In re Houston

94 F. 119, 1899 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 113
CourtDistrict Court, D. Kentucky
DecidedMay 13, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 94 F. 119 (In re Houston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Houston, 94 F. 119, 1899 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 113 (kyd 1899).

Opinion

EVANS, District Judge.

The petitioner is brought before the court by the respondent, who is the jailer of Campbell county, Ky., in obedience to the writ of habeas corpus issued yesterday upon a properly verified petition showing that on the 3d day of May, 1899, he was, on his own petition, duly adjudged a bankrupt by the district court of the United States for the district of Kentucky; that previously thereto, namely, on the 14th day of January, 1899, his wife, Pattie W. Houston, had obtained a divorce from him by the judgment of the Campbell circuit court, and that in the proceedings therefor, and before the said adjudication in bankruptcy, the said circuit court had given judgment against him for alimony, to be thereafter paid in weekly installments of five dollars each; that this judgment for alimony was included in the schedule of the bankrupt’s liabilities, and that several installments thereof were past due; that on the 9th day of May, 1899, he had applied for and1 obtained an order in the bankruptcy court staying and enjoining all proceedings in said action in the state court to enforce the collection of the installments of alimony then past due; that notice of said order and injunction staying said proceedings was given and was served upon the judge of said circuit court, but that notwithstanding such order and injunction, and notice thereof, the petitioner had been proceeded against by process of contempt in said state court, and, because he had not paid said installments, he was, by the judgment of said state court, on the 11th day of May, 1899, committed to and imprisoned in the county jail of said county, in violation of the laws of the United States and of his rights thereunder, and in defiance of the orders of the bankruptcy court staying said proceedings. The respondent, the jailer, without filing a written response, in open court orally agreed that the facts were as have been stated, and filed copies of the judgments of the Campbell circuit court allowing said alimony, and ordering the imprisonment of the petitioner for its nonpayment, and presented these orders as the justification of the said imprisonment.

Upon this state of facts, the case seems to the court to be a plain one. The constitution of the United States provides that that instrument, and the laws made in pursuance thereof, shall be the supreme law of the land, anything in the constitution or laws of any state to the contrary notwithstanding. Const. Amend, art. 6, subd. 2. Among the powers so delegated to the congress is that authorizing it to pass a general bankrupt law. Pursuant to' such power, the existing bankruptcy act (30 Stat. 544) became the supreme and only law of the land upon that subject. Under its provisions the petitioner applied for its benefits, and was duly adjudicated a bankrupt. Among those benefits was that of claiming a discharge from all liabilities of every character which by the terms of the bankrupt law were provable debts against his estate, with certain exceptions specified in the act. Section 1 of the act provides that the word “debt” shall include any debt, demand, or claim provable in bank[121]*121ruptcy, and also that the word “discharge” shall mean the release of a, bankrupt from all of his debts which are provable in bankruptcy, subject to the exceptions named in the act. Whether wisely or unwisely, congress did not, in fact, in section 63, distinguish between judgments for alimony and other judgments, when including them in the list of provable debts; nor did it, in section 17, include judgments of that class among those not to be affected by a discharge in . bankruptcy. The bankrupt court in this case had so decided on the motion for a stay of proceedings, and had directly passed upon the» question in holding that a stay should be ordered. While, in making the order for a stay of proceedings, the court only looked at the question from She slandpoint of the past-due installments of alimony, it is strongly inclined to the opinion that the peculiar form of judgment by which alimony is usually allowed may be properly classed among tlie unliquidated demands of the bankrupt, to be liquidated and made certain in amount pursuant to section 63 of the act; and, if the state law gave it priority, such judgments could be allowed a preference of payment out of the assets. And it should not be overlooked that the court of appeals of Kentucky, in the case of Tyler v. Tyler, 99 Ky., at page 34, 34 S. W. 899, in speaking of a judgment against the husband for alimony, said that it “makes him an ordinary debtor to the wife for a fixed sum of money, tha t his estate is liable for in the same manner (hat it: would be for a debt due upon any contract.” But whethei the judgment he a fixed liability or a contingent one is immaterial in this case, because all these questions, must be settled and disposed of in the bankruptcy court alone; and, while the judgment of the court thereon may be erroneous, it is not void, nor, so long as it remains uureversed, is it,to be disregarded by the state court. Whether the liability be fixed or contingent, section 11 of the act authorizes the court to stay proceedings, in all suits founded upon a claim from which a discharge would be a release, and which is pending against a person at the time of filing the petition; and section 2, cl. 13, gives the bankrupt court power to enforce obedience by all persons to all its lawful orders by fine and. imprisonment. The court attaches no importance to the words, “the filing of the petition against him,” used in section 63 of the bankruptcy law, because it is the evident intention of the act that the debts described in that section shall be provable against a voluntary bankrupt as well as an involuntary bankrupt, and because the court, from his knowledge of the history of the act, is satisfied that these words were inadvertently left in the draft of the bill after the adjustment of the controversy between the two houses of congress over the question of whether there should he any clause of involuntary bankruptcy. Any other construction of section 63 would exclude altogether the idea that there were provable debts against a voluntary bankrupt. And, besides, tie matter is concluded by the very first sentence of the first section of the bankrupt act, which provides that the phrase “ ‘a person against whom a petition has been filed’ shall include a person who has filed a voluntary petition.”

In view of what has been stated, there does not seem to be any doubt of the accuracy of any one of the following propositions r [122]*122(1) That the authority of the bankrupt court was meant, alike by the constitution and by congress, to be supreme and exclusive, within the sphere of the powers conferred. (2) That this necessarily excludes the idea of any co-ordinate jurisdiction in the state court in questions like the one upon which this case must turn. (3) That no rule of comity'can apply or be allowed to operate in such cases, because the sole jurisdiction is, by the exercise of the congressional power to pass a general bankrupt law, vested in the bankrupt court alone, and it has no authority to delegate that power, and no right to abandon it, to any other tribunal.

Coming, then, to the question in issue here, we find that a state court, in defiance of the propositions laid down, and of the order staying its proceedings lawfully made by the bankrupt court, has assumed the power, while bankruptcy proceedings are pending, to commit a bankrupt to jail for omitting to pay certain installments of alimony due under the judgment of the state court rendered before the adjudication in bankruptcy, and from which he might be discharged. in the bankruptcy proceedings.

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Bluebook (online)
94 F. 119, 1899 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-houston-kyd-1899.