278 Pa. 400 | Pa. | 1924
Opinion by
This is the question presented: Where a fire insurance company, in settlement of a loss, has made payment to the insured, after the date of filing an involuntary bankruptcy petition against him, but before the adjudication, without knowledge of the petition, can the trustee, the insured having absconded, compel payment by the insurance company a second time?
Gioffre owned a building covered by a policy of defendant company; on January 30,1920, it was destroyed by fire. The insured made proof of loss March 20, 1920. An involuntary petition in bankruptcy was filed against him on April 13, 1920. August 28, 1920, the insurance company, without notice of the pendency of the bankruptcy proceeding, paid to Gioffre the amount of the policy, less a sum due on a mortgage covering the property. He was adjudged a bankrupt November 19, 1920, and on December 18,1920, a trustee was appointed, who subsequently (Gioffre having absconded) began suit to recover from the insurance company the amount of money it had paid the bankrupt, less the sum paid the mortgagee. On the trial, the court entered a compulsory
On first reading, there seems to be some confusion among the various cases in which the courts have been called on to determine the rights of those who in good faith have dealt with a bankrupt between the time of the filing of an involuntary petition and the adjudication. These cases are many and a review of all of them will not be attempted. A discussion of most of them can be found in 1 Federal Statutes Annotated, 2d ed., page 1154. Their careful perusal, having in mind the particular facts of each case, what the court was called upon to determine, the provisions of the Bankruptcy Act of 1898, and its amendment of 1910, dispels at least some of the fog.
Under the Bankruptcy Act of March 2, 1867, 14 Stat. L. 522, payment to a bankrupt, after filing of the petition, although made in good faith, and without actual notice of the proceeding, was not valid. Judge Sharswood, in speaking of that statute in Mays v. Manufacturer’s National Bank, 64 Pa. 74, 77, thus characterized it: “This is an unjust and cruel law; and the effect of it may be to make bankrupts of honest and solvent men, who are only desirous of fulfilling their legal obligations. That all the world has notice of a transfer by operation of law, in proceedings in bankruptcy, is a mere fiction— not true in reality — ......The attention of Congress ought surely to be called to this subject, and some suitable provision made to protect those who deal honestly, in good faith, and without notice, with bankrupts.” That Congress did not intend to continue this injustice when it passed the Act of July 1,1898, 30 Stat. L. 544, is made manifest by the provisions of section 70a of the statute, which provides, that the trustee shall be vested, by operation of law, with the title of the bankrupt, “as of the date he was adjudged a bankrupt.” In our opinion, it would take more explicit language than that of the amendment of June 25, 1910, 36 Stat. L. 838, on which
Certain declarations by the federal courts, — such as: “The filing of the petition by proper parties......making the requisite jurisdictional allegations......operates as a lis pendens, and notice to all the world”: In re Billing, 145 Fed. 395 (1906). “The filing of the petition in bankruptcy is......‘judicial process’ and operates as an attachment or sequestration from that time of the property of the bankrupt, for the equal benefit of all of his creditors, and as a restraint upon its disposition by him”: In re Smith & Shuck, 132 Fed. 301, 303 (1904). “The filing of the petition was a caveat to all the world. It was in effect an attachment and injunction. Thereafter all the property rights of the debtor were ipso facto in abeyance until the final adjudication......Those who dealt with his property in the interval between the filing of the petition and the final adjudication, did so at their peril”: Bank v. Sherman, 101 U. S. 403, 406 (1880). “It is as true of the present law as it was of that of 1867, that the filing of the petition is a caveat to all the world, and is in effect an attachment and injunction......and on adjudication, title to the bankrupt’s property became vested in the trustee with actual or constructive possession and placed in the custody of the bankruptcy court”: Mueller v. Nugent, 184 U. S. 1, 14 (1902) — give standing room for the position assumed by appellant that payment to the bankrupt after the filing of the petition is invalid, but, we believe, other pronouncements of the federal courts negative the idea which he contends for, as for instance, In re Mertens, 144 Fed. 818, 823 (1906), where it was said: “Under the Act of 1867, no lien could be acquired after the filing of the petition in bankruptcy, because the title of the assignee vested as of the commencement of the proceeding in bankruptcy. Now the trustee takes the property of the bankrupt in the condition in which he finds it at the date of the adjudication, unless it has been encumbered fraudulently or in contra
While, in Bailey v. Baker Ice Machine Co., 239 U. S. 268, the Supreme Court of the United States, considering the effect of the 1910 amendment, remarked (page 275), “When not otherwise specially provided, the rights, remedies and powers of the trustee are determined with reference to the conditions existing when the petition is filed,” the opinion is careful not to say that the trustee takes title to the property of the bankrupt as of the date of the filing of the petition. This case, as we read it, only determined that the status given a trustee by the amendment of 1910 is effective as of the date of filing the petition. Everett v. Judson, 228 U. S. 474 (1913); Acme Harvester Co. v. Beekman Lumber Co., 222 U. S. 300; and Bailey v. Baker Ice Machine Co., 239 U. S. 268, in certain of their expressions aid the argument of appellant, but none of these cases nor any of the others we have examined, decided since the 1910 amendment, hold that it changed the law as to the time when the trustee actually takes title to the bankrupt’s property.
In Gunther v. Home Ins. Co., 276 Fed. 575, where the bankrupt, after involuntary proceedings commenced, sued out claims against fire insurance companies, and received settlements from them and where the trustee subsequently brought action and obtained a verdict, the latter’s right to recover was sustained on the ground that the settlement with the bankrupt was not in good faith. The court there said (page 576): “Defendants object to the sufficiency of the complaint, in that, in the interval between bankruptcy proceedings instituted and adjudication, a bankrupt in respect to his property had
Frederick v. Fidelity Mutual Life Ins. Co., 256 U. S. 395 (affirming 75 Pa. Superior Ct. 77), throws light on the question we are considering. There, after the trustee in bankruptcy qualified, the bankrupt died and the insurer, in ignorance of the bankruptcy proceedings, paid the beneficiary in a life policy issued to the decedent the full amount of the insurance. The trustee had not known of the policy, but, learning of it, brought action against the company for the . amount of the cash surrender value thereof. Judgment for defendant was affirmed, Mr. Justice Pitney saying, at page 398: “Here the question is whether, after the death of the insured and payment of the stipulated amount to the beneficiary named in the policy in strict conformity to its terms, without notice of the bankruptcy, or claim made by the trustee, there is a liability on the part of the insurance company to pay to the trustee the surrender value that, on complying with the terms of the policy, he might have demanded. It is not enough to sustain the trustee’s claim to say that the filing of the petition in bankruptcy was a caveat to all the world, and in effect an attachment and injunction, and that on adjudication title to the
In Johnson v. Collier, 222 U. S. 538 (1912), the bankrupt was allowed to institute an action between the time of the filing of the petition and adjudication. The defendant there attempted to defend against the suit on the ground that a petition had been filed, but the court said the bankrupt was not divested of his property by filing a petition in bankruptcy, that he was still the owner holding in trust pending the appointment and
A proper conclusion we think to be drawn from the cases of Everett v. Judson, 228 U. S. 473, and Burlingham v. Crouse, 228 U. S. 459, is that the trustee’s title goes back to the adjudication, but he takes title to property as it was at the time of the filing of the petition. If there was nothing in existence at the time of adjudication to which he could take title, it is immaterial in what condition any property might have been at the time of the filing of the petition. To come within the language of Everett v. Judson, where Mr. Justice Day said, at page 478, “While it is true that section 70a provides that the trustee, upon his appointment and qualification, becomes vested by operation of law with the title of the bankrupt as of the date he was adjudged a bankrupt, there are other provisions of the statute, which, we think, evidence the intention to vest in the trustee the title to such .property as it was at the time of the filing of the petition ” there must be property in existence at the time of adjudication so that the trustee could then take title. In the case now before us, there was no property in existence at the time of the adjudication, because the right of action against the insurance company had ceased prior to that time. It is immaterial, therefore, whether there was a right of action at the time of filing the petition.
Our conclusion is that the trustee cannot compel the defendant to again pay the money which it in entire good faith parted with to its insured without knowledge that a petition in bankruptcy had been filed against him.
Judgment affirmed.