In re Leeds Woolen Mills

129 F. 922, 1904 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 321
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Tennessee
DecidedApril 22, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 129 F. 922 (In re Leeds Woolen Mills) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Leeds Woolen Mills, 129 F. 922, 1904 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 321 (W.D. Tenn. 1904).

Opinion

HAMMOND, J.

This petition of the trustee against Hines for the recovery of about $500 worth of goods received by him from the referee in bankruptcy, acting as receiver or custodian of .the property, has been twice on reference before the standing master, and is before the court again upon a second report sustaining the title of the trustee to the goods. Objection is taken again to the jurisdiction of the court, that question having been reserved from the beginning.

Both counsel seem under the misapprehension that it is necessary for the court to decide the question of adverse ownership as one involved in the question of jurisdiction. It is true, we are compelled to look at the facts found in the record relating to the ownership in order to determine whether or not Hines was, at the time of the filing of this petition, subject to the jurisdiction of this court, to entertain it against him; but certainly the jurisdiction of the court does not depend upon the fact of an adverse claim of ownership, and we may have the jurisdiction whether the goods belonged to him as an adverse claimant or not. The very question is whether or not we can entertain the jurisdiction to decide that controversy. The facts pertinent to the element of jurisdiction are that at the time of the bankruptcy the goods in controversy were in the actual manual possession of the bankrupt corporation and passed from it into the manual possession of the referee as custodian, upon the surrender of these and all the other goods to him. In my judgment, the simple fact of this possession by the referee in bankruptcy is conclusive in favor of our jurisdiction. By that possession the goods were in custodia legis — whether rightfully or wrongfully is another question. But that question may be rightfully decided by us. Whether it might also be rightfully decided by any other jurisdiction it is not necessary to determine. The bare possession by the court, through its officer, of the property, was sufficient to give us jurisdiction to determine to whom the goods properly belonged. The case belongs to the category of those controlled by the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in the case of White v. Schloerb, 178 U. S. 542, 20 Sup. Ct. 1007,44 L. Ed. 1183, and not to that of those controlled by the decision of that court in Bardes v. Hawarden Bank, 178 U. S. 524, 20 Sup. Ct. 1000, 44 L. Ed. 1175.

If it be a fact, upon the proof in this record, that the bankrupt held the goods as a bailee of the rightful owner, and yet, through some misapprehension, he surrendered them as his own to the bankruptcy receiver or trustee, or if he mixed them with his own goods and so surrendered them along with his goods, nevertheless, if the bankruptcy receiver or trustee deny title of the rightful owner and claim the property as that of the bankrupt, it is a controversy which this court has the plain jurisdiction to determine; and that jurisdiction cannot be defeated [924]*924■by the delivery or surrender of the possession to the supposed rightful ■owner by the receiver or referee in bankruptcy, whatever may be said upon that point as to such a surrender by the trustee in bankruptcy after his appointment. The referee, as custodian or receiver, or a receiver ad interim, has no title to the goods, and no right or authority to determine any question of title or ownership, and no right to make any surrender of the goods to any claimant, so as to bind the trustee when he is subsequently appointed, or those who are interested in the estate. When the trustee is elected under the statute, he represents the title and ownership of the goods, for the benefit of the estate, and it is not impossible that if he should surrender them to a claimant, even under a misapprehension as to the ownership or validity of the claim, the latter would be such an adverse claimant as would bring the case within the jurisdiction of the case of Bardes v. Hawarden Bank, supra. But this cannot be the effect of a surrender by the referee holding goods under our rule constituting .him the custodian until a trustee is appointed in cases of voluntary bankruptcy, nor by an ad interim receiver otherwise appointed until the trustee is elected. Therefore, when the defendant Hines represented to the referee as the temporary receiver that he was the owner of the goods, and persuaded him to accept his representations and deliver to him the two boxes of woolen stuffs as his own property, he did hot thereby become an adverse claimant in such a sense as that he is entitled to rely upon the rule of Bardes v. Hawarden Bank, supra. On the contrary, he wrongfully took the goods from the possession of the court, whether he was the rightful owner or not, and he can be, by this court, compelled to restore that possession for the purposes of its jurisdiction; and the case stands as if the court had never been deprived of its jurisdiction, and Hines were himself the petitioner, asking to have the goods decreed to him upon the facts of this case. Bailees in possestion of an insolvent’s goods at the time of bankruptcy are not altogether favored claimants, and they must expect such embarrassment as a controversy arising with the trustee about the ownership of the property, and must be willing to submit that controversy to the bankruptcy court, if they permit their property to pass into its possession along with the bankrupt’s own goods. Our bankruptcy statute is not so drastic as the English act, which passed the title to the trustee in bankruptcy of “all goods being, at the commencement of the bankruptcy, in the possession, order or disposition of the bankrupt in his trade or business, by the consent and permission of the true owner, under such circumstances that he is the reputed owner thereof.” Property so situated passed to the trustee and creditors of the bankrupt upon the general ground of equity against one who allows a person to obtain the credit that belongs to reputed ownership acquired by consent of the true owner, so that, if one chooses to leave his property in the hands of an insolvent who becomes bankrupt, he cannot complain if those who give the bankrupt credit upon the possession of the property shall be held to have a better right to it than himself. Act of 1890, § 43; Williams’ Bky. 175. This has long been a principle of English bankruptcy legislation. It has been mitigated somewhat by adjudications that discriminate in favor of the unfortunate true owner, under particular circumstances that show a better equity than the creditors may have under the general [925]*925rule. I call attention to this principle for the purpose of showing that, notwithstanding our bankruptcy act does not go so far as the English act, it does not lie in the mouth of a bailor whose goods are, by his consent, in the possession of an insolvent bailee who becomes bankrupt,, to set up any objections to the jurisdiction of the court of bankruptcy to determine the ownership, if he permits the goods to pass into the possession of the officials, receivers, or trustees of the bankruptcy administration. He, probably, of all claimants, can least expect to have the advantage of being an “adverse claimant” in the sense of Bardesv. Hawarden Bank, supra. Certainly, if he reacquires possession by representations made to the receiver, who has no authority to. deliver such possession nor to determine any question of title, he will not be allowed to take advantage of that recovered possession, although he may, in fact, be the rightful owner.

The case of In re Bender (D. C.) 106 Fed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
129 F. 922, 1904 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-leeds-woolen-mills-tnwd-1904.