In Re Continental Midway Corporation

185 F. Supp. 867, 1960 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5349
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedJuly 28, 1960
Docket10695
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 185 F. Supp. 867 (In Re Continental Midway Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Continental Midway Corporation, 185 F. Supp. 867, 1960 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5349 (D. Md. 1960).

Opinion

CHESNUT, District Judge.

This petition to review an order of the Referee has required a close consideration of the Maryland law and practice with regard to determining whether the judgment creditor in this case, who claims priority in payment, validly acquired a lien on personal property of the judgment debtor as against the Trustee in Bankruptcy. The order of the Referee determined that the creditor did not effectively obtain a lien and therefore was not entitled to priority in payment over general creditors. The controlling facts of the case as contained in the certificate of the Referee, and not here substantially challenged by counsel for the judgment creditor, are as follows:

1. The Chenille Manufacturing Company, Inc., obtained in due course a judgment against the Continental Midway Corporation (now the bankrupt) for $1490.01 with interest and costs in the Court of Common Pleas of Baltimore City on July 19, 1956.

2. On July 26, 1956 counsel for the creditor issued a fi. fa. on the judgment and had it delivered to the sheriff for service. The next return day in the court was the first Monday of August 1956, and at that time the sheriff made a return of nulla bona on the writ.

3. On August 14, 1956 counsel for the judgment creditor delivered a second fi. fa. to the sheriff which again was returned nulla bona on the next return day, the first Monday of September 1956.

4. Again on September 11, 1956 counsel for the judgment creditor delivered a third fi. fa. to the sheriff, the return day for which was the first Monday in October 1956, and it also was returned nulla bona.

5. On November 23, 1956 the Circuit Court of Baltimore (an equity court) appointed receivers for the debtor corporation who promptly took possession of the assets. The involuntary petition in bankruptcy in this case was filed December 13, 1956. Subsequently the Trustee, having taken possession of certain personal property of the bankrupt, sold the property consisting of office furniture, fixtures and equipment located at 1500 N. Chester Street, Baltimore, Maryland, for the net sum of $1330.

6. On January 30, 1957 the creditor filed its claim as an unsecured creditor (that is, stating that it held no security for its claim) in the amount of $1519.96, representing the amount of the judgment plus interest and costs. On July 26, 1957 the creditor filed a petition alleging in substance that he was entitled to priority in payment by reason of a lien on the personal property above referred to which had been sold by the Trustee. And with respect to the fi. fa. *869 issued September 11, 1956, it appears from correspondence filed in the case that the creditor requested or demanded that the sheriff levy on certain furniture and equipment in the premises 1500 N. Chester Street, alleged to be the property of the debtor. But the sheriff refused to do so saying that his deputy was informed when he started to make such a levy that the property did not belong to the debtor, and the sheriff then declined to make the levy unless the creditor would take “supplemental proceedings” in court or furnish the sheriff with an indemnity bond. This not being done the sheriff in due course returned this third writ of fi. fa. nulla bond. The Referee in his certificate stated that by virtue of testimony produced before him after the bankruptcy intervened, he found as a fact that as of September 11, 1956 there was office equipment and furniture in the premises 1500 N. Chester Street belonging to the debtor which could have been levied on by the sheriff. The Referee held hearings on the creditor’s petition on September 19, 1957, August 6, 1959, which was adjourned until November 13, 1959, and finally on January 15, 1960, concluded the matter by the order of that date denying priority.

The principal contention of counsel for the creditor is that upon the delivery to the sheriff of the fi. fa. order issued July 26, 1956 the creditor thereby became entitled to a lien on all the personal property of the debtor and that the lien so acquired continued up to and including the taking of possession of the debtor’s personal property above mentioned by the Trustee in Bankruptcy, and that therefore the creditor is entitled to priority in payment of at least the net sum realized by the Trustee on the sale of the office furniture and equipment. I understood counsel for the creditor to place his principal dependence upon the fi. fa. of July 26, 1956 because under section 67 of the Bankruptcy Act (11 U.S.C.A. § 107) Liens and Fraudulent Transfers, a lien obtained within four months before bankruptcy and when the debtor is insolvent would itself fall for that reason. On this basis the effect of the fi. fas. issued in August and September would be invalidated if, as counsel seem to concede, the debtor could be shown to have been insolvent at that time. However, as the Referee made no finding as to insolvency of the debtor on the possible invalidity of a lien obtained within four months prior to the bankruptcy, I think it necessary to include a consideration of not only the first fi. fa. issued July 26, 1956 and the return thereof, but also the returns made to the second and third fi. fas. in August and September respectively.

The contention of counsel for the Trustee is that even assuming that the issuance of a fi. fa. from the Clerk of the Court and the delivery of the same to the sheriff under Maryland laws constitutes a lien on personal property of the debtor thereafter levied and scheduled by the sheriff in due course of return, nevertheless as there was no actual levy in this case on any of the furniture of the debtor and no schedule made or returned, and more particularly because the return to the first and each of the subsequent fi. fas. made by the sheriff was nulla bona, therefore any inchoate lien which might have arisen on the issuance of the fi. fa. was terminated and dissolved upon an official return of nulla bona; and that the lien could only have been revived by another fi. fa. on which the sheriff made a return of goods levied and scheduled and as no such return was ever made by him but there was a return of nulla bona in due course of time on all three writs and as the judgment creditor made thereafter no effort to subject the debt- or’s property to a lien until after the intervention of bankruptcy, the creditor has no proper basis for claiming priority in payment as a claim secured by a lien.

In a succinctly worded opinion the Referee decided that the creditor in this case has not established a lien and therer fore denied priority in payment. I agree with the conclusion of the Referee, but *870 think it will be worth while to develop the law applicable to the decision in more detail.

We must first turn to the Bankruptcy Act itself. It is not disputed that the Trustee in Bankruptcy succeeds in title to the assets of the bankrupt only to the extent that they have not been previously voluntarily or involuntarily by operation of law, subjected to valid claims of third persons. Section 67 (11 U.S.C.A. § 107) provides that liens obtained against the property of the bankrupt within four months pri- or to the bankruptcy are invalidated if obtained when the debtor was insolvent. The section does not expressly deal with liens obtained more than four months prior to the bankruptcy but it has been held by the Supreme Court in Straton v. New, 1931, 283 U.S. 318, 51 S.Ct. 465, 75 L.Ed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
185 F. Supp. 867, 1960 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-continental-midway-corporation-mdd-1960.