In re King

3 F. 839, 1880 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 171
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedSeptember 14, 1880
StatusPublished

This text of 3 F. 839 (In re King) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re King, 3 F. 839, 1880 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 171 (S.D.N.Y. 1880).

Opinion

Choate, D. J.

In these cases in bankruptcy, under the bankrupt law of 1841, applications have been made to set aside and declare null and void certain deeds made or claimed to have been made by Mr. Waddell, the official assignee, under orders of the court entered in the years 1858, 1859, and 1862, authorizing him to sell at private sale certain alleged interests vested in him as such assignee in certain real estate in the city of Chicago.

The ground on which the vacating of the deeds is sought by the petitioners, the executors of one Ogden, is that long prior to the date thereof their testator was in the actual possession of the real estate in question, claiming title thereto as assignee or grantee of the interest, whatever it was, that had belonged to the bankrupts, and that the deeds now in question were not deeds for any valuable consideration, but that they were in fact gifts, so far as the estates of the bankrupts are concerned, which the court neither authorized nor had any power to authorize; that if not mere gifts the deeds were void, because the interest of the bankrupts had been previously sold and disposed of under prior orders of the court, and that the deeds were procured by false and fraudulent representations of matters of fact, whereby the court was deceived and misled into making the orders under which the deeds purport to have been given, and by which alone the giving of them can bo justified.

The respondent, Chapman, who claims to be the bona fide purchaser for value of the titles made under these deeds, and who alone appears to object to the prayer of the petition, has commenced a suit based in whole or in part on these deeds, or some of them, against said Ogden, which is still pending against the petitioners as his executors, in which suit said Chapman claims an accounting for the rents and profits of that interest in the said lands formerly of the bankrupts, and alleged to be held by said Ogden as trustee for said Chapman, said Chapman’s interest as cestui que trust being derived through said assignee’s deeds.

1. I think it is clear that the petitioners, though not parties to the bankruptcy proceedings, have such an interest in the [842]*842matter that they can maintain this petition. They do not appear as mere strangers or amici curies, suggesting an unlawful or erroneous act or proceeding on the part of the court or its officer, and asking to have it vacated on grounds of public policy, but they appear as parties whose rights are injuriously affected by the act of the officer of the court, alleged to he illegal, inadvertent, or done with a fraudulent and misehievious purpose as to them. I think the court has power to relieve them if they make out their case. The power was exercised in a case similar to the present, in the Matter of Conant, Bankrupt, (unreported,) and Judge Betts granted the relief here asked to a party occupying a position somewhat similar to that of these petitioners.

2. Nor do I find anything in the act repealing the bankrupt law of 1841 which precludes the court from entertaining this petition. The act contains the proviso that it “shall not affect any case or proceeding commenced before the passage of this act, or any pains, penalties, or forfeitures incurred under the said act; but every such proceeding may be continued to its final consummation in like manner as if this act had not been passed.” It is urged that after the discharge of the bankrupt, and the final disposition and distribution of his estate, the proceeding has reached its final consummation, and the power of the court to pass any order in the case is taken away by this proviso. I think, however, that this proviso clearly preserves in full force all the power and authority which, under the bankrupt law of 1841, this court had to act in any case commenced before the passage of the repealing act. Full force is to he given to all the language used, and the first clause distinctly provides that the repeal shall not affect any pending case; and the last clause, giving express authority to continue to final consummation all such cases, though perhaps unnecessary, was not designed to he restrictive of the prior clause. Nor, in a large and proper sense, is a case carried to its final consummation so long as there remains any order, decree, or action for the court, in the proper and usual exercise of its jurisdiction in like cases, to enter or to take, or any redress or relief to be given to any [843]*843party or person properly applying to the court therefor in tho case.

3. It is claimed on behalf of the respondent, Chapman, that, although the legal estate in the lands in question became vested in Mr. Ogden, and although, from a period long prior to these deeds, he claimed to hold to his own use the beneficial or equitable interest which had formerly belonged to the bankrupts, that, as to the interest of the bankrupt Hyde, he, Chapman, is in fact the assignee of that interest by another and independent title, anterior and superior to that under which Ogden claimed to have obtained the same interest as the assignee of Hyde, and that tho circumstances under which Ogden acquired the legal title to Hydo’s share were such as in law and equity made him a trustee for the assignee of this beneficial interest of Hyde. Hence it is argued that, as Ogden was a trustee for Hyde’s assignee, and as Chapman is Hyde’s assignee, Ogden and his representatives cannot raise this question with Chapman; that, Ogden being Chapman’s trustee, he and his representatives cannot attack his title;, that they are bound, in all things, to protect and defend the title and interest of Chapman in tho lands to which the trust relates. But the argument is fallacious, and the point wholly irrelevant to the present inquiry. Whatever title Chapman may have to Hyde’s interest, acquired before and independently of these deeds, cannot be affected or impaired by the vacating of the deeds; and, as to any such title, Ogden’s attack on these deeds is in no sense a violation of any relation or duty of trust which may exist in reference to such earlier title. In respect to the tiilo claimed by Chapman to have been created in him under these deeds themselves, no relation of trustee and cestui que trust can possibly arise between the parties if the deeds are void, or were acquired by a fraud, to which, as alleged in the petition, Chapman was a party. Ho party can claim the benefits and protection due to a cestui que trust, who has acquired the apparent interest of a cestui que trust by means of a fraud practiced upon or against the rights of the alleged trustee. Such a claim would be too absurd for discussion. I have, therefore, treated as [844]*844wholly irrelevant the testimony relating to the existence and effect of the disputed assignment by Simeon Hyde to McNulty and Chapman, under which Chapman derives his alleged earlier and independent equitable interest as Hyde’s assignee. It has nothing to do with, and cannot affect, the questions involved in these applications, which are simply of the validity and Iona fides of the deeds in question, and Chapman’s complicity in the fraud, if they are void for fraud, and of the petitioners’ alleged laches in making the applications to set them aside, which, it is claimed by the respondent, should now preclude them from the relief asked for. We come, therefore, to the consideration of those questions.

The deeds in question made by Waddell, as assignee in bankruptcy of Henry King, are five in number, as follows: (1) A deed to Gordon L.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 F. 839, 1880 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-king-nysd-1880.