In re Toggery, Inc.
This text of 60 F.2d 311 (In re Toggery, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
This is a proceeding by the trustee in bankruptcy of this estate to review an order of the referee in bankruptcy in the matter of the claim of Kokernot-Nixon Properties Inc. (referred to for convenience as landlord), the owner of the storehouse or building in which was located the store of bankrupt at the time of, and for several [312]*312years previous to, the filing, on March 28, 1932, of the petition in bankruptcy. The particular matter sought to he reviewed is the holding by the referee that the landlord has a lien on bankrupt’s stock of goods, located in such storehouse, securing $3,150 owing as the rent of such, storehouse for the year ending March 31, 1932. The trustee does not dispute that the rent is owing, nor that the landlord has- a lien for the last six months of such year, but denies that it has a lien for the first six months of sueh year.
The decision depends upon the construction of article 5238 of the Texas Revised Civil Statutes of 1925,1 the italicized portion of which, added by the Act of 1919, p. 170 is material. The landlord claims both a contract lien given it in paragraph 92 of the lease between landlord and bankrupt and the statutory lien provided for in article 5238.
1. If there be no creditors sueh as are mentioned in article 5238, so circumstanced as to be entitled to complain, the landlord’s lien created by the parties themselves in their lease is unassailable. Gunst v. Dallas Trust & Savings Bank (Tex. Civ. App.) 8 S.W.(2d) 807.
2. If there be creditors such as are mentioned in article 5238, and so circumstanced as to he entitled to complain, the provisions-of article 5238 must be read into the lease,, and landlord is' required, in order to have a lien for the first six months of the year, to file with the county clerk of the proper county the statement required by article-5238. The time for filing sueh statement is-not limited by article 5238. In re McLaughlin (D. C.) 10 F.(2d) 810. But, if at the-time of filing such statement, and thereby-securing the lien, there were “Unsecured' Creditors” of the bankrupt, sueh as are mentioned in article 5238, the claims of such-“Unsecured Creditors” are by such article-made superior to the lien of landlord so-fixed.
3. The word “Creditors” in many of theTéxas statutes governing liens, the creation-of liens, and the registration and/or recording of liens, has been construed by the courts-to mean creditors who have a lien by contract, or . have acquired a lien by some process of law. See article 5490, Texas Revised Civil Statutes 1928 (Vernon’s Ann. Civ. St. art. 5490). Also Alsbury v. Alsbury (Tex. Civ. App.) 211 S. W. 652, and eases there-cited, as illustrative of such statutes and construction given them by the courts.
Having in mind apparently such statutes, and the construction given them, the Legislature, in enacting article 5238, clearly used the words “Unsecured Creditors” in the sense that such words are generally used and understood; i. e., creditors who have-no liens of any kind, in other words, general creditors. The referee’s certificate-shows claims of “Unsecured, Creditors,” or general creditors, or creditors who have no liens, against- the bankrupt estate, aggregating approximately $12,000. Since the petition in bankruptcy was filed March 28, 1932, sueh claims necessarily existed and were owing on and before such date.
4. Passing now to the question of the landlord’s lien, and the securing- thereof under - [313]*313article 5238. The referee’s certificate and papers accompanying same show that landlord duly filed its statement with the proper county clerk on March 25, 1932, and that it was recorded March 28, 1932, at 4 p. m.
But it said that the county clerk’s certificate to such statement shows it to have been recorded in the “Mechanic Lien Record.” An examination of such certificate discloses that it is certified that the statement was recorded in the “M. L. Reeord.” In deference to the referee’s findings, it will be assumed that this was the mechanic lien record. The wording of the article is that such statement shall he recorded by the clerk “in a booh to be provided for such purpose,” and, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, it will be presumed that the clerk performed his duty by recording same in the mechanic lien record.
The matter of the index required by the article is also pressed. "Whether the clerk did or did not keep an alphabetical index such as is mentioned in the article is not made material by such article in determining whether landlord secured its lien. The securing of the lien is not made dependent upon the index.
The securing of the lien under the article is made dependent, however, upon such statement being “verified, filed and recorded,” and therefore landlord’s lien did not become secured under such article until the statement was recorded March 28,1932, at 4 p. m. And it did not become secured then, or at all, if the petition in bankruptcy, which is marked filed March 28,1932, but the hour not given, was in fact filed prior to 4 p. m. of that date.
5. Since the indebtedness of bankrupt to such unsecured creditors existed, as stated, on and before March 28, 1932, at 4 p. in., their rights are superior to bankrupt's lien (if a lien there be) for the first six months of the year, and the referee was in error in holding otherwise.
As to distribution among unsecured creditors themselves, see Moore v. Bay, 284 U. S. 4, 52 S. Ct. 3, 76 L. Ed. 133.
It is not necessary to discuss other questions raised. That part of the order of Ihe referee holding that the landlord has a lien for the. first six months’ rent is reversed and matter sent back to referee for proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion. Such order is in other respects affirmed.
Let a decree be drawn and presented accordingly.
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60 F.2d 311, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-toggery-inc-txsd-1932.