In Re Douglas Lumber Co.

2 F.2d 985
CourtDistrict Court, D. Wyoming
DecidedMay 25, 1924
Docket718
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 2 F.2d 985 (In Re Douglas Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Wyoming primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Douglas Lumber Co., 2 F.2d 985 (D. Wyo. 1924).

Opinion

KENNEDY, District Judge.

This proceeding is before the court upon a petition for review of the referee’s order denying a claim of the International Harvester Company for the return of property based upon conditional sale contracts between it and the bankrupt. The record discloses substantially the following facts:

On September 3, 1920, the International Harvester Company entered into a contract with the bankrupt for the delivery of certain farm machinery during the year 1921; on November 22, 1921, a similar contract for the sale and delivery of property during the year 1922; and on August 19, 1922, for the salo and delivery of similar property during the year 1923—all of which contracts provided that the title should remain in tho vendor until the full purchase price had been paid. These contracts were not placed upon the records of tho county clerk of the county in which the Douglas Lumber Company was doing business until the 2d of October, 1923, when all of the aforesaid contracts were filed in the office of the county clerk of Converse county, with an affidavit attached to the so-called 1921 contract, reciting that the title to the machinery enumerated in the three contracts was in the vendor until the purchase price enumerated therein had been paid in full. On November 27, 1923, the Douglas Lumber Company filed in this court its petition in bankruptcy, with schedules attached, in which schedules the conditional sales contracts are set out.

Some time thereafter, in the due course of the administration of the bankruptcy proceeding, the trustee was selected, all properly, including that in controversy, taken into his possession, and a claim for the return of the machinery covered by the conditional sales contracts was filed with the referee by the International Harvester Company. The trustee filed objections to such claim, and a hearing was had before the referee upon the issue thus raised. The claim set forth the specific machinery in the hands of the trustee, which was claimed under the contracts, none of which claimed machinery, however, was included in the 1921 contract, but was either under the 1922 or 1923 contract. The parties entered into a stipulation to the effect that some of the creditors of *986 the bankrupt company had no actual notice of any claim of the International Harvester Company in and to the property, other than such constructive notice as may have been imparted by the filing of the contracts with the affidavit attached to one of them. The referee’s ruling denied the claim of the International Harvester Company, and, as before stated, the matter is brought before this court upon a petition for review of the referee’s order.

It is the contention of the claimant, first, that the filing of the conditional sales contracts imparted such notice as will entitle the' claimant to the recovery of its property; and, second, that independent of that notice, if the same should be held insufficient, the notice imparted by the listing of the conditional sales contracts in the schedules imparted such notice as will entitle the claimant to a recovery. The provision of the Wyoming statutes relating to conditional sale contracts and the placing of them of record is found in section 4713 of the Wyoming Compiled Statutes 1920, which reads as follows:

“No sale, contract or lease wherein the transfer or title of ownership of personal property is made to depend upon any condition, shall be valid against any purchaser Or judgment creditor of the vendee or lessee in possession, without notice, unless the same be in writing, signed by the’ vendee or lessee, and the original or a copy thereof filed in the office of the county clerk of the county wherein the property is; said instrument so filed shall have attached thereto an affidavit of such vendor or lessor, or his agent or attorney, which shall set forth the names of the vendor and vendee, or lessor and lessee with a description of the property transferred and, the full and true interest of the vendor or lessor therein. All such sales or transfers shall cease to be valid against purchasers in good faith, or judgment or attaching creditors without notice' at the expiration of one year from the date of such sale, unless the vendor or lessor shall, within thirty days prior to the one year from the date of such sale or transfer, file a similar affidavit to the one above provided for in the office of said clerk, and the said vendor or lessor may preserve the validity of his said sale or transfer of such personal property by an annual refiling in the same manner as aforesaid of such copy.”

The status of the trustee in a situation like the present appears to be fixed by section 47a of the Bankruptcy Act of 1898, as amended in 1910 (Comp. St. § 9631), which, so far as is applicable, reads as follows:

“Trustees shall respectively (1) account for and pay over to the estates under their control all interest received by them on property of such estates; (2) collect and reduce to money the property of the estates for which they are trustees, under the direction of the court, and close up the estate as expeditiously as is compatible with the best interests of the parties in interest; and such trustees, as to all property in the custody or coming into the custody of the bankruptcy court, shall be deemed vested with all the rights, remedies, and powers of a creditor holding a lien by legal or equitable proceedings thereon; and also, as to all property not in the custody of the bankruptcy court, shall be deemed vested with all the rights, remedies, and powers of a judgment creditor holding an execution duly returned unsatisfied.”

An analysis of these two sections brings the trustee within the purview of section 4713 of the Wyoming statutes, as being in the position of a judgment creditor, although not actually such, leaving the matter of whether he be with or without notice for determination.

The notice, so far as a trustee is concerned, undoubtedly means the notice to the creditors, as he stands as a representative of the creditors' in a bankruptcy proceeding. This is illustrated in the case of In re Bazemore (D. C. Ala.) 26 Am. Bankr. Rep. 494, 189 F. 236, where the court says:

“If all the creditors of the bankrupt had actual notice of the conditional sale, the trustee would represent no class as to which the condition would be void, since actual notice removes the necessity of showing constructive notice.”

Upon whose shoulders rests the burden of proof as to actual notice has been determined by the Supreme Court of this state in a consideration of the Wyoming statute in the ease of Crumrine v. Reynolds, 13 Wyo. 111, 78 P. 402, where the court says:

“When a party seeks to appropriate the property of a conditional vendor to the payment of the debt of the conditional vendee, he must show that he is within the terms of the statute giving such right. He must show that he did not have notice of the vendor’s lien.”

It is therefore apparent in this ease that the burden Was upon the trustee to establish the fact that the creditors were without notice, which burden has, however, been as *987

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Bluebook (online)
2 F.2d 985, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-douglas-lumber-co-wyd-1924.