruptcy; but we think that this fact has no bearing on the "possession" of the fund. The contract was nothing more than an instrument which might be used as evidence of his right to the fund. However, In re Weston, 68 F.2d 913 (98 A.L.R. 319), it was held that the bankruptcy court obtained such constructive possession of a fund due to a bankrupt contractor as to prevent a State court from obtaining jurisdiction of a subsequent proceeding to enforce a mechanic's lien filed against such fund. In that case it was said that the fund was held for the benefit of the contractor at least until liens had been asserted against it, and that this amounted to constructive possession. One judge dissented from the opinion. In Perry v. Wood, 63 F.2d 257, it was held that since the Texas lien laws *468 had the effect of transferring the owner's obligation from the bankrupt contractor to the materialmen lienholders to the extent necessary to satisfy their liens, the State court had jurisdiction of proceedings to enforce such liens. The facts of the instant case are such as to bring it under the ruling of the latter case. Whether or not the statutes of our State have the effect of transferring the owner's obligation from the bankrupt contractor to the materialmen, the asserted agreement of October 17, if valid, would have that effect. If the assignment was valid, the owner was bound to apply the fund according to its terms among the materialmen, and could not properly have paid the fund to the contractor. See Graham v. Southern Railway Co., supra. The trustee in bankruptcy acquired no better title to the fund than the bankrupt had at the time the petition was filed. Therefore it is clear that the owner was not holding the fund for the benefit of the bankrupt, and that the bankruptcy court can not be said to have obtained constructive possession thereof under the theory of the Weston case.
3. The petition for interpleader contained prayers that the trustee and the other defendants be enjoined from bringing independent suits against the petitioner; and this prayer was granted in the order of the court authorizing the interpleader. We do not think that this amounted to an unauthorized interference with the administration of the bankruptcy court. As stated above, the State court had jurisdiction of the fund involved, and the fund was never in the possession of the bankruptcy court. Having jurisdiction of the fund, the court necessarily had authority to pass all proper orders with respect thereto. It did not purport to interfere with the administration of the assets of the bankrupt which were in the possession of the bankruptcy court. The only purpose of the suit was to require the trustee to interplead and assert his claim, in order to determine if the bankrupt had title to the fund. See Moore v. Hoffman, supra.
4. It is also urged that the suit would not lie, because leave to interplead the trustee was not obtained from the court of bankruptcy which appointed him. In Rice v. Kelly,
5. The trustee contended that various creditors of the bankrupt should have been made parties to the suit. The creditors mentioned do not appear to have been adverse claimants to the fund in question, but appear to have been creditors of the estate, who might have had a priority over the materialmen if it were treated as a part of the estate of the bankrupt. Upon appointment, the trustee became vested with the duty of collecting all of the assets and bringing them into the bankruptcy court for distribution by that court in accordance with the priorities of the various claims. He represented all of the creditors for that purpose, and therefore it was unnecessary to make creditors of the bankrupt parties to this suit. For the reasons stated in this and the preceding divisions of the opinion, the court did not err in granting the prayers of the petitioner for an interpleader and in overruling the trustee's objections thereto. There was no motion to remove the case to the Federal court, and nothing said in this opinion should be construed as a ruling on the questions which might arise from such a motion.
6. We come now to the evidence upon which the court directed a verdict for the materialmen. It appeared that when the materialmen discovered that the purchases made from them by the contractor were so large that it would be impossible for them to be paid in full from the contract price, they immediately sought to determine what steps could be taken to keep their losses as small *470
as possible. It does not appear that either of the materialmen realized before that time that the others had such a large bill for supplies; and one testified that he did not know until then that the house was being built under a contract, but thought that the contractor was merely acting as superintendent in the construction of the house for the owner. Knowing that the contractor was unable to bear any of the loss resulting from his contract, they arranged a meeting with the contractor and the owner at the latter's office, to see what could be done. Some of the materials had not been attached to the house, and on the way to the meeting the contractor was told that these would be seized unless satisfactory adjustments were made. (However, nothing appears to have been said about the materials at the conference.) According to the testimony of the materialmen, the contractor joined in the conversation with reference to the recovery of the materials, and expressed his willingness to do whatever they decided was best. At the meeting it was agreed that the owner would be allowed to complete the house and pay cash for the materials and labor required for its completion; that the contractor would supervise the completion of the building, without charge; that the balance of the contract price, after deducting the amount previously paid for labor and the amount necessary for completion of the house, should be paid directly to the materialmen in proportion to their respective claims; and that the materialmen should not file liens or make other claims against the owner. The materialmen testified that the contractor agreed to this arrangement. However, his testimony on this question was as follows: "I did not agree to the payment of this money, as was testified to by materialmen here. I was present, and knew what they said and knew what they were agreeing to among themselves, but did not say anything. I made no objection, as there was nothing I could say." It is insisted that the evidence demanded a verdict on the theory that an equitable assignment of the fund in controversy was shown by this evidence. "An equitable assignment is such an assignment as gives the assignee a title which, though not cognizable at law, will be recognized and protected in equity. `It is in the nature of a declaration of trust, and is based on principles of natural justice and essential fairness, without regard to form.' 5 C. J. 837. While a legal assignment must be in writing (Turk v. Cook,
There must be a valuable consideration to support an equitable assignment. Had the assignment been in written form, the preexisting debt would have constituted a sufficient consideration; but it is urged that this is not true of an equitable assignment. Whether or not the pre-existing debt was such a valuable consideration as would support the assignment (Sutton v. Ford,
7. The plaintiff in error contends that if the assignment be otherwise valid, it is void as a preference under the Federal bankruptcy act. That act, in so far as here material, is as follows: "A preference is a transfer . . of any of the property of a debtor to or for the benefit of a creditor for or on account of an antecedent debt, made or suffered by such debtor while insolvent and within four months before the filing by or against him of the petition in bankruptcy, . . the effect of which transfer will be to enable such creditor to obtain a greater percentage of his debt than some *473
other creditor of the same class." 11 U.S.C.A. § 96. It is well settled that a materialman's lien is not such a lien as is avoided by the bankruptcy of the debtor. See Middle GeorgiaLumber Co. v. Hunt,
8. In the motion for a new trial the verdict is attacked as void because it failed to cover all of the issues involved in the case. In their verdict the jury, after finding in favor of the materialmen in the sum of their respective claims for materials furnished, found "that the fund paid into court by the plaintiff be applied to the payment of said sums pro rata." It is contended that the jury should have settled the issues pertaining to the right of the petitioner to maintain the petition for interpleader, that the verdict should have been against some particular party, etc. We do not deem it necessary to state each of the numerous grounds of attack, all of which seem to have been based upon an erroneous conception of the nature of a suit in interpleader. Such a suit may be said to consist of two phases. It must first be determined whether the bill will lie. In this phase the court determines whether the complainant is entitled to the relief which he seeks, and enters a decree accordingly. This was done in the instant case when the court, after a hearing, entered a decree overruling the objections and demurrers of the trustee, allowing the petitioner to pay the fund in controversy into the registry of the court, and ordering the defendants to set up their respective claims to the fund. This decree was final in so far as the prayers of the petitioner were concerned. He then obtained all of the relief which he sought. Perkins v.Trippe,
The grounds of the motion for a new trial which have not been dealt with specifically being without merit, it was not error to to overrule the motion.
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.