In re Franklin

151 F. 642, 1907 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 374
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 11, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 151 F. 642 (In re Franklin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Franklin, 151 F. 642, 1907 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 374 (E.D.N.C. 1907).

Opinion

PURNELL, District Judge.

On the 10th day of March, 1905, J. R. Franklin was duly adjudged a bankrupt, and the cause referred to V. H. JBoydeu, Esq., referee, at Raleigh, N. C. After.considerable delay and many hearings the case is now certified by the referee on claims and contentions therein on exceptions to the report of the referee.

The first claim tints contested the referee reports as follows;

The claim of the Gordon Hollow Blast Grate Company, lien upon the machinery and plant, upon which the referee holds the claim is invalid: (i) For the reason that the lion was never perfected before or after the bankruptcy by the claimant, as required by the North Carolina statute. (2) That the furnishing of the articles was not by contract or agreement, but a sale in the regular course of business, and only personal credit was looked to for payment. (3) That the Bank of South Boston, mortgage creditor, has a superior lien to the Raleigh Iron Works. In this report exceptions are tiled. The material for which this lien is claimed was ordered through an agent of claimant company on one of their blanks, and it was not even designated where the material was to be used. The referee decides upon the foregoing facts that the Gordon Hollow Blast Grate Company is not entitled to a lien upon the machinery, plant, or land belonging to the bankrupt’s estate, as a material furnisher, as claimed and set up in the proof of claim and the petitions herein filed. It is further decided that: the Gordon Hollow Blast Grate Company is not entitled to the lien claimed, for the further reason that the said lien has never been perfected under the laws of the state of North Carolina, as required under that, act or provisions of said laws which create said liens, and which, perfecting the bankruptcy act, requires before it can become such a claim in bankruptcy as is entitled to be paid in full. The bankruptcy act protects all statutory liens which have been properly perfected before or after the adjudication in bankruptcy in accordance with tlie statute or provision of law which gives them birth. If they have not been so perfected as required, then they cannot be said to exist in these proceedings or to be entitled to priority in payment. The claim is disallowed as a material furnisher’s lien, and can only be filod and allowed as an unsecured claim against the bankrupt’s estate. See In re Lillington Lumber Co. (D. C.) 13 Am. Bankr. Rep. 153, 132 Fed, 886, “Statutory lien filed after adjudication of debtor.” “A statutory lien filed within the time prescribed by the statute is protected il' otherwise valid, although not filed until after the debtor’s adjudication as a bankrupt.” See other cases cited. Fehling v. Goings. 13 Am. Bankr. Rep. 154, 67 N. J. Eq. 375, 58 Atl. 642; Crane v. Smythe (Sup.) 11 Am. Bankr. Rep. 747, 86 N. Y. Supp. 711, 87 N. Y. Supp. 917; Matter of Roeber (D. C.) 9 Am. Bankr. Rep. 778, 121 Fed. 444; In re Mero (D. C.) 12 Am. Bankr. Rep. 171, 128 Fed. 630. The lien claimed by the Gordon Hollow Blast Grate Company has never been filed within the time required by the state law, or filed at all, except as set up in these proceedings, in the bankruptcy court. It therefore has never been perfected. Appeal and request for certification, costs of the proceedings taxed against the Gordon Hollow Blast Grate Company.

The opinion and decision of the referee are affirmed. Before a creditor can claim a lien given by a state statute he must comply with the statute and perfect his lien. It is only after so perfected that they are protected by the court of bankruptcy, or by any other court.

And the second claim is like unto the first, which is the claim of the Raleigh Iron Works. It appears in Exhibit A filed with this claim that in the account filed and claimed to be a lien such items as follows are charged: Collection charges on checks, drayage, freight paid, telephone messages, railroad fare, steel, pipes, dies, and articles of general merchandise. While some items charged would support a lien under the North Carolina statute the foregoing items would probably be successfully contested. But no lien was filed or perfected as required by [644]*644the state statute. However this may be, the claim was not perfected under the state statute and cannot be allowed in bankruptcy as a preferred claim, but can be proved as an unsecured claim. The decision of the referee to this effect is affirmed and exceptions thereto overruled. Claimant at best had an inchoate right of lien, which a court of bankrutpcy cannot protect or enforce. The American Wood Working Machinery Company claim their lien upon the property described in the conditional sale under the following statute:

“All conditional sales of personal property in which the title is retained by the bargainor shall be reduced to writing and registered in the same manner and for the same fees and with the same legal effect as is provided for chattel mortgages in the county where the purchaser resides; or in case the purchaser shall reside out of the state, then the county where the said personal estate, or some part thereof, is situated; or in case of choses in action where the donee, bargainee, or mortgagee resides.” Code, § 1275; Revisal 1905, § 983.

The statute evidently refers to the place that the purchaser resides at the time of the execution of the mortgage or conditional sale. Franklin really had no fixed residence.

The testimony is as follows: The conditional sale dated Raleigh, N. C., November 6/ 1902, was executed in Raleigh, and the mail address of Franklin was Fuquay Springs, Wake county, N. C. The conditional salé provided that the property should be delivered to Franklin at Raleigh via Southern Railway, and it was delivered to him at Raleigh and reshipped to Fuquay Springs, Wake county. All of the correspondence between Franklin and the American Wood Working Machinery Company until May 27, 1903, was written from and postmarked Fuquay Springs-, Wake county, N. C. Franklin came to North Carolina from Virginia on October 17, 1902, and went to Fuquay Springs and continued to take his meals at Fuquay Springs until May, 1903. He slept at Fuquay Springs three nights in every week until December, and spent about one-third of his time during this interval at Fuquay Springs. He remained at Fuquay Springs two or three weeks until his wagons came down, and during this interval purchased the machinery of the claimants. He did not commence the operation of his mills at Chalybeate Springs until February 1st. The machinery was purchased in the city of Raleigh, was ordered shipped to Raleigh, and the conditional sale was executed in Raleigh and recorded in Wake county, where the bankrupt resided at the time of the execution of the conditional sale.

The American Wood Working Machinery Companj'- insists that its conditional sale was properly recorded in the county where Franklin resided at the time of the execution thereof. Franklin testifies that he afterwards moved to Chalybeate Springs in Harnett county, and that he accepted the property at Fuquay Springs, in Wake county, and after-wards carried it into Harnett county, where he constructed his plant and acquired residence. The Supreme Court of this state has decided that no new registration was rendered necessary by reason of such removal. Harris v. Allen, 104 N. C. 86, 10 S. E. 127; Barrington v. Skinner, 117 N. C. 52, 23 S. E. 90. And registration is notice to the world even when the property is carried into another state. Hornthal v. Burwell, 109 N. C. 10, 13 S. E. 721, 13

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
151 F. 642, 1907 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-franklin-nced-1907.