Dudley's Case

7 F. Cas. 1150, 1 Penn. Law J. 302, 1842 U.S. App. LEXIS 519
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 31, 1842
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 7 F. Cas. 1150 (Dudley's Case) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dudley's Case, 7 F. Cas. 1150, 1 Penn. Law J. 302, 1842 U.S. App. LEXIS 519 (circtedpa 1842).

Opinion

BALDWIN, Circuit Justice.

Two points are involved in the motion pending in the district court, and adjourned for decision here. Both points will therefore be considered. The question which has been presented on the first argument, arises on the last proviso in the second, and the first clause in the third section of the act of 1S41. That proviso is in these words: “Provided also, that nothing in this act contained, shall be construed to annul, destroy, or impair any lawful rights of married women or minors, or any liens, mortgages, or other securities on property real or personal, which may be valid by the laws of the states respectively, and which are not inconsistent with the provisions of the second and fifth sections of this act.” A proviso operates as a limitation to the enacting part of a law, or as an exception of some case which might otherwise be embraced by it. This proviso extends to the whole bankrupt law in the plainest terms, and is most emphatic in its language, expressly excluding any construction of any part of the act, which shall annul, destroy, or impair any lien, mortgage or other security on real or personal property, which is valid by the law of the state where it is situated or found, and is not inconsistent with the second and fifth sections.

The phraseology of this proviso is peculiar, and adopted only in cases where the legislature intend that the court shall give no construction to a law, which shall in any manner affect its provisions, or defeat their declared intention. In ordinary acts of legislation, their effects are prospective in defining some rule of action, leaving it to the court to expound and apply it according to the settled judicial rules of construing statutes; it is only where they mean to be the sole expounders of their laws, that a legislature use the language, “nothing in this act shall be so construed,” and where it is used, it operates o-n the past, the present, and the future. Thus, under the third article of the constitution of the United States, the federal courts assumed jurisdiction of suits against a state by a citizen of another state. The 11th amendment declared that “the judicial power of the United States shall not be construed to extend to any • suit” of that description, and the supreme court of the United States decided, that it annulled all jurisdiction of such cases then pending, and they were summarily stricken from their docket. [Hollingsworth v. Virginia] 3 Dall. [3 U. S.] 378. As the constitution created the judicial power of the United States, and could control and annul its exercise by a declaration that it should not be exercised on the forbidden case, even after the court had acted on it for years, so congress may act on the judicial power which they create, and by a subsequent law take from the courts a power which they have assumed. In this case, however, the principle need not be earned to the same extent, for the restraint on the judicial power in bankruptcy, is imposed in the same act which brought it into existence, and this prohibition being clearly within the power of congress, is directed to the courts who are to carry the act into effect, as a rule of judicial action to which they must conform. This proviso may be viewed also as a declaration, that there is no provision in the bankrupt act which has the effect which it shall not be so construed as to have; otherwise there is a manifest absurdity in prohibiting a construction, which would be consonant with the intent of the legislature. So viewed,—in this double aspect of a limitation to the power of all courts, and a declaration of the meaning of the whole law,—this court is bounded in its power to make any order or decision in any manner contrary thereto. It cannot so construe the law, as to impair a valid lien or security.

In deciding what is a valid lien or security on property, this proviso refers us to the law of this state, by which we are to ascertain whether a judgment creditor has a lien or security on the real estate of the ■ defendant in virtue of his judgment, or on his personalty by the delivery of an execution to the sheriff, or to a constable who makes a levy on it; and -whether if such lien or security existed, it has become afterwards invalid or inoperative. If the result of this inquiry is favourable to the judgment creditor, the only remaining one is, whether any lien or security which he has obtained by the laws of this state, is invalid by reason of being repugnant to the second or fifth sections of the act; if that inquiry ends in the same result, there is an end to the exercise of any judicial power to impair the efficacy of such lien or security; we are forbidden to so construe the law. As this proviso applies to the whole law, it must be carried into the third section, the [1152]*1152substance of which is, that the property of the bankrupt is divested out of him by operation of law from the time of the decree, without any other act, and vests by force of the decree in the assignee appointed by the court. No words are used which indicate in the least degree, that it was intended that the decree should relate to the petition, or have any retrospective operation on the property of the bankrupt which had been, before the filing of the petition, soid or incumbered by any of his .acts which was valid by the law of the state, and not invalid by provision of the bankrupt act. It would be a conclusive objection to such relation, that the law had fixed on the decree as the solemn and definite act, which divested the property of the bankrupt and vested it in the assignee; for by giving such decree a relation to the petition, it would in effect divest the property at a time, and by an act wholly different from that which the law prescribes; thus making the court the real and efficient legislator on the property and rights of purchasers and creditors who had lawfulliensbeforethe decree. The words of the third section justify no such construction, and if they could be so construed, it would be in the very teeth of that proviso in the second section which expressly prohibitsv it. '

It would be indeed an anomalous principle to incorporate into a system of bankruptcy, that a debtor by his voluntary act of filing a petition, which he could revoke or withdraw at his pleasure at any time before a decree, should be allowed to have the option to proceed to a decree which should annul the valid liens of his creditors by relation to an act which did not bind himself; or by withdrawing his petition, leave himself free to file a Dew one or waive all benefit of the act. Another conclusive reason against such relation of the decree to the petition, appears by a comparison of the third section of the act of 1841, with the tenth section of the bankrupt act of 1800 [2 Stat 19].

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Bluebook (online)
7 F. Cas. 1150, 1 Penn. Law J. 302, 1842 U.S. App. LEXIS 519, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dudleys-case-circtedpa-1842.