Bailey v. Blackmon

14 F.2d 16, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 1994
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJune 8, 1926
DocketNo. 2270
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 14 F.2d 16 (Bailey v. Blackmon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bailey v. Blackmon, 14 F.2d 16, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 1994 (4th Cir. 1926).

Opinion

WADDILL, Circuit Judge.

This was one of two causes in which, on the 20th of December, 1924, we handed down an opinion reported in 3 F.(2d) 252. Shortly thereafter, Miss Bailey, the appellant and the losing party therein, by her petition for rehearing, brought to our attention for the first time, a decision of the Supreme Court of South Carolina, hereinafter fully discussed, and made shortly after the announcement of our own. In view of the conflict thereby revealed, we granted a rehearing, which has been had. The question at issue is as to the title of Miss Bailey to a bond and mortgage assigned to her by her father, C. T. Bailey, subsequently adjudicated a bankrupt.

Some time prior to his bankruptcy, he was the owner of valuable real estate in Columbia, S. C. He had given a mortgage upon it to W. J. Keenan and C. M. Asbill, and had subsequently conveyed the equity of redemption to Messrs. Luther, Bradford, and Coleman, taking from them a mortgage for part of the purchase money. One of their notes so secured was transferred by Bailey to his daughter. It, or more accurately its proceeds, are the subject-matter of the controversy with which we are now concerned.

On the 3d of September, 1921, a petition to have Bailey adjudicated a bankrupt was duly filed. Three days later, the United States District Judge for the Eastern District of South Carolina enjoined Bailey, his daughter, the appellant herein, and Bailey’s wife, from conveying, disposing of, or in any wise incumbering certain real estate in Georgia and in or near Columbia, S. C., theretofore conveyed by Bailey. On the 2d of November, he was duly adjudicated a bankrupt. On the day before this adjudication, but almost two months after the filing of the petition in involuntary bankruptcy and the issuance of the injunction referred to, Messrs. Keenan and Asbill, the holders of the first mortgage upon the Columbia property, already mentioned, filed in the state court their bill for its foreclosure, and on the 18th of November followed it up with an amended bill, by -which they added Miss Bailey and O. C. Blackmon, Jr., the trustee, as defendants to Bailey and others who were'the re[17]*17spondents named in the original bill. Before the end of the month, service of process was had upon all three. They all answered; the bankrupt’s trustee contenting himself with saying that he had neither knowledge nor information sufficient to form a belief as to the allegations of the complaint other than those which set forth Bailey’s adjudication and his appointment as trustee. Miss Bailey’s answer set up the assignment to her of the bond in dispute and prayed judgment for it out of the proceeds of sale. The state court referred the ease to a master, to take testimony and to report. This was an wholly uneontested proceeding. In it the bankrupt testified that he was solvent at the time he had made his assignment to his daughter. On the 4th of February, 1922, the master reported that the assignment was valid and recommended judgment in favor of Miss Bailey for the amount of the bond. This recommendation was on the 15th of February, confirmed by the court in a decree to which all the parties, including the trustee in bankruptcy, consented, and in which an attorney’s fee of $200 was allowed counsel representing Miss Bailey. The decree directed the sale of the mortgaged premises and the distribution of the proceeds among the parties interested, including Miss Bailey and her counsel, in accordance with their relative priorities as they had been ascertained by the master. The sale was made in the succeeding month of March and in due course was confirmed. The purchase money was paid and on the 16th of May, the master filed his report of sales and disbursements, in which he showed that there was coming to Miss Bailey $2,217.86, in which was included the $200 allowed her lawyers. On the same day Miss Bailey filed a petition, setting forth that she had become of age, and asking that the money should be paid to her in her own right. In accordance with his report, the master drew his check in her favor for the amount awarded her by the decree, and apparently sent it to her, but, in consequence of what is presently to be stated, he stopped payment upon it before it was actually cashed by her, and, so far as we are advised, it has never been paid.

On the 11th of May, that is, five days before the master had filed the report last mentioned, the trustee in bankruptcy had duly instituted this plenary suit in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of South Carolina. In it he sought to have set aside the assignment from the bankrupt to his daughter. On the 17th of that month, the trustee through his counsel served upon the master a copy of his bill in the United States court, and requested him not to pay the money to Miss Bailey until the controversy was determined. In consequence of this notice, the master on the same day stopped the payment of the check as before mentioned. On the 18th, he reported the matter to the court. On the 19th the trustee in bankruptcy filed a verified petition in the state court, setting forth, among other things, that the bankrupt was examined before the referee in January, 1922, that it was then for the first time ascertained that he had assigned the bond and mortgage to his daughter, that, when the trustee subsequently filed his formal answer in the foreclosure ease, he did not realize that it concerned this bond and mortgage, and overlooked the facts in regard to the validity of their assignment, which he averred was voluntary and fraudulent, and that on the 11th of May, he had begun an action in the federal court to have it set aside. He petitioned the court to impound the funds payable to Miss Bailey until the validity of the assignment to her could be inquired into, or, in the alternative, that the case should be reopened and he be permitted to attack its validity in the main cause in the state court. On the 2d of June, Miss Bailey, in the United States court demurred, on jurisdictional and other grounds, to the bill there pending, and also filed therein her answer upon the merits.

On the 17th of June the state court entered a decree in which it was stated “that the matters now attempted to be raised and the issues to be presented in the suit in bankruptcy court between O. C. Blackmon, Jr., trustee in bankruptcy, and Dorothy Bailey, both of. whom are defendants in this action, were not before this court in this case, and could not have been decided in the decree rendered in this case. * * * Under the principles ree-. ognized in Farrar v. Haselden, 9 Rich. Eq. (S. C.) 331, the funds in the hands of said master, heretofore adjudged in this action to he paid to said guardian, should be held by the master pending the determination of the question whether or not said trustee in bankruptcy is entitled to said fund on the grounds stated in his bill of complaint in the suit brought,” by him in the United States court as a court of bankruptcy, “and until that question is determined in that court.” Eleven days later, on June 28th, Miss Bailey gave notice of her intention to appeal from this order, but for some twenty months thereafter, did nothing to perfect it. During that time the action instituted by the bankrupt trustee in the United States District Court was regularly and earnestly prosecuted and as vigorously defended; Miss Bailey there [18]*18appearing and taking an active part in the' controversy without, so far as the record discloses, doing anything to advise the federal court that she proposed to go on with her state appeal.

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Bluebook (online)
14 F.2d 16, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 1994, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bailey-v-blackmon-ca4-1926.