SEXTON, AS TRUSTEE IN BANKRUPTCY OF KESSLER & COMPANY,
v.
DREYFUS.
SAME
v.
LLOYD'S BANK, LTD.
Supreme Court of United States.
Mr. Wallace Macfarlane and Mr. George H. Gilman for appellant.
Mr. Frederic R. Coudert, for appellees in No. 662.
Mr. Rufus W. Sprague, Jr., for appellee in No. 663.
*343 MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the court.
In both of these cases secured creditors selling their security some time after the filing of the petition in bankruptcy and finding the proceeds not enough to pay the whole amount of their claims, were allowed by the referee to apply the proceeds first to interest accrued since the filing of the petition, then to principal, and to prove for the balance. The referee certified the question whether the creditors had a right to the interest. The District Judge answered the question in the affirmative, giving the matter a very thorough and persuasive discussion, and declining to follow the English rule. In re Kessler, 171 Fed. Rep. 751. On appeal his decision was affirmed by a majority of the Circuit Court of Appeals. 180 Fed. Rep. 979.
The argument certainly is strong. A secured creditor could apply his security to interest first when the parties were solvent, Story v. Livingston,
For more than a century and a half the theory of the English bankrupt system has been that everything stops at a certain date. Interest was not computed beyond the date of the commission. Ex parte Bennet, 2 Atk. 527. This rule was applied to mortgages as well as to unsecured debts; Ex parte Wardell, 1787; Ex parte Hercy, 1792, 1 Cooke, Bankrupt Laws, 4th ed., 181; (1st ed., Appendix), and notwithstanding occasional doubts it has been so applied with the prevailing assent of the English judges ever since. Ex parte Badger, 4 Ves. 165. Ex parte Ramsbottom, 2 Mont. & Ayrt. 79. Ex parte Penfold, 4 De G. & Sm. 282. Ex parte Lubbock, 9 Jur. N.S. 854. In re Savin, L.R. 7 Ch. 760, 764. Ex parte Bath, 22 Ch. Div. 450, 454. Quartermaine's Case [1892], 1 Ch. 639. In re Bonacino, 1 Manson, 59. As appears from Cooke, sup., the rule was laid down not because of the words of the statute but as a fundamental principle. We take our bankruptcy system from England, and we naturally assume that the fundamental principles upon which it was administered were adopted by us when we copied the system, somewhat as the established construction of a law goes with the words where they are copied by another State. No one doubts that interest on unsecured debts stops. See § 63 (1). Board of County Commissioners v. Hurley, 169 Fed. Rep. 92, 94.
The rule is not unreasonable when closely considered. It simply fixes the moment when the affairs of the bankrupt are supposed to be wound up. If, as in a well known illustration of Chief Justice Shaw's, Parks v. Boston,
It is suggested that the right of a creditor having security for two claims, one provable and the other unprovable, to marshal his security against the unprovable claim, (see Hiscock v. Varick Bank,
Interest and dividends accrued upon some of the securities after the date of the petition. The English cases allow these to be applied to the after accruing interest upon the debt. Ex parte Ramsbottom, 2 Mont. & Ayrton, 79. Ex parte Penfold, 4 De G. & Sm. 282. Quartermaine's Case [1892], 1 Ch. 639. There is no more reason for allowing the bankrupt estate to profit by the delay beyond the day of settlement than there is for letting the creditors do so. Therefore to apply these subsequent dividends, &c., to subsequent interest seems just.
Decrees reversed.
