In Re Moore

11 F.2d 62
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 12, 1926
Docket2390, 2403
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 11 F.2d 62 (In Re Moore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Moore, 11 F.2d 62 (4th Cir. 1926).

Opinion

11 F.2d 62 (1926)

In re MOORE.
MULLEN
v.
WARNER (two cases).

Nos. 2390, 2403.

Circuit Court of Appeals, Fourth Circuit.

January 12, 1926.

Walter H. Buck and James Morfit Mullen, both of Baltimore, Md., for petitioner and appellant.

Edward Duffy, of Baltimore, Md., for respondent and appellee.

Before WADDILL, ROSE, and PARKER, Circuit Judges.

PARKER, Circuit Judge.

On December 6, 1923, one William H. Moore of Baltimore, Md., was duly adjudged a bankrupt, and thereafter in due course appellant, Mullen, was elected trustee in bankruptcy of his estate. On October 6, 1921, more than two years prior to the adjudication, the bankrupt conveyed a lot of ground and improvements thereon in the city of Baltimore to one Knapp, admittedly a "straw man," who immediately reconveyed the property to Moore and his wife so as to vest them with an estate by the entireties, which under the law of Maryland is not subject to sale under execution against the husband. At the time this was done Moore was insolvent, and was indebted to Miss Martha Warner, the appellee, in a sum exceeding $15,000. He owed other debts aggregating approximately $8,500. On September 26, 1923, within four months prior to the adjudication of bankruptcy, Miss Warner recovered judgment against Moore for the full amount of her claim, and straightway filed a bill in equity in circuit court No. 2 of Baltimore city to set aside the two conveyances by means of which the estate by the entireties had been created. While the suit was pending, Moore was adjudged bankrupt, and the trustee in bankruptcy was ordered to intervene in the suit and to "prosecute to the fullest extent the rights of said trustee in bankruptcy in and to the property involved in said equity suit." The trustee thereupon petitioned and was allowed to intervene in the suit in the state court as a party plaintiff, and on March 3, 1924, a consent decree was entered in that cause reciting that Moore admitted his inability to prove his solvency as of October 6, 1921, decreeing that the conveyances be set aside and directing that Moore and wife convey to the trustee in bankruptcy all of their *63 right, title, and interest in the property, but expressly reserving for future determination the question as to the priority claimed by the creditors whose claims were existent at the time of the making of the conveyances.

The trustee in bankruptcy sold the property for $5,759.88; and Miss Warner filed her petition in the bankruptcy court praying that she and the other antecedent creditors be allowed the whole of the fund realized to the exclusion of the subsequent creditors whose claims amounted to approximately $18,000. The District Court entered a decree in accordance with the prayer of this petition excluding subsequent creditors from participation in the fund, and from this decree the trustee in bankruptcy appealed, filing also a petition to superintend and revise.

It is admitted that under the Maryland law a voluntary conveyance by an insolvent is fraudulent in law as to antecedent creditors. Christopher v. Christopher, 3 A. 296, 64 Md. 587, 588. But as to subsequent creditors it is not void unless shown to be fraudulent in fact. Matthai v. Heather, 57 Md. 489; Turner v. Hudson, 104 A. 455, 133 Md. 144; Diggs v. McCulloh, 16 A. 453, 69 Md. 609. It is also admitted that under the Maryland law where a conveyance is set aside as being fraudulent only as against antecedent creditors, subsequent creditors do not participate in the fund realized. Williams v. Banks, 11 Md. 98. The question which is presented by this appeal, therefore, is whether a trustee in bankruptcy who has set aside a conveyance which, in the absence of bankruptcy, could have been avoided only by creditors whose claims were in existence at the time of the conveyance, holds the fund realized for the sole benefit of such antecedent creditors or for the benefit of creditors generally to be distributed under the general provisions of the Bankruptcy Act (Comp. St. §§ 9585-9656).

The contention of the petitioner is that since, in the absence of bankruptcy, only antecedent creditors could have avoided the conveyance, and since because of the intervention of bankruptcy the trustee was substituted for such creditors to secure rights which would have inured to their benefit alone, the recovery by the trustee should be held to be for their exclusive benefit and that subsequent creditors, who could not have set aside the conveyance, should not be allowed to participate in the recovery. While there is much that is plausible in this contention, it is not supported by the provisions of the Bankruptcy Act. Undoubtedly the right of the trustee to set aside the conveyance existed because of the right of antecedent creditors to avoid same; but this right was derived from section 70e of the Bankruptcy Act (Comp. St. § 9654), which provides that the trustee may avoid any transfer by the bankrupt of his property which any creditor of the bankrupt might have avoided and may recover the property so transferred, but makes no provision for the holding of the property recovered by the avoidance of such transfer for any particular creditor or class of creditors. To hold that the recovery by the trustee in such a case should go to the antecedent creditors alone, instead of being held for distribution under the general provisions of the act, would be to read into the statute a provision which Congress has not enacted, and one which we think is at variance with the spirit of the statute as embodied in its other provisions.

The Bankruptcy Act contemplates an equal division among the bankrupt's creditors with no preferences except those specially designated in the statute. It is accordingly provided by section 67b (being section 9651, Comp. St.) that whenever a creditor is prevented by the bankruptcy from enforcing his rights as against a lien created by his debtor, the trustee shall be subrogated to and enforce the right of such creditor for the benefit of the estate. Can it be that when the trustee avoids a lien through subrogation to the right of a creditor he does so for the benefit of the estate, but when he avoids a fraudulent conveyance, he does so for the exclusive benefit of such creditor? We think not. Such a distinction would certainly seem to be repugnant to the presumed intention of the act, and we think that it is repugnant also to its express provisions. It is true that the words "for the benefit of the estate" were not added to section 70e as they were to 67b, but the addition of these words was not necessary. The power vested in the trustee by section 70e is the power not only to avoid the fraudulent conveyance but to recover the property conveyed. In the absence of contrary provision, this recovery would be presumed to be for the benefit of the estate. But the matter is not left to presumption, for section 70a expressly vests the trustee with property transferred by the bankrupt in fraud of creditors. The antecedent creditors have no lien upon the property or the fund realized from it, their right in the absence of bankruptcy being merely the right to set aside the fraudulent conveyance and subject the property to levy under execution. The Bankruptcy Act gives them no preference. Consequently the recovery by the trustee *64 is held for distribution in accordance with section 65 of the act (Comp. St.

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

Related

Coleman v. Community Trust Bank (In Re Coleman)
285 B.R. 892 (W.D. Virginia, 2002)
Friedman v. Sterling Refrigerator Co.
104 F.2d 837 (Fourth Circuit, 1939)
Herzig v. Commercial State Bank
91 F.2d 646 (Tenth Circuit, 1937)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 F.2d 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-moore-ca4-1926.