In re Anderson

1 F. Cas. 831, 2 Hughes 378, 9 Nat. Bank. Reg. 360, 1876 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 89
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedApril 18, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1 F. Cas. 831 (In re Anderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Anderson, 1 F. Cas. 831, 2 Hughes 378, 9 Nat. Bank. Reg. 360, 1876 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 89 (E.D. Va. 1876).

Opinion

HUGHES, District Judge.

Upon the facts as they have been recited I have to say as foEows:

The written agreement of 20th December, 1S72, cannot bind the bankrupt’s estate; first, because it was not signed by the assignee; and second, because the signature of George W. Anderson, who was civiliter mortuus, was a nuEity so far as the estate was concerned.

There is nothing in the point made by the commissioners in their answer, that Anderson signed the agreement after he received his discharge. By the very language of that paper, he was only “discharged of and from aE debts provable against his estate which existed on the 31st of December, A. D. 1868.” He was not discharged, - as a party, from this court; and was in no manner or degree reinvested by the discharge with control over the estate which he had surrendered in bankruptcy. As to that estate, his becoming a [833]*833party to the' agreement in question was an absolute nullity.

As an agreement between the parties to it, this writing had no validity against the bankrupt’s estate. ' Did it derive validity irom the consent which the assignee gave to the decree rendered in accordance with and execution of the agreement? The decree could only derive validity, if at all, from the consent of the assignee. He did consent.3 The only question is, Had he power to do so?

I think he had not such power, for several reasons. The assignee in bankruptcy is the creature of the laws of congress on that subject. He has no power but such as these laws give him. And nowhere do they give an assignee power to become defendant to. a suit, in another court than the bankrupt court, commenced after the petition and adjudication. He may become party defendant to a suit elsewhere which has been commenced against the bankrupt before his petition, and which may be pending at the time of the petition; but not to such a suit commenced after the petition. In fact, the law does not contemplate the possibility of such a suit. Having given full jurisdiction •over the bankrupt’s estate to the bankruptcy court, and mindful of the mockery of doing so if another court could appropriate that jurisdiction after the adjudication, it does not contemplate the possibility of an assignee going into another court as a • defendant in such a suit, and nowhere gives him authority to do so.

It gives the assignee power.to go out into other courts, and sue as plaintiff in right of the estate; its language being “he may sue and recover the said estate, debts, and effects.” It gives him power to prosecute as plaintiff suits thus commenced by himself after the adjudication, or suits which may have been commenced by the bankrupt, and may be pending at the time of the bankruptcy. But it confines his power to appear as defendant to suits which were pending at the date of the bankruptcy; its language being: “He may defend all suits at law or in equity pending at the time of the adjudication of bankruptcy, m which such a bankrupt is a party in his own name, in the same manner and with the like effect as they might have been defended by such bankrupt,” but for. the bankruptcy.

The suit in the circuit court for Montgomery having . been commenced after the adjudication, the assignee had no power to become defendant in it; his doing so was of no validity to bind the estate, -and any consent which he may have given to the proceedings in that suit was null and void. It is useless, therefore, to consider the ques. tion whether the state court had jurisdiction of a general creditor’s bill against this bankrupt after his adjudication. Being civil-iter mortuus as to the estate, his being a party to that suit was a nullity; and his as-signee having no power to be a party to the suit, his being made so was a nullity. The suit itself was therefore a suit ex parte as to this estate, and its proceedings can in no manner bind it. I will say, however, on this question of jurisdiction, that I know of no case, in any of the reports, of a general creditor’s suit in chancery being brought in another court than the court of bankruptcy against the bankrupt after his adjudication. I assume such a proceeding to be wholly anomalous. The law contracts with the bankrupt that in consideration of his surrendering his whole estate (certain exemptions excepted) for the benefit of his creditors, he shall be discharged of all debts provable against him existing at the date of adjudication. It provides a court to execute this contract, and it gives that court full and exclusive control of his estate for that purpose. For the law to allow any of these creditors to go into another court after the bankrupt has made his surrender, for the purpose of asserting control over the estate, would be to break faith with the other creditors and the bankrupt himself, and convert the whole proceeding in the bankrupt court into a mockery and fraud. The pretension to such a jurisdiction does not bear serious examination, nor deserve it.

I will say passim that the restraining order of 29th July, 1873, cannot stand longer on that prayer of the petition which prays for a homestead. The homestead exemption is not allowable to Anderson, and the restraining order granted for its protection cannot stand longer on that ground. I will sign an order continuing the restraining order given by this court on the 29th July, 1873, but basing it on the grounds set forth in this decision.

On appeal from an order entered by the district court as indicated, the circuit court rendered the following supervisory decision:

BOND, Circuit Judge.

I am of opinion that this petition to the supervisory jurisdiction of the circuit court, to set aside a decree of the district court continuing the restraining order of the 29th of July, 1873, ought to be dismissed. Whatever may be the rights of the petitioner, Mrs. Anderson, in the district - court, I do not think it necessary to determine; but it is clear that both she and her husband were entitled to be heard therein, and that the proceedings in the state court, commenced after the adjudication in bankruptcy, were null and void so far as they affected the rights of any person who might come into the bankrupt court claiming an interest in the property [834]*834in litigation in the state court; and there .was necessity for the first restraining order, to prevent any disposition of the property till such claim was adjudicated; and upon the petition of Mrs. Anderson in the district court it was necessary to continue said order, which the district court has done, which action is the matter complained of. The court remands the case to the district court with directions to proceed to ascertain the rights of the parties claiming the property in litigation in the state court, without expressing any opinion as to the merits of the controversy.

On April 18th, 1876, this cause came on again before the district court, when, upon the facts and questions of law stated in-writing, that court again rendered a decision in the cause as follows:

In ascertaining the facts of this case I have relied chiefly upon that portion of the evidence to which no exception was taken by counsel on either side. But the objections which were made to the competency of Mrs. Andesson are not good. This is a “cause or trial” arising under the bankruptcy act; and it is expressly provided by that act, section 5088, that the wife of a bankrupt may be examined, and by the amendm*nt of June 22d, 1874 (section 8 amending section 26), it is provided generally that any party to a trial or cause under the bankruptcy act shall be a competent witness.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 F. Cas. 831, 2 Hughes 378, 9 Nat. Bank. Reg. 360, 1876 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-anderson-vaed-1876.