In re Chaney

39 F. Supp. 696, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3031
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Virginia
DecidedJuly 16, 1941
DocketNo. 1514
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 39 F. Supp. 696 (In re Chaney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.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 Chaney, 39 F. Supp. 696, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3031 (W.D. Va. 1941).

Opinion

PAUL, District Judge.

This matter involves the question of whether the debtor, who has filed a petition under Section 75 of the Bankruptcy Act, 11 U.S.C.A. § 203, is a farmer within the meaning of that act.

It appears that in 1936 the debtor had title to and was living on a tract of approximately 130 acres of land in Augusta County, against which there was a large indebtedness secured by liens on the property. The debtor having failed to pay interest on the debts or taxes on the property for sometime and being greatly in default as to her obligations, a creditor’s suit was brought in the Circuit Court of Augusta County against her which resulted in a decree under which the property was sold at public auction and purchased by one Holly Stover. This purchaser paid the purchase price for the property and this was applied to paying off the debts against the property, and Stover took possession of the property under his purchase. However, some irregularity in the proceedings in the state court occurred which caused the Supreme Court of Virginia to hold that the sale was void and, in October 1936, the case was remanded to the Circuit Court of Augusta County for further proceedings and Mary V. Chaney was again placed in possession of [698]*698the property. • In the course of these further proceedings some action was taken, from which the debtor applied for another appeal to the Supreme Court of Virginia, but that appeal was not granted; and in February, 1940, the state court entered a decree subrogating Holly Stover to the liens upon the land which had been paid off by his funds and directing that unless the amount so charged against the land should be paid within a limited time the land should again be offered for sale at public auction.

The indebtedness was not paid and in July, 1940, a few days before a sale was to be had, the debtor filed her petition in this court under Section 75 of the Bankruptcy Act. The petition was referred to a conciliation commissioner and Holly Stover filed his petition in the proceedings asking leave to proceed with the sale of the property, contending in substance that the relation of debtor-creditor did not exist as between the debtor and himself and that the petition under Section 75 should not operate as a stay as to the proceedings in the state court. This court overruled this contention and sent the matter back to the conciliation commissioner. The conciliation commissioner thereafter reported that no agreement for composition or extension had been agreed upon between the debtor and her creditors and, by an order of December 18, 1940, the debtor was granted leave to tender her petition under Subsection s of Section 75, 11 U.S.C.A. § 203, sub. s, if she should be so advised. Such an amended petition was filed and thereupon Stover filed his objections to further proceedings on said amended petition on the ground that the debtor was not at the time of filing her petition a farmer within the definition and meaning of the statute and was not entitled to the relief provided by Subsection s of Section 75 of the Bankruptcy Act. The court thereupon, by an order of January 3, 1941, referred the matter to the conciliation commissioner for a hearing and report upon the question of whether or not the debtor at the time of filing her petition and her amended petition was a farmer within the meaning of the statute.

In the hearings before the conciliation commissioner on the reference to him, a number of witnesses were heard and it was stipulated by the parties that there should also be considered in evidence certain parts of the record of the proceedings in the state court. As a result of the reference, the conciliation commissioner, on May 30th, filed his report finding that the debtor was not a farmer within the meaning and definition of the statute at the time she filed her petition. The debtor duly filed her exceptions to the,, report of the conciliation commissioner, alleging that the findings were in error, and it is upon these exceptions that the matter is now before this court.

While no exception has been taken by the debtor based on any contention as to the time in which the objections of the creditor were first raised, I think it proper to say that inasmuch as the question raised goes to the jurisdiction of the court it could be raised and should be considered at any stage of the proceedings; and it is to be noted that the question was raised at the first opportunity after the debtor sought the benefits of Subsection s.

The evidence which was submitted to the conciliation commissioner and which is now before the court on the question of whether or not this debtor is a farmer within the meaning of the act is confusing and unsatisfactory and is lacking in the definiteness and clarity which is desirable. This is primarily due to the contradictions and evasiveness of the debtor in her testimony and to her lack of frankness and her unwillingness to make any true disclosure of her affairs. As far as can be gathered from the evidence, however, the situation appears to be substantially as follows:

There is on the tract of land which the debtor owns a cave, and for several years prior to 1937 the debtor had exploited this cave as a commercial proposition, charging admissions thereto. During part of the time she leased the cave to some one else and for a short period prior to August, 1937, when she was dispossessed of the property, she operated the cave herself. She testifies that her net income from the cave was about $125 per month. It appears, however, that at the same time she was cultivating some part of the land, apparently 12 to 20 acres, and that she was the owner of some livestock and some farming implements. The evidence of this latter fact is that in February, 1937, during the pendency of the creditor’s suit, the debtor, for a consideration of $100, sold and transferred to Richard A. Cates, her son by a previous marriage, all livestock of every nature and description and all the farming implements on the place. The [699]*699stock and farming implements are not specifically described, but the bill of sale simply refers to all livestock and all farming implements. If this was a bona fide sale at a fair price, the livestock and farming implements must have been meagre and insufficient to maintain any real farming or dairying operations. Just what the nature of the farming operations carried on on the property at that time were is not disclosed except, as stated, it would appear that some land was cultivated. This was the situation in the fall of 1937, just prior to the time when Stover came into possession of the land by his purchase at the judicial sale.

The debtor was reinvested with possession of the property in August, 1939, and apparently some small grain was sown on the property that fall, for during the year 1940 there was threshed 41 bushels of wheat, 126 bushels of rye and 30 bushels of barley. It is not known whether this grain was put out on shares by some one in the neighborhood or grown entirely by the debtor. As near as I can make out from the evidence, there was also a field of about 5.2 acres of land on which corn was grown during the year 1940. It would also appear that this same field of 5.2 acres was sown in wheat in the fall of 1940, this being done by a man named Cash, who lived in the neighborhood and who undertook to raise the wheat crop for a one-third share, using all of his own farming implements except a disc belonging to the debtor.

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Bluebook (online)
39 F. Supp. 696, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3031, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-chaney-vawd-1941.