In re Tifft

23 F. Cas. 1213, 19 Nat. Bank. Reg. 201, 1879 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 61
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMay 2, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 23 F. Cas. 1213 (In re Tifft) 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 Tifft, 23 F. Cas. 1213, 19 Nat. Bank. Reg. 201, 1879 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 61 (S.D.N.Y. 1879).

Opinion

CHOATE, District Judge.

This is a petition of Alanson H. Tifft, who has filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy in the Eastern district of New York, asking an injunction against the sheriff of the county of New York to restrain the sale on execution of certain property of the bankrupt on which the sheriff has made a levy, and for other relief. The petition in bankruptcy was filed February 11, 1878. On the same day the debtor filed a petition in composition, and thereupon a meeting of creditors was called, in pursuance of the statute, to consider the same. The composition proposed was 33% per cent, for which notes were to be given, payable in six, nine, twelve, fifteen, and eighteen months. The proposed composition was duly accepted by the creditors, and was confirmed by the court, and ordered to be recorded May 21, 1878. Among the creditors whose names and addresses and the amount of whose debt were mentioned in the schedule produced at said meeting was the Iron Clad Manufacturing Company, a corporation organized under the laws of New York, and having its principle office or place of business in the city of Brooklyn, in the Eastern district of New York. The petitioner was adjudicated a bankrupt April 18, 1878. No assignee has' been appointed. On the 10th of April, 187S. the Iron Clad Manufacturing Company commenced an action in the marine court of the city of New York against the bankrupt, procured a warrant of attachment therein, and under the warrant the sheriff of the county of New York attached certain goods of the bankrupt in the store at which he transacted his business. On the 18th of April the corporation recovered judgment in said action for eight hundred and seventeen dollars and ninety-three cents. An execu[1214]*1214tion was on the same day issued thereon, and the sheriff made a levy on the same goods. No- sale has yet been made under the execution. The relief asked in the petition is that the corporation and the sheriff be enjoined from enforcing the execution or judgment, or from removing, disposing of, or in any manner interfering with the property so levied on, or any other property belonging to the said petitioner, until the question of his composition or discharge shall be lawfully determined, and until the further order of this court, and for such-other or further order or relief as the court shall deem equitable or proper. It appears by affidavit put in by respondent that the corporation violated no injunction of the bankrupt court in entering its judgment and issuing execution, and making its levy thereunder, and that the levy was made Before the order of adjudication was entered on the 18th day of April.

■I think it must be regarded now as settled by authority that the district courts of the United States can exercise the jurisdiction conferred upon them by the law, not only in the district where the original petition is filed, but in any district, when the exercise of such jurisdiction is essential to the complete and full execution of the bankrupt law, of 1867 [14 Stat. 517], and when the power of the court in which- the original petition is filed fails because the persons or property against whom the relief to which a party is entitled is sought are beyond the limits of the district, and so cannot be reached by its process. While the particular applications of this principle have generally been on proceedings to collect or receive assets, yet the reasoning of the court is not limited to that single matter, but .extends to all other proper relief. The theory of the decisions is that congress intended to provide ample machinery for the administration of the law throughout the United States. Sherman v. Bingham [Case No. 12,762]; Lathrop v. Drake, 91 U. S. 516. See. also, M’Gehee v. Hentz [Case No. 8,794]. When, therefore, by an amendment of the bankrupt law, the provisions relative to composition were adopted, the same power and jurisdiction of the district courts throughout the United States attached to these new proceedings; for they are in every sense proceedings in bankruptcy as truly as the proceedings theretofore allowed and prescribed by the bankrupt law. This court may, therefore, in the exercise of this ancillary jurisdiction, and in aid of the district court of the Eastern district, as to persons and property within this district, grant injunctions, stay proceedings, enforce the provisions of composition resolutions, or administer other summary relief as a court of bankruptcy in a ease pending in the Eastern district, if the relief sought is such as that court would grant if the persons or property to be effected were within the reach of the process of that court; provided, of course, that court is disabled from giving the same relief by reason of the persons or property not being subject to its process.

The questions therefore to be determined are whether the bankrupt would be entitled to the relief sought If the persons and property against which it is sought were in the Eastern district, and whether the district court in the Eastern district is unable to reach the same effectually by its own process.

As regards all relief sought against the creditor, the Iron Clad Manufacturing Company, the prayer of the petitioner must be denied, because upon the petition it appears that this corporation has its principal place of business in the Eastern district, and, in the absence of any averment or proof to the contrary, it must be presumed that the proper officers through whom the coercive power of the court must be exercised are within the reach of its process. •

■ It is, I think, beyond dispute that, on the admitted facts in this case, the Iron Clad Manufacturing Company is bound by the composition, and that it did not, and could not, by the alleged attachment and levy on the bankrupt’s property, obtain any lien thereon. The statute declares that “the provisions of a composition accepted by such resolution in pursuance of this section shall be binding on all the creditors whose names and addresses and the amount of the debts due to whom are shown in the statement of the debtor produced at the meeting at which the resolution shall have been passed, but shall not affect or prejudice the rights of any other creditors.” The same section provides “that, in all cases in bankruptcy now pending by or against any person, whether an adjudication in bankruptcy shall have been had or not, the creditors of such alleged bankrupt may, at a meeting, etc., resolve that a composition proposed by the debtor shall be accepted in satisfaction of the debts due to them from the debtor”; and further, that the value of the debts of secured creditors above the amount of such security, to be determined by the court, shall, as nearly as circumstances admit, be estimated in the same way, and creditors whose debts are fully secured shall not be entitled to vote upon or to sign such resolution without first relinquishing such security for the benefit of the estate.

It seems to me- too plain for argument that the creditors referred to as those who may meet and accept the -composition are the same class of persons who in the bankrupt law are designated as the creditors who have the right to prove their debts and share in the estate of the bankrupt if administered through an assignee under the direction of the bankrupt court, — namely, those who are creditors at the time of the filing of the petition in bankruptcy, — and that the secured creditors here referred to are creditors who at [1215]

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Bluebook (online)
23 F. Cas. 1213, 19 Nat. Bank. Reg. 201, 1879 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-tifft-nysd-1879.