UNITED STATES v. EMORY ET AL.
No. 33
Supreme Court of the United States
Argued November 10, 1941. Decided December 15, 1941.
314 U.S. 423
The CHIEF JUSTICE and MR. JUSTICE BYRNES join in this opinion.
No appearance for respondents.
MR. JUSTICE BYRNES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case involves the application of
The St. James Distillery, а corporation, executed a note to the Industrial Bank and Trust Company of St. Louis on September 23, 1935. On July 14, 1936, the Bank endorsed the note and delivered it to the Federal Housing Administration, acting on behalf of the United States, under a contract of insurance and guaranty provided for in Title I of the National Housing Act. The United States, through the Federal Housing Administration, on that date reimbursed the Bank in the amount of $5988.88, the balance due on the note. Emory, claiming wages due him, filed a petition on August 27, 1936 in the Circuit Court of Phelps County, Missouri, alleging that the St. James Distillery was hopelessly insolvent and praying that a receiver be appointed. On Sеptember 9, the Circuit Court found all the issues in Emory‘s favor and appointed a receiver who took possession of the corporate assets.
After deductions for the costs of the receivership, the assets available for distribution totaled $678. Against this amount the wage claims of “about twelve individuals” were filed. The separate amounts of these claims were neither stipulated nor determined by the courts below; their aggregate was “about $900.” The United States, on behalf of the Federal Housing Administration, filed a claim for the $5988.88 due on the note. The wage claim-
The Circuit Court of Phelps County decided that the claim of the United States should be treated as an ordinary claim against the estate, and that the wage claims should be paid first. On appeal, the Springfield Court of Appeals held that the claim of the United States on behalf of the Federal Housing Administration was accorded preference over ordinary claims by
The applicability of
Just such proceedings as this, therefore, are governed by the plain command of
The court below, however, held otherwise. In granting priority to the wage claims over that of the United States, it relied upon Missouri law. It recognized, as the authorities obliged it to recognize,3 that the state statute could
The judgment below must have rested upon either of the following theories: that Congress intended by
There is a difficulty common to both theories which we regard as insurmountable. Neither the language of
We find no such evidence. The entire Act of 1898, as § 2 in particular plainly reveals, was designed to create federal courts of bankruptcy and to define their functions. Indeed, § 64 itself, in subdivision (a), refers to the “court“; § 1 provides that, as used in the Act, “court” means “the
It is not strange, therefore, that both courts and commentators have assumed that the application of § 64 of the Act of 1898 was limited to federal bankruptcy proceedings, and that the priority of claims of the United States in non-bankruptcy proceedings remained unaffected. Bramwell v. U. S. Fidelity & Guaranty Co., 269 U. S. 483; Price v. United States, 269 U. S. 492; Stripe v. United States, 269 U. S. 503; United States v. Butterworth-Judson, 269 U. S. 504; Mellon v. Michigan Trust Co., 271 U. S. 236, 238-239; Spokane County v. United States, 279 U. S. 80; New York v. Maclay, 288 U. S. 290. See Rogge, The Differences in Priority of the United States in Bankruptcy and in Equity Receiverships, 43 Harv. L. Rev. 251; Blair, The Priority of the United States in Equity Receiverships, 39 Harv. L. Rev. 1. We are aware of but a single case in which an appellate court has specifically passed upon the contention that the priority granted to the United States in non-bankruptcy proceedings by
While the point was not discussed in the courts below, it is now urged that the objectives and provisions of the National Housing Act require us to hold that claims of the
Certainly, there is no provision in the National Housing Act expressly relinquishing the priority of the United States with respect to claims arising under it. At best, therefore, such an intention on the part of Congress must be found in some patent inconsistency between the purposes of the Housing Act and
We are told, however, that the broad purposes of the Act would be thwarted if we failed to assume that Con-
Consequently, the argument against the application of
Neither Cook County National Bank v. United States, 107 U. S. 445, nor United States v. Guaranty Trust Co., 280 U. S. 478, requires a different conclusion. In the former case, the United States was denied its
The claims which were denied priority in the Guaranty Trust case arose under Title II of the Transportation Act of 1920. That Act provided for the funding of debts to the United States which the railroads had contracted during the period of wartime control, and also provided for new loans to the railroads. In holding
In the instant case, none of these circumstances is present. The National Housing Act contains no refer-
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE REED, dissenting:
The purpose and provisions of the National Housing Act¹ lead me to the conclusion that
A statute is not to be intеrpreted by its text alone, as though it were a specimen under laboratory control. It takes meaning from other enactments forming the whole body of law bearing upon its subject.³ If, like
From past interpretation we learn that the traditional function of
Nothing in the hearings, the debates or the Act show definitively that Congress considered the application of
The National Housing Act was “one of the latest of a series of enactments, extending over more than a century, through which the Federal Government has recognized and fulfilled its obligation to provide a national system of financial institutions . . . “¹³
The facts of this case show how government aid to a debtor may be a snare for his other creditors if the priority statute operates in this class of claims. About a dozen claimants became creditors in the aggregate amount of some nine hundred dollars for labor. Such labor claims were entitled to the preference under Missouri law common to labor claims. But for the priority of the Government‘s claim, they would receive all of the realization from the assets—about two-thirds of their claims. But a month before the appointment of thе receiver, the Federal Housing Administration took over from a bank a note of about $6000. From a deferred position in the hands of the bank, this debt is said to have stepped into a preferred position by transfer to the government agency. As such, it absorbs all of the assets, and the laborers who trusted their employer‘s credit get nothing. Such a preference of creditors, brought about by the debtor, would be an act of bankruptcy.
In 1920, when the railroads needed funds but lacked credit for private borrowing, government loans were authorized by Congress, based upon such prospective earning power and security as would furnish reasonable assurance of repayment.¹⁶ In United States v. Guaranty Trust Co., 280 U. S. 478, we held that the rehabilitating functions and the security provisions of the Transportation Act of 1920 were so inconsistent with
Even in the mechanics of its operation, Title I repudiated the benefits of
The judgment should be affirmed on the ground thаt no priority exists by virtue of
MR. JUSTICE ROBERTS, MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS and MR. JUSTICE JACKSON concur in this dissent.
