In re Joslyn

13 F. Cas. 1159, 2 Biss. 235
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedJanuary 15, 1870
DocketCase No. 7,550
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 13 F. Cas. 1159 (In re Joslyn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Joslyn, 13 F. Cas. 1159, 2 Biss. 235 (N.D. Ill. 1870).

Opinion

DRUMMOND, District Judge.

Various affidavits and petitions have been filed in different cases in bankruptcy, concerning rent due by the bankrupts. They do not present in precisely the same form, nor in the same stages of progress, the acts of the landlord for the recovery of rent, so that, looking at them all together it has become the duty of the court to decide in a general way what is the effect of the bankrupt law upon the right of the landlord, in this state, to recover his rent, when due from a bankrupt to the landlord at the time the proceedings in bankruptcy are commenced.

It is necessary to consider in the first place what are the provisions of law in this state upon the subject of rent and the right of distress in the landlord therefor. The earlier acts did not, in express terms, authorize a distress for rent, but simply recognized the existence of a right in the landlord, it being, as is well known, a common law right; and the adjudications of our courts upon these earlier statutes proceeded upon that principle, but yet treated it as an absolute right. The law provided that where there was a distress for rent it should be lawful for the landlord by himself, his agent, or attorney, to seize for rent any personal property of his tenant that might be found in the county where such tenant should reside, and in this respect it was different from the common law which confined the right of the landlord to distrain for rent to property on the premises. The later statutes have in express terms authorized the landlord to distrain for rent in arrear, and inasmuch as it was somewhat uncertain during what time the right of distress existed after the rent was due, the act of 1857 gave the right to the landlord to distrain the goods of the tenant for the period of six months after the expiration of the term for which the premises were demised. There are also some statutes which declare that the landlord shall have a lien upon certain products of the premises demised, for example upon the crops growing or grown upon the premises.

There is, however, one provision of our statute which becomes very material in the view which the court takes of the questions now under consideration. It declares that in all cases of distress for rent the person making such distress, where the claim does not exceed one hundred dollars, shall file with a justice of the peace, and where it exceeds one hundred dollars with the clerk of the circuit court, a copy of the distress warrant and an inventory of the property levied upon, and thereupon the party against whom the distress warrant shall have been issued, shall be duly summoned and the amount due from him assessed and entered upon the records of the court finding the same, and then the court is to certify to the person or officer making the seizure the amount so found due, and thereupon the officer is to proceed to sell the property so distrained, and make the amount thus certified to him, and return the certificate so issued to him with an indorsement thereon of his proceedings, which return and certificate shall be filed in the proper court.

Under this statute it has been held that the only province of the court is to ascertain whether there is the relation of landlord and tenant, and what is the amount due. The question is, how does the bankrupt law af-[1160]*1160feet the right or lien of the landlord to dis-train for rent. In other words, has the landlord the right under the law to distrain for rent, notwithstanding the filing of the petition in bankruptcy, and, can he, although there may be 'a distress warrant out at the time of ttie filing of such petition, proceed to obtain a certificate from the proper court and sell the property, notwithstanding a petition may have been filed in bankruptcy between the date of the levy of the distress warrant and the time when the certificate to sell is granted by the court?

The only provision upon the subject of rent in the bankrupt law is contained in the nineteenth section, which is: “Where the bankrupt is liable to pay rent, or other debt falling due at fixed and stated periods, the creditor may prove for a proportionate pait thereof, up to the time of the bankruptcy, as if the same grew due from day to day, and not at such fixed and stated periods.”

Under the English law, it is well known, the proceeding in bankruptcy did not interfere with the right of the landlord to distrain for rent, provided the property remained on the demised premises. Undoubtedly the right may vary in different states under the bankrupt law, because the right of the landlord is different in different states. In some the right to distrain is entirely taken away, thus placing the landlord upon the same footing as other creditors, and giving him no priority. In some the right to distrain still exists, as in our own state, modified more or less by statute.

Under the bankrupt law of 1841 [5 Stat. 440], the right of the landlord to distrain, in those states where such right existed, was not lost. Under the second section of that law, “all liens valid by the laws of the states respectively, and not inconsistent with the provisions” of that law.were preserved; and in Peck v. Jenness. 7 How. [48 U. S.] 612. it was decided that an attachment on mesne process, levied upon property, and valid by the law of the state where it was issued, was one of the liens preserved by the second section of the law, notwithstanding the property might be held simply upon mesne process.

The twentieth section of the bankrupt law of ISO" declares that “when a creditor has a mortgage or pledge of real or personal property of the bankrupt, or a lien thereon for securing the payment of a debt owing to him from the bankrupt, he shall be admitted asa creditor only for the balance of the debt.”

The question is whether the lien of a landlord for rent is such a security as binds the property as against the assignee of the bankrupt and against the rights of the other creditors. To prevent some of the difficulties which sprung up under the administration of ■ the law of 1841. the fourteenth section of the bankrupt law of 18G7 declares that the assignment in bankruptcy shall relate back to the commencement of the proceedings, (the filing of the petition,) and by operation of law thereupon the title to all such property and estate, both real and personal, shall vest in the assignee, notwithstanding the same is then attached on mesne process as the property of the debtor, and it shall dissolve any such attachment made within four months next preceding the commencement of the proceedings. Another clause of this same section declares, “that no mortgage of any vessel or of any other goods or chattels, made as security for any debt or debts, in good faith, and for present considerations, and otherwise valid, and duly recorded pursuant to any statute of the United States or of any state,” should be invalidated or affected. It is a little singular that while the bankrupt law of 1807 makes this declaration as to the effect of mesne process and of certain other securities upon property, it is silent as to the effect of the law upon final process; and the inference has been that while it cut off those attachments levied oh property under mesne process, it did not necessarily interfere with the right of a particular creditor upon final process; and, therefore, where under the law of a state, a fi. fa. issued on a judgment was a lien on the property from the time of its delivery to the sheriff, such lien would be good, provided the judgment was obtained and execution issued in good faith and not in fraud of the bankrupt law.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 F. Cas. 1159, 2 Biss. 235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-joslyn-ilnd-1870.