In re Brunquest

4 F. Cas. 482, 7 Biss. 208
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Wisconsin
DecidedJune 15, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 4 F. Cas. 482 (In re Brunquest) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Brunquest, 4 F. Cas. 482, 7 Biss. 208 (E.D. Wis. 1876).

Opinion

DYER, District Judge.

Chapter 154 of the Laws of Wisconsin for 1802 [Sess. Laws, p. 8G] provides, that any person who may perform any labor or services in running, booming or towing any logs or timber in certain counties in this state, shall have a lien upon such logs or timber for the amount due for such labor and services. The second section of the act provides, that no such demand or claim shall remain a lien on any such logs or timber, unless a petition or statement thereof in writing, under oath, shall be made and filed in the office of the clerk of the circuit court of the proper county, within certain periods named in the statute. Then follows a provision that suit shall be commenced for the recovery and enforcement of such claim or demand, within four months after the filing of such statement or petition. Smith & Butler had a contract with the bankrupt Brunquest, to cut and drive logs owned by him, and they employed certain parties, who are among the lien claimants here, to do the work. Simpson & Simpson also had a contract with Brun-quest for driving logs down the Oconto river and some of its tributaries, and they also employed laborers who are among the lien claimants to do the work under their contract. Failing to obtain payment from their employers, these claimants are now attempting to assert liens upon the logs which constitute part of the assets of the bankrupt under this statute. The lien claimants employed by Smith & Butler, with the exception of two, filed their petitions for liens within thirty days from the time when their labor and services were completed, but after Brunquest, the bankrupt, and owner of the logs, had filed his petition in bankruptcy, which petition was filed on the 28th of August, 1874. The lien claimants employed by Simpson & Simpson, filed their petitions within the statutory period of thirty days, and before the petition in bankruptcy was filed. Bankruptcy proceedings were commenced in this court before the four months prescribed by the statute, in which to commence a suit for the recovery and enforcement of these claims had expired, and no suits were ever commenced in the state court to enforce these asserted liens, nor within that period did the claimants make proof in this court of any claim upon or against this property; nor did they within that period apply to this court for enforcement of their liens. The assignee of the bankrupt and certain mortgage creditors now contest the validity of these alleged liens, and resist their recognition and enforcement. Their position is that these liens being purely statutory, every requirement of the statute must be complied with in order to keep them alive and in force; and as there was a failure to commence suit in the state court within the four months named in the statute, or to do that in the bankruptcy proceedings which could be regarded as equivalent to a suit, the liens have lapsed and cannot be recognized.

The position of the lien claimants is, that after adjudication in bankruptcy, it was not only not necessary to bring suits in the state court to enforce their liens, but that they could not properly do so; that these liens were existing and provable at the time the bankruptcy proceedings were commenced, because the work had been done, and the petition had been filed within the time prescribed by the statute; that under the broad language of the first section of the bankrupt act [14 Stat. 517] this court has not only express but exclusive jurisdiction over all liens upon the bankrupt’s property, and for their ascertainment and liquidation; that suits brought in the state court after the [483]*483commencement of bankruptcy proceedings, to enforce the liens, would have been in disregard of the authority of this court, and would not' have been tolerated; that by the bankrupt law, liens in existence at the time bankruptcy proceedings are commenced, are preserved without suit, and without any action by lien claimants, in the bankruptcy proceedings, equivalent to a suit; that the bankruptcy proceeding is a suit, though commenced by the bankrupt; that the proceedings throughout constitute but one suit, in which the bankrupt or the assignee is plaintiff, and all creditors and claimants are defendants; that thereby, all the property of the bankrupt is taken and held as a trust fund for the benefit of all creditors and lien claimants; that the provisions of. the bankrupt law are designed to protect all such claimants, whether they hold their liens as security for a personal debt .of the bankrupt or not; and that finally, the commencement of proceedings in bankruptcy, being the commencement of a suit to which all lien holders are parties, and as thereby a trust fund is created for their benefit, without any application to the bankrupt court to enforce the liens within the statutory period of limitation, the liens must be recognized throughout the entire bankruptcy proceedings, as they stood at the time the petition in bankruptcy was filed. It is to be first noticed, that none of these lien claimants are the personal creditors of the bankrupt; they were employed by and performed work for other parties who are their personal debtors; they are now asserting claims upon the bankrupt’s property, upon which they performed the work, and which claims could have had no existence but for the provisions of a state statute. It is said that these claims could not be recovered or enforced by actions in the state court, as this statute provides; that if the claimants had resorted to such remedy before the bankruptcy proceeding was commenced, that proceeding would have arrested such suits, and if taken subsequently to the filing of the petition, the proceeding would have been in contempt of the authority of the bankrupt court. There are decisions in which the exclusive jurisdiction of the bankrupt court over liens upon the property of the bankrupt has been so strongly asserted, as to furnish some support to the proposition thus laid down by counsel for the lien claimants. In re Cook [Case No. 3,151] was a case where petitions were filed for the purpose of perfecting mechanics’ liens in conformity with the state law, after bankruptcy proceedings were begun. ■Suits were then commenced against the bankrupts and the assignee in bankruptcy, to enforce the liens in the state courts. The district court for the western district of this state, upon the application of the assignee, stayed the suits and directed the property to be sold free of all liens of that character, and the proceeds to be paid into court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 F. Cas. 482, 7 Biss. 208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-brunquest-wied-1876.