Brooke v. McCraken

4 F. Cas. 228, 10 Nat. Bank. Reg. 461
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Oregon
DecidedJuly 1, 1838
StatusPublished

This text of 4 F. Cas. 228 (Brooke v. McCraken) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brooke v. McCraken, 4 F. Cas. 228, 10 Nat. Bank. Reg. 461 (circtdor 1838).

Opinion

DEADY, District Judge.

This is an ac- | | tion brought by the assignee of C. B. Corn-stock & Co., to recover of the defendant the sum of eight hundred and seventy-seven dollars and eighty-two cents, the alleged value of one hundred and twenty-five barrels of flour, received by him from the bankrupts, contrary to the bankrupt act. The amended complaint alleges that Comstock & Co. were adjudged bankrupts on January 10, 1S74, upon a petition filed December 16, 1873, and that on December 6, 1873, the bankrupts being indebted to the defendant in the sum of one thousand dollars, and insolvent, did, with a view to give a preference to the defendant, deliver to him, as a payment on said indebtedness, one hundred and twenty-five barrels of flour, the property of .said bankrupts, at and for the price of six dollars per barrel; and that said defendant then and there had reasonable cause to believe that said Comstock & Co. were insolvent, and that said transfer or payment was made in fraud of the bankrupt act.

The defendant demurs and assigns for causes of demurrer; 1st, that the court has not jurisdiction of the action; and 2d, that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. In support of the first ground of demurrer, it is claimed that this is an action to recover a mere debt, and is therefore only cognizable in the district court, according to the ruling in Bachman v. Packard [Case No. 709], in which it was held, in the language of the syllabus, that: “The concurrent jurisdiction conferred upon the circuit court by section 2 of the bankrupt act, is limited to cases where there is a controversy concerning the right to or some interest in some specific thing between the assignee and a third person, and does not include an action to collect a simple debt.” That was an action upon a promissory note made by the defendant to the bankrupt. But here the defendant does not nor did not owe the bankrupt anything, but on the contrary, the bankrupt owed him. Neither does the defendant owe the assignee anything. The demand is not a debt in any legal sense of the term, but a claim for unliquidated damages for the unlawful detention or conversion of property, which the latter is seeking to have ascertained and established by the judgment of this court.

This is an action to recover the value (as damages) of certain property alleged to have been transferred to the defendant contrary to the bankrupt act. The right to maintain it was never in the bankrupt. The assignee derives his right to sue, not from the bankrupt, but from section 35 of the act, as the representative and for the benefit of the other creditors. That section declares that a payment or transfer, made under the circumstances stated in the complaint, “shall be void, and the assignee may recover the property or the value of it,” from rhe cred- | | itor receiving it. In the language of the clause of section 2, conferring jurisdiction upon this, court, it is an action by the as-signee “touching property of said bankrupt against a person claiming an adverse interest” therein.

It is admitted that the assignee might maintain replevin for the property in this court. Of this there can be no doubt. And it is equally plain that he may maintain trover for its value. The act gives the right to maintain either in the same direct language, “the assignee may recover the property or the value of it,” and the one is as much an action “touching the property” as the other. So far as the nature of the controversy and the substantial rights of the parties are concerned, there is no difference between the two actions. In the one case the judgment is for the delivery of the specific goods or their value, and in the other for their value only. Each is a proper remedy for a wrong “touching property,” in which the defendant claims, or may claim, an interest adverse to the plaintiff. See Smith v. Crawford [Case No. 13,030].

Upon the argument of the second cause of demurrer, it was assumed by counsel for defendant, and hardly denied by counsel for plaintiff, that section 11 of the act of -June 22, 1874, which amends section 35 of the bankrupt act by substituting the word “knowing” for “reasonable cause to believe,” is applicable to transactions occurring before the' passage of the amendment. But this cannot be so. Upon the conditions stated in the complaint the right to recover this .property, or the value thereof, in trust for the creditors, was vested in the assignee at and before the passage of the act Even admitting that congress has the power to affect vested rights by retroactive legislation (Watson v. Mercer, 8 Pet. [33 U. S.] 110; Carpenter v. Pennsylvania, 17 How. [58 U. S.] 463; Evans v. Eaton [Case No. 4,559]), such effect will not be given to its enactments, unless the intention so to do plainly appears therein. In Harvey v. Tyler, 2 Wall. [69 U. S.] 347, the court said: “It is a rule of construction that all statutes are to be considered prospective, unless the language is express to the contrary, or there is a necessary implication to that effect.” In Pacific Mail S. S. Co. v. Joliffe, Id. 458— Mr. Justice Field, speaking for the court— it was held that where a right arises under or is given by a statute, and it “has been so far perfected that nothing remains to be done by the party asserting it, the repeal of the statute does not affect it or an action for its enforcement. It has become a vested right which stands independent of the statute.” In McEwen v. Bulkley, 24 How. [65 U. S.] 244, the rule is laid down “that it is the very essence of a new law that it shall apply to future cases; and such must be its construction, unless the contrary plainly appears.” In U. S. v. Starr [230]*230[Case No. 16,379], the court says: “In the construction of a statute, it is a cardinal and well-established principle, that the court will never give to it a retrospective operation, unless it clearly appears from the language used that its makers intended it to have that effect; because laws are generally made to operate upon the future not the past transactions of men.” To the same effect is the ruling in Schenck v. Peay [Id. 12,450]; Ex parte Billing [Id. 1,408]. The repeal of a statute, after a lien has been acquired under it, does not affect the lien. Ex parte Hope M. Co. [Id. 6,681].

There is not a single circumstance in or out of the act which indicates that congress intended section 35, as amended, to have a retroactive effect in any particular. It was amended by adding two words and a clause, and substituting the word “knowing” for the understood expression “reasonable cause to believe.” Nothing is said or implied as to when it shall take effect, and therefore it comes within the general rule, declaring it to take effect from its passage and only to operate prospectively. As to sections 10 and 12 of the amendment, congress made special provision when they should take effect; the former after, and the latter before, its passage. This, itself, is a significant circumstance to show that it was the intention of congress to let the other sections take effect according to the general rule. In Hamlin v. Pettibone [Case No. 5,995], Mr. Justice Hopkins, in the course of an interesting and suggestive opinion upon this subject, says: “There are many provisions of the act of a practical character, that may be. properly applied in further proceedings in all cases; such as those relating simply to the administration of the law, and as do not affect existing rights or the validity of contracts.

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Bluebook (online)
4 F. Cas. 228, 10 Nat. Bank. Reg. 461, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brooke-v-mccraken-circtdor-1838.