In Re Etherton

88 F. Supp. 874, 1950 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4233
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. California
DecidedJanuary 20, 1950
Docket47250
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 88 F. Supp. 874 (In Re Etherton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Etherton, 88 F. Supp. 874, 1950 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4233 (S.D. Cal. 1950).

Opinion

YANKWICH, District Judge.

Earl L. Etherton, bankrupt, filed his petition for arrangement under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Act of 1938 1 on March 18, 1949. The plan of arrangement was abandoned before its confirmation by the court on August 3, 1949 and the petitioner was adjudicated a bankrupt on the same day. Prior to the filing of the petition, J. W. Bradshaw, doing business as J. W. Bradshaw Hardware Floor Company, re *876 corded three. separate mechanic’s liens on January 4, 1949, in Los Angeles County against three separate parcels of land owned by the bankrupt, — one lien being upon lots 9 and 10 of Tract No. 13601 for $414, the second upon Lots 5 and 6 in the same Tract in the sum of $414, and the third upon Lots 3 and 4 in the same Tract in the sum of $484, — making a total of $1312.

Notice to creditors under the original proceeding was given by the Referee .on March 30, 1949. It called for a first meeting of creditors on April 11, 1949. On April 20, 1949, Bradshaw filed a secured claim to cover the liens. On petition of Trustee, orders to show cause were issued directed to various lien claimants, including Bradshaw, to show cause why their liens should not be decreed to be void against the properties in the proceeding.

On November 10, 1949, the Referee made his order decreeing that the liens asserted hy Bradshaw were void. The properties against which Jhe liens were claimed have been sold. And the lien rights are asserted against the proceeds in the hands of the trustee.

This is a petition to review the order of the Referee. The. certificate indicates that the 'basis for the-Rfefe'ree’s order was that the mechanic’s liens asserted against the properties by various lien claimants, including Bradshaw, — the only .one who. is questioning the order, — were invalid and that, consequently, he could hot claim any right to fhe funds derived from the sale of the properties. ■ The legal ground behind the Referee’s order is that Bradshaw had not instituted proceedings to enforce the mechanic’s liens within the time specified by California law. 2 In asserting this view, the Referee followed a case from the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. 3

We leave out of consideration, for ' the present, the obvious principle that a decision by even so highly respected a court as the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit is not binding on us, unless its reasoning commands assent, and confine ourselves to the fact that the New York Statute, under consideration in the case which the Referee followed, is different from the California Statute. The New York Statute limited the life of mechanic’s liens to one year. They were deemed to be discharged unless the claimants took one of three steps, — -(1) commenced an action within the year to foreclose, (2) obtained an order from a court continuing the lien, (3) or were made defendants in an action to foreclose another lien. 4

It can be seen readily that under such statute, it might be held that, as it lay within the power of the claimant to continue the life of the lien by addressing a request for that purpose to a proper . court, his failure to do so was fatal and the filing of the claim in bankruptcy did not extend the life of the lien. The Court, in summing up its ruling, said so in so many words: “Because the liens were not continued in any of the ways prescribed by the state law, they had lost all efficacy before the land against which they were filed was sold by the bankruptcy court. Consequently no liens were transferred or transferable to the proceeds of sale and the claimants are not entitled to any priority in the distribution of assets.” (Emphasis added.) 5 But, trader the California Statute, 6 no method is provided for continuing the lien after the expiration of the ninety-day period. Therefore,' the language which the Court of Appeals used in interpreting the New York Statute has no application.

In the case before us, when the petition under Chapter 11 was filed, the ninety-day " period had not expired. The lien was valid, to all intents and purposes. Nothing more remained to “perfeef’ its validity as *877 a lien. The ninety-day enforcement period is merely a period of limitation. It does not affect the validity of the lien or destroy the debt. Action can still be brought after the ninety-day period to collect the debt to which the lien related. The statute merely affects “the enforcement” of the lien. It reads: “No lien provided for in this chapter binds any property for a longer period than 90 days after the same has been filed, unless proceedings be commenced in a proper court within that time to enforce the same.” 7 (Emphasis added.)

The enforcement of which the section speaks is necessary only when it is sought to subject the property to the satisfaction of the lien. Such possible enforcement was halted by the institution of the bankruptcy proceeding. All proceedings to enforce the lien were automatically suspended. 8

I think that the Referee has misread Paragraph b of Section 67 of the Bankruptcy Act. 9 That subdivision recognizes all liens which have been perfected before bankruptcy. It reads: “Where by such laws such liens are required to be perfected and arise but are not perfected before bankruptcy, they may nevertheless be valid, if perfected within the time permitted by and in accordance with the requirements of such laws, except that if such laws require the liens to be perfected by the seizure of property, they shall instead be perfected 'by filing notice thereof with the court.”

The enactment speaks of the “perfection” of a lien, and not of its “enforcement”. A mechanic’s lien is perfected when a proper notice is filed, in conformity with the statute. The foreclosure is merely “a proceeding in equity and resembles a proceeding to foreclose a mortgage or equitable lien.” 10

Even when there is a further step necessary in order to perfect the lien, all that this section 11 requires is that a notice of lien shall be filed with the bankruptcy court. There is no provision, in this section, or in any other, which authorizes the bankruptcy court to continue the effect of the lien, in the absence of a state statute, such as the New York Statute, which gave the court the right to continue the lien after expiration of one year. 12 There is no such provision in the state law of California. The only right which the lien claimant had in this case, after perfecting his lien, was to foreclose it or sue for the debt.

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Bluebook (online)
88 F. Supp. 874, 1950 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4233, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-etherton-casd-1950.