Ex Parte American Steel Barrel Co.

230 U.S. 35, 33 S. Ct. 1007, 57 L. Ed. 1379, 1913 U.S. LEXIS 2676
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJune 16, 1913
Docket14, Original
StatusPublished
Cited by207 cases

This text of 230 U.S. 35 (Ex Parte American Steel Barrel Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex Parte American Steel Barrel Co., 230 U.S. 35, 33 S. Ct. 1007, 57 L. Ed. 1379, 1913 U.S. LEXIS 2676 (1913).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Lurton

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a proceeding for a rule on the Hon. Thos. I. Chatlield, District Judge of the United States for the Eastern District of New York, the Hon. Julius Mayer, District Judge for .the Southern District of New York, and the Hon. E; Henry Lacombe, Senior Circuit Judge for the Second Judicial Circuit of the United States, to show cause why a writ of mandamus shall not be issued commanding the Hon. Thos. I. Chatfield to resume jurisdiction and *37 proceed to hear and determine all matters which may arise or have arisen in a certain proceeding pending in the said District Court for the Eastern District of New York wherein the Iron Clad Manufacturing Company has been adjudicated a bankrupt; and directing the vacation of an order made in said case by the Hon. E. Henry Lacombe, as Senior Circuit Judge, on April 2, 1912, designating and appointing the said Judge Mayer, District Judge to hear and exercise in the F rstern District of New York, the same powers that are now vested in the District Judges of said District, or either of them, “and quashing and setting aside all proceedings in said matter of Iron Clad Manufacturing Co., Bankrupt, had' before said Hon. Julius M. Mayer . . . subsequent to the said order of Judge Lacombe . , . , and especially commanding the said Judge Chatfield to exercise the jurisdiction thereof which he had and was exercising on and prior to the 29th of .March, 1912.”

A rule to show cause issued, and a return has been made.

The question now is whether a writ of mandamus shall issue.

Shortly stated, the facts necessary to be understood are these:

1. Creditors of the Iron Clad Manufacturing Company, filed on May 23, 1911, a petition in the District Court of the United States for the Eastern District of New York, praying its adjudication as a bankrupt. The proceeding was long contested,, but on December 2, 1911, the company was adjudged a bankrupt by Judge Chatfield.

2. In the meantime, controversies had arisen as to what constituted the assets of that company. On June 20/ 1911, certain of the creditors filed a petition in the case, charging that the corporate capital, property and assets of another corporation, the American Steel Barrel Company, belonged to the Iron Clad Manufacturing Co., and had been controlled and managed in the interest of the *38 latter, and praying that the receivership under the proceeding against the Iron -Clad Manufacturing Company should be extended to'-the American Steel Barrel Company.

3. This was bitterly resisted and the indeperident ownership of thé Steel Barrel Company asserted. Elizabeth’ C. Seaman was the president and manager of both, com- . panies, and the nominal owner of all of the shares in each, save a few qualifying shares in the’;hands of directors. Mrs. Seaman seems to have béen not only active in resisting the proceedings against the Iron Clad Company, but also in resisting every claim to the property of the Steel Barrel Company made by the creditors of the Iron-Clad Company.

4. The hearing of this application was postponed from time- to time and there was disagreement as to whether it -should be heard upon affidavits before Judge Chatfield or referred to a commissioner to take proof and report. Finally, on March 15, 1912, Judge Chatfield filed an opinion refusing to extend the receivership to the property of the American Steel Barrel Company, or to. take summary possession of its assets, as he had been asked to do. The ground upon which he acted, as shown by his opinion (194 Fed. Rep. 906), was, that the claim to the assets of the Steel Barrel Company was one which should be asserted in a plenary suit. An order in accordance with this opinion was not entered because counsel for the creditors, asked for time to make a new application, and such application was made on March 29, 1912, followed, however, on-the samo day, by the filing of an affidavit under § 2Í of the Judicial Code, to prevent further hearing of the case by Judge Chatfield. That affidavit, in substance, alleged that throughout the proceedings in the case, Judge Chat-field had manifested “a strong bias and prejudice against the petitioning creditors and against their counsel, and has shown a strong bias toward Mrs. Elizabeth C. Seaman, ■

*39 who was and is the sole person interested in the subject-matter of the bankrupt corporation’s property other than the creditors.”

The motion to rehear the application to extend the receivership was made when District' Judge Yeeder was holding the bankrupt court and was by him at once referred to Judge Chatfield. In view of the filing of the disqualifying affidavit, Judge Chatfield declined to hear thé motion and application to re-open and rehear the motion which had been decided by the opinion handed down on March 15th, and made a certificate in these words:

“UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT, Eastern District of New York.
In the Matter
OF
Iron Clad Manfacturing Company,
Bankrupt.
March 29, 1912.
In the Matter of a Motion to Reopen the Application to Extend Receivership, for a - Direction That the Petitioners be Afforded an Opportunity to Take Testimony, Etc., and for Postponement of the Entry of Any Order or Decree upon the Application Decided March 15,1912, and for Other Relief.
Before Veeder, J.
. Appearances: Whitridge, Butler & Rice, for petitioning creditors, in support of motion, James A. Allen, specially for Elizabeth C. Seaman and the American Steel Barrel *40 Co., Emanuel Hertz, specially for George A. Wheelock, in opposition.-
Motion respectfully referred to Judge Chatfield.
Van Vechten Veeder,
U. S. J.
The within application having been referred upon the return day to me Judge Veeder, who called the motion calendar, and the motion papers having been presented by the Clerk, in the presence of James A. Allen, appearing specially, and desiring to be heard in opposition, as attorney for certain parties, Emanuel Hertz, appearing specially for George A. Wheelock, and also desiring to be heard in opposition, and Erskine B. Essig, representing certain creditors, but not taking part in said motion, and no one appearing before me on behalf of the petitioners, but a certain affidavit by Thatcher M. Brown having been brought to the attention of the Court, which affidavit was filed after the motion was referred to me by Judge Veeder and before any of the parties appeared before me, in which the said Thatcher M. Brown, as a party to the proceeding, makes an affidavit that I have a personal bias either against the creditors or in favor of the opposite-party to the proceeding, and asking that' another judge be designated in the matter prescribed in Section 20, to hear this motion,

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Bluebook (online)
230 U.S. 35, 33 S. Ct. 1007, 57 L. Ed. 1379, 1913 U.S. LEXIS 2676, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-american-steel-barrel-co-scotus-1913.