First Nat. Bank of Lincoln v. Live Stock Nat. Bank

31 F.2d 416, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 3465
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMarch 5, 1929
Docket8142
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 31 F.2d 416 (First Nat. Bank of Lincoln v. Live Stock Nat. Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First Nat. Bank of Lincoln v. Live Stock Nat. Bank, 31 F.2d 416, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 3465 (8th Cir. 1929).

Opinion

MARTINEAU, District Judge.

A. Victor Bryan, a cattle dealer living in Seotts Bluff county, Nebraska, in October, 1926, made two mortgages to secure two notes, one of $10,000 and the other of $8,000. The money was borrowed by Bryan from the Interstate Live Stock Commission Company, and in due course, before maturity, the notes were transferred to the Live Stock National Bank, of Omaha, Neb. The borrowed money was used to purchase the cattle covered by the two mortgages. By mistake the mortgages, about the time they were made, were recorded in Sioux county, Nebraska, where the cattle were located, instead of Seotts Bluff county, the home of Bryan. Bryan was also indebted to the First National Bank of Lincoln, Neb., for money which he had borrowed prior to making the notes held by the Live Stock National Bank.

February 19, 1927, the First National Bank levied an attachment upon the cattle covered by the two mortgages above mentioned, and upon other property of Bryan. February, 21, 1927, the Live Stock National Bank filed its two mortgages with the clerk of Seotts Bluff county, Nebraska. February 23,1927, Bryan filed his voluntary petition in bankruptcy, and on that day was adjudged a bankrupt. At the time of the filing of the attachment suit by the First National Bank, the sheriff took possession of the mortgaged cattle. March 15, 1927, the first meeting of creditors was held, and Thomas W. Shepard was made trustee. Prior to that time the First National Bank filed with its proof of claim a petition for the preservation of the attachment lien for the estate, for the benefit of general creditors, and disclaimed any individual preference under the attachment. The next day the referee ordered the sheriff to deliver to the trustee all the property which he took possession of under the attachment. The sheriff was not a party to the bankruptcy proceedings, but complied with the order of the referee on March 17, 1927, by delivering the cattle to the trustee. The referee, at the time he ordered the cattle tumed^over by the sheriff to the trustee, made no order preserving the attachment lien for the benefit of the estate, but set that question for hearing at the time of the hearing upon secured claims, and ordered that all persons interested in said estate might within that time file objections thereto, and further ordered that no rights would be lost to the trustee or to the general estate by reason of not making the order at that time. April 15,1927, the Live Stock National Bank filed objections to the preservation of the attachment lien, and on May 4, 1927, Thomas W. Shepard, trustee in bankruptcy, filed his petition for the preservation, of that lien.

By consent of the parties the mortgaged cattle were sold for $38,000, a sum much in excess of the notes secured by the mortgages. The mortgages, at the time they were made, were executed in good faith and to secure a present consideration. They were not for an antecedent debt. They in no way diminished the estate of Bryan, but were given for the purchase price of cattle which greatly enhanced the value of his estate. At the time the attachment was run, and at the time the instruments were recorded in the proper county, Bryan was admittedly insolvent.

Under this state of facts the referee held that the attachment lien of the First National Bank had been lost by the voluntary surrender by the sheriff of the attached property to the trustee, with the consent of the attaching creditor, and that the Live Stock National Bank had the first lien upon the mortgaged cattle. This order of the referee was affirmed by the District Court. This appeal is to reverse that judgment.

The facts in this ease are not in dispute. The controversy arises over the application of the bankruptcy laws to them. The chattel mortgages were made for a present consideration, to secure money used in the purchase of the cattle covered by them. By mistake they were recorded in the wrong county. Bryan the bankrupt became insolvent. The First National Bank levied an attachment upon the mortgaged property. Two days later the mortgages were recorded in the proper county. Two days after this the mortgagor, Bryan, was adjudged a bankrupt. Before the appointment of a trustee, appellant, the First National Bank, filed a petition for the preservation of its attachment lien for the benefit of the estate. A trustee was elected, and upon order of the referee the sheriff, who held the attached property, but who was not a party to the bankruptcy proceedings, with the consent of the First National Bank, voluntarily surrendered the possession of the attached mortgaged property to the trustee. The referee, without then making an order for the preservation of the attachment lien for the estate, directed that objections to the preservation of this lien might be filed. The Live Stock National Bank, the appellee herein, did *418 file objections to its preservation, at the same time asserting its claim against the estate, which it contended was secured by chattel mortgages on the attached property, the lien of which it claimed was superior to the attachment lien.

With these facts not in dispute, the question at issue is: Who has the first claim upon the mortgaged property, the trustee, or the Live Stock National Bank, the mortgagee? Under the Nebraska law, the lien of an attaching creditor is superior to that of an unrecorded mortgage. This being true, if bankruptcy proceedings had not been instituted, and the Nebraska state court had upheld the attachment of the First National Bank, its lien would have been superior to that of the Live Stock National Bank. But, inasmuch as the attachment was levied within four months of the institution of the bankruptcy proceedings, and while the bankrupt was insolvent, the attachment was void as against the trustee-in bankruptcy, and, if the claim of the Live Stock National Bank on its mortgage had not intervened, the attached property would have gone to the trustee, to be distributed to the general creditors of the bankrupt.

When, in the event the attachment lien is dissolved, the property would go to others than the trustee, under sections 67c and 67f, of the Bankruptcy Act (11 USCA § 107), the bankruptcy court is given power to preserve the lien of the attachment for the trustee for the benefit of the estate. The appellants earnestly insist that the bankruptcy court erred in not preserving the attachment lien of the First National Bank for the benefit of the estate as against the mortgagee, while the appellee insists that the voluntary surrender of the attached property by the sheriff, with the consent of the attaching creditor, before the attachment had been perfected in the state court, defeated the attachment lien entirely, and left no lien to be preserved by the bankruptcy court for the benefit of the estate. The attachment lien in the state court had not been perfected at the time the bankruptcy proceedings were instituted, and could not be perfected, except in the state court, unless the parties interested consented to the bankruptcy court taking jurisdiction.

Before the attachment hen could be preserved in this ease, the bankruptcy court should have made an order that it be preserved for the benefit of creditors, and then have directed its trustee to intervene in the state court, before the surrender of the possession of the property by the sheriff, and there perfect the attachment lien.

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Bluebook (online)
31 F.2d 416, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 3465, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-nat-bank-of-lincoln-v-live-stock-nat-bank-ca8-1929.