The material facts are as follows: On October 28, 1918, the plaintiff, owner of five bonds each of the par value of $1,000 issued by the Dominion of Canada, deposited them “as margin upon a trading account” with the defendant Cawley, a stockbroker doing a brokerage business' “under the name of' F. G. Roberts & Company.” On July 22, 1919, Cawley made an assignment for the benefit of creditors, and, under involuntary ' proceedings begun on that day, he was adjudged a bankrupt on August 6, 1919, and the trustees of his estate, who also had acted as temporary receivers in bankruptcy until their appointment as' trustees on September 27, 1919, are joined by amendment to the bill, which was filed on August 8, 1919. The bankrupt subsequently to October 28,1918, rehypothecated the bonds in question with securities received from other customers on margin trans-' actions, as security for money lent to him from time to time by;
"While the plaintiff is the only claimant who has ever made any demand on the company, it appeared “that various petitions in the nature of reclamation petitions or petitions to establish liens on the cash and securities in the hands of the trustees had been filed in the bankruptcy proceedings in the District Court of the United States. Some of these petitions were brought by persons whose securities had been pledged as collateral . . . and had been sold by the Metropolitan Trust Company,” which has never appeared or sought to intervene in that court. During the entire period covered by the record the bankrupt, the trustees and the trust company were citizens of this Commonwealth.
The trial judge, who ordered the bill dismissed “without prejudice to any remedy which the plaintiff may have by proceedings in the District Court of the United States,” gives these reasons
1 ■ “I should not dismiss this plaintiff from this court if there was any doubt about his right to prosecute his claim in the bankruptcy court. You must assure me, before I dismiss this bill, that the plaintiff can go down there without encountering a maze of bars and other difficulties. In the first place, you have not got the money. Nobody can bring any petition down there now, and never have been able to bring a petition down there with relation to this money, because you have not got it. This is the only place it can be brought, up to date.”
“I think I will dispose of this case this way: unless you can let these petitioners into the bankruptcy court free and clear of any embarrassment on the ground of limitation and asserting some claim to share in this surplus, I will retain this case here.”
“Now, if you really want to save your rights, I will do what I suggested yesterday; I will find that the parties are not properly before the court, and that I ought not to take jurisdiction. And further, I will deny the right to amend by calling in these parties, and save your rights on all of that, and report the case. The form of the decree, I am not quite satisfied in my own mind about, yet, but I should not dismiss this bill unless it was clear that you had the right to go into the bankruptcy court; but if you do have that right, I should dismiss it; that is to say, I should decline to permit an amendment to the bill by bringing in these parties, and give you your rights in the district court. My only doubt is as to whether you are foreclosed by any of those proceedings down there.”
The controversy, as we have said, concerns property to which - the bankrupt had no title, or possession, or control at the date
The judge’s ruling when referring to the bankruptcy court, “Nobody can bring any petition down there now, and never have been able to bring a petition down there with relation to this money, ...” accurately stated the law applicable to the present record. Bardes v. Hawarden Bank, 178 U. S. 524. Bush v. Elliott, 202 U. S. 477. Frank v. Vollkommer, 205 U. S. 521. Eyster v. Goff, 91 U. S. 521. Davis v. Friedlander, 104 U. S. 570. Skilton v. Codington, 185 N. Y. 80.
The dismissal of the bill because the bankruptcy court could administer the fund with greater flexibility than the trial court, but under what conditions is not fully shown, and therefore the
But after ruling in substance that no decree could be entered because of nonjoinder, and without giving the plaintiff leave to amend within a time to be designated in a proper interlocutory decree, the court declined to entertain the bill. The evidence however having been taken by a commissioner, and no question of the credibility of witnesses being in issue, the entire case is before us on the appeal. We are of opinion that, until the plaintiff, after having been given a reasonable opportunity therefor, had failed or declined to amend, the bill under the circumstances should not have been dismissed for alleged nonjoinder. If the plaintiff, who plainly had made out a case, could not obtain relief in the trial court, he was remediless under any procedure to which as matter of right he could resort in the bankruptcy court. It was said by Mr. Justice Colt, in Schwoerer v. Boylston Market Association, 99 Mass. 285, 295, “An objection to the nonjoinder, if deemed necessary by the defendant to his own pro
It follows that the plaintiff must rank with other claimants, among whom the fund, being insufficient to pay them in full, should be distributed, but in what proportions can only be determined when all those interested have been made parties. McBride v. Potter-Lowell Co. 169 Mass. 7. Hewitt v. Hayes, 205 Mass. 356, 365.
The decree is reversed, and the case is to stand for further proceedings in the trial court.
Ordered accordingly.