In re Johnson

212 F. 311
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 15, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 212 F. 311 (In re Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Johnson, 212 F. 311 (E.D. Okla. 1914).

Opinion

CAMPBELL, District Judge.

This appeal brings up for review a decree entered in the a'bove-styled bankruptcy proceeding.

The matter under dispute is the validity under section 7911, Statutes of Okl. 1909, of an unrecorded conditional sale contract as against creditors who became such after the contract was executed prior to its being recorded, and without knowledge of it, where none of them had, prior to the adjudication in bankruptcy, secured a lien upon the property covered by the conditional sale contract, either by execution, attachment, or otherwise, prior to the recording of said conditional sale contract, and where the property subsequently came into the hands of the trustee in bankruptcy.

The Rock Island Implement Company, the conditional vendor, asserted title under its contract and sought to reclaim the property, or its proceeds, from the trustee in bankruptcy. The petition of the implement company was denied by the referee; he being of the opinion that the conditional sale contract was invalid as against the subsequent [313]*313creditors without notice, who had presumably extended credit to the bankrupt upon the faith that his property was unencumbered.

The Rock Island Implement Company prosecutes the present review.

Section 67a of the Bankruptcy Act declares:

“Claims which for want of record or for other reasons would not have been valid liens as against the claims of the creditors of the bankrupt shall not be liens against his estate.”

And the applicable provision of the recording law of Oklahoma (section 7911, Statutes 1909) is as follows:.

“Instruments evidencing conditional sale must be recorded. * * * That any and all instruments in writing, or promissory notes now in existence or hereafter executed, evidencing the conditional sale of personal property, and that retains the title to the same in the vendor until the purchase price is paid in full, shall be void as against innocent purchasers, or the creditors of the vendee, unless the original instrument, or a true copy thereof, shall have been deposited in the office of the register of deeds in and for the county -wherein the property shall be kept, and when so deposited shall be subject to the law applicable to the filing of chattel mortgages; and any conditional, verbal sale of personal property reserving to the vendor any title in the property sold shall be void as to creditors and innocent purchasers for value.”

A similar provision as to the effect of unfiled chattel mortgages against creditors is found in section 4422, Statutes 1909.

[1, 2] It is apparent that the effect to be given to the unrecorded conditional sale contract must be determined by the recording law of the state; and it is also apparent that the question arising under that law turns upon who are included in the term “creditors” in section 7911.

Upon that question the decisions of the several state courts have not been uniform. Although recording statutes usually provide that an unrecorded mortgage, or conditional sale contract, is void as to creditors, the prevailing doctrine seems to make such instruments void only as against those creditors who obtain a lien on the mortgaged property by attachment or levy of execution before the instrument is filed for record; that this rule only applies to creditors who became such before the mortgage was executed. See 6 Cyc. 1070. Where credit was extended to the mortgagor during the time that the mortgage was withheld for record, it has been held that the mortgage is void alike as to creditors with or without liens.

In some of the states, however, creditors who have extended credit to the mortgagee subsequent to the execution of the mortgage are required to obtain a judgment before attacking the unrecorded mortgage. This is generally held to be necessary: Hirst, to definitely establish the legal demand; second, to extinguish the legal remedy. Such was the holding in the case of Union National Bank v. Oium, 3 N. D. 193, 54 N. W. 1034, 44 Am. St. Rep. 533, wherein the court in construing the identical statute which we have in Oklahoma held that the same rendered unfiled chattel mortgages void as to creditors: First, who had extended credit and fastened upon the property covered by the mortgage, either by attachment or levy, prior to the filing of the same; [314]*314second, void as to creditors who had, subsequent to the execution of the mortgage, extended credit to the mortgagor and had, subsequent to the filing of the mortgage, obtained a judgment. To the same effect, see Ruggles v. Cannedy, 127 Cal. 290, 53 Pac. 911, 59 Pac. 827, 46 L. R. A. 371; Noyes v. Brace, 8 S. D. 190, 65 N. W. 1071.

The exact point we are here discussing has not been passed upon, to our knowledge, by the Supreme Court of Oklahoma. However, the Supreme Court of Oklahoma in the case of Campbell, Hunt & Adams v. Richardson & Eicholtz, 6 Okl. 375, 51 Pac. 659, held that the Oklahoma statute should receive the same construction as that given to it by the Supreme Court of South Dakota, and held in that case that the word “creditor” as used in the statute applied alike to that class of creditors whose claims are antecedent to the execution of the mortgage and those who extended the mortgagor credit subsequent thereto. The statute of North Dakota is identical with that of South Dakota.

In the case of Cornelius v. Boling et al., 18 Okl. 469, 90 Pac. 874, the Supreme Court of Oklahoma territory held that an unfiled chattel mortgage, even though the mortgagee had taken possession of the property covered thereby prior to bankruptcy, was invalid against the mortgagor's trustee in bankruptcy. This case was cited and commented upon by us in an opinion in Re Wall (D. C. Okla.) 29 Am. Bankr. Fep. 901, 207 Fed. 994, a case arising prior to the arhendment of 1910 to section 47a(2) of the Bankruptcy Act.

In the case of First National Bank v. Sayler, 4 Okl. 408, 50 Pac. 76, the court held a chattel mortgage void as- to creditors for want of record to be void as against the assignee in trust for the benefit of creditors.

In Re Wall, supra, this court held that the Oklahoma Supreme Court, in holding' that an adjudication in bankruptcy amounted to an attachment; had overlooked the qualification which the Supreme Court of the United States had placed on this doctrine in the case of York v. Cassell, 201 U. S. 344, 26 Sup. Ct. 481, 50 L. Ed. 782, 15 Am. Bankr. Rep. 633, and we there held that the term “creditor” in the statute above quoted meant a creditor who has perfected a lien by legal process upon the specific property.

Section 47a(2) of the Bankruptcy Act, as amended, provides that the trustee, as to all the 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. Such is the standing of the trustee in this case.

The question to be answered, therefore, is whether or not, in order to render the conditional contract of sale void as against the creditors here represented by the trustee, it was necessary for them to have fastened upon the property by attachment, levy, of otherwise prior to the filing of the conditional sale contract.

The holding in the case of Cornelius v.

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Related

Security Nat. Bank v. Truscon Steel Co.
1923 OK 484 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1923)
Anderson v. Oklahoma Moline Plow Co.
246 F. 743 (Eighth Circuit, 1917)

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Bluebook (online)
212 F. 311, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-johnson-oked-1914.