In re Alexander

1 F. Cas. 348

This text of 1 F. Cas. 348 (In re Alexander) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Alexander, 1 F. Cas. 348 (circtdva 1869).

Opinion

CHASE, Circuit Justice.

A petition has been presented to the court by P. C. Bagley and John Alexander, for the revision of an order of the district court. It appears that among the assets of the bankrupt was a tract of land, encumbered by a deed of trust, [350]*350executed by him on December 24, 1864, in favor of William D. Miller, to secure the payment of three bonds, each for seventeen thousand dollars, payable in four, eight, and twelve years from date, respectively; that the petitioner, Alexander, is tenant of the tract, under the assignee, claiming a term which will not expire until January 1, 1S70; and that the petitioner, Bagley, holds a judgment, which is a lien on the real estate of the bankrupt, and is claimed to be the next lien after the deed of trust. On March 16, 1869, the district court made two orders, one directing the assignee to sell the land, and the other directing that Miller might become the purchaser, and that the assignee should receive the amount of his bid in the trust bonds at par. The petitioners as soon as these orders came to their knowledge prayed an appeal in the name, and with the approval of the assignee, and immediately notified Miller and the clerk of the district court of their appeal. The time for filing the bond on appeal was extended by the order of the district judge until April 18, and on the 14th an order was passed showing that the assignee had filed his bond in the penalty of ten thousand dollars. On May 6, the assignee informed the counsel for the petitioners that he would not allow the use of his name in the prosecution of this appeal. The petitioners, therefore, ask in consideration of the surprise occasioned to them by this information, and also upon the ground that an appeal from the order of the district judge in such a case as that before him is not allowed by the act, that the court will give them leave to file their petition now presented and grant them appropriate relief. The petition invokes the exercise of the jurisdiction of superintendence, conferred upon the circuit courts by the second section of the bankrupt act, which, provides that “the several circuit courts within and for the district where the proceedings in bankruptcy shall be pending, shall have a general superintendence and jurisdiction of all cases and questions arising under this act; and, except when special provision is otherwise made, may, upon bill, petition, or other proper process of any party aggrieved, hear and determine the case as a court of equity.”

In the consideration of this petition it becomes necessary to ascertain, if possible, the nature and extent of the jurisdiction thus conferred. It is clear that it must be exercised over proceedings in bankruptcy already pending in the district court, and it seems to be a reasonable interpretation that it does not extend to decisions of the district court from which appeals may be taken. By the eighth section, appellate jurisdiction of such decisions was conferred upon the circuit court in four classes of cases: 1. By appeal in cases in equity decided in the district court, under the jurisdiction created by the act; 2. By writs of error in cases at law, decided in the exercise of that jurisdiction; 3. By appeal from decisions rejecting wholly or in part the claims of supposed creditors; and, 4. By appeal from decisions allowing such claim. In the first two classes of cases, the appeal or writ of error is given to the unsuccessful party to the suit, whether in equity or at law; in the third class it is given to the dissatisfied creditor; in the fourth to the dissatisfied assignee. The suits belonging to the first two classes of cases seem to be those of which concurrent jurisdiction is given to the circuit and district courts by the eighth section; for no "jurisdiction of cases at law or in equity relating to the estate, rights, or liabilities of the bankrupt is expressly given to the district court elsewhere than in the third clause of the second section; though this jurisdiction may be well enough held to be included in the general grant of the first section.

If this view is correct and the jurisdiction of the district court under the act spoken of in the eighth section is the jurisdiction defined by ’ the third clause of the second section, the appellate jurisdiction by appeal and writ of error, from decisions in the exercise of that jurisdiction, must be regarded as limited to suits at law, or in equity, by assignees against persons claiming adverse interest, or by such persons against assignees. From these premises the necessary deduction is that the appellate jurisdiction, strictly so called, conferred upon the circuit courts, is limited to the controversies between assignees and the claimants of adverse interests and to controversies between assignees and creditor-claimants touching the allowance of claims. But there must be, obviously, numerous decisions by the district courts and district judges sitting at chambers, which are not included in either of these categories.

The order complained of in the petition Is an example: It is not a decree in equity; nor a judgment at law; nor a rejection of claim in whole or part; nor an allowance of a claim. From this order, then, it is clear no appeal could be taken. On this point there seems to have been a misapprehension both of counsel and of the district judge; Cor an appeal was allowed, though not in time; .and afterwards the time for filing the appeal bond was extended. Of this nothing more need be said now than that the right of appeal as given by, the statute can neither be enlarged nor restricted by the district or the circuit court. The regulation of appeal is a regulation of jurisdiction. The circuit court has no jurisdiction of any appeal in any case, under the bankrupt act, from the district court, unless it is claimed and bond is filed, at the time it is claimed, and notice of it is given, as required by the eighth section of the act, [351]*351within ten days after the entry of the decree or decision appealed from; or unless it is entered at the term of the circuit court first held within and for the proper district next after the expiration of the ten days from the time it was claimed. This is mentioned here only to correct the misapprehension which seems to prevail, concerning the jurisdiction of this court upon appeals. Returning, then? to the order mentioned in the petition, and finding it as already stated to be one from which no appeal can be taken, the conclusion is inevitable that it is one which may be reviewed in the exercise of the power of general superintendence, or that it cannot be reviewed at all.

It may be said that the superintending jurisdiction does not extend to decisions of the district court, or of the district judge at chambers; and, certainly, if it does not extend to both, it extends to neither; for the first section of the act gives the same jurisdiction to the district judge at chambers as to the district court. This construction would limit the revisory jurisdiction of the circuit court to that given in the eighth section. But it is plain that this construction is not the correct one. It would, indeed, nullify the operation of the most important clause of the second section; for it would limit the superintending jurisdiction to the proceedings of assignees and registers; and these seem to be already placed by the first clause under the supervision of the district court.

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Bluebook (online)
1 F. Cas. 348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-alexander-circtdva-1869.