In re Wynne

30 F. Cas. 752, 4 Nat. Bank. Reg. 23
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Virginia
DecidedMay 15, 1868
DocketCase No. 18,118
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 30 F. Cas. 752 (In re Wynne) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Wynne, 30 F. Cas. 752, 4 Nat. Bank. Reg. 23 (circtdva 1868).

Opinion

CHASE, Circuit Justice.

The question in ■this case arises upon a petition of John Johns, Jr., assignee of Charles H. Wynne, an involuntary bankrupt, who asks for instructions as to the order of payment of claims against the bankrupt estate. Wynne was adjudicated a bankrupt on the petition of Wheelwright, Mudge & Co., filed in the district court of the United States for the district of Virginia on June 8, 1867. En-ders, Paine & Williams claimed to be preferred in payment under a deed of trust dated August, 1866, which was never recorded; or if that claim be disallowed, then under a deed of trust dated December 8, 1866, recorded March 2,1867.

Haxall & Co. also insist on preference upon the ground that Wynne was tenant under them of the warehouse which he occupied, and that under the law of Virginia, they as landlords had a lien for the rent due at the date of the petition; to enforce which on June 10, 1867, they sued out a distress warrant for two thousand one hundred and twenty dollars, the amount of rent then due, and caused the same to be levied on the goods then on the premises, and subsequently, on July 18, 1867,-sued out an attachment, which was levied the same day upon the same goods, for one thousand five hundred dollars, the amount of rent to become due on December 1, 1867. We will consider the claim to preference on payment advanced on behalf of Enders, Paine & Williams, and we must say at once that so far as this claim is founded on the deed of August, 1860, it can not be admitted. It is doubtless true that a mortgage or other conveyance made as security for a debt evinced by a note or bond will operate as security for the same continuing debt, though the evidence of it be changed by renewal or otherwise. [Farmers’ Bank v. Mutual Ins. Soe., 4 Leigh, 69.] Winsor v. MeLellan [Case No. 17,887].2 But in this case it is the security itself which has been changed, and not the evidence of the debt. The deed of December 8, 1866, was executed, as it seems, in substitution for that of August, which thereupon ceased to have any validity or effect.

The only question now to be determined is, therefore, whether or not the deed of December created a lien upon the property described in it. which the assignee of the bankrupt must satisfy before applying any of its proceeds to the claims of the general creditors. And it is to be observed that the deed is not condemned by the thirty-fifth section of the bankrupt act, which avoids all assignments and other modes of preference made or attempted by insolvents, or persons in contemplation of insolvency, [760]*760within four months before the filing of the petition in bankruptcy, or in case the person to be benefited has notice of the intent within six months before such filing. The deed, in question was not made within either limit of time. It need not, therefore, be here considered whether either period could begin to run till after the passage of the act If the deed is to be treated as void or inoperative as against the assignee by operation of the act, it must be because of effect of that clause of the fourteenth section, which provides that “all the property conveyed by the bankrupt in fraud of his creditors,” "shall in virtue of the adjudication of bankruptcy and the appointment of the assignee be at once vested in such assignee.” We do not doubt that the assignee takes the property in the same plight in which it was held by the bankrupt when his petition was filed ([Winsor v. McLellan, supra];2 Bradshaw v. Klein [Case No. 1,790]), subject to such liens or incumbrances as would affect it if no adjudication in bankruptcy had taken place; but it is to be remembered that the assignee represents the rights of creditors as well as the right of the bankrupt, and that any lien or incumbrance which would be void for fraud as against creditors, if no petition had been filed or assignee appointed, will be equally void as against the general creditors represented by the assignee. In re Richardson [Id. 11,777]; Carr v. Hilton, 1 Curt. 230 [Case No. 2,436].

This is what the act means when it vests in the assignee, “all property conveyed in fraud of creditors.” It does not make any conveyance or incumbrance fraudulent. It simply clothes the assignee with the entire title, notwithstanding such conveyance or incumbrance, and makes it his duty to invoke the proper jurisdiction to annul the fraudulent proceedings. And it may be remarked further that, except to this extent, the bankrupt act has no influence upon this case, so far as the deed of trust is concerned.

Much was said in argument concerning the effect of the record of this deed upon March 2. 1867; and it was strenuously urged that the deed was avoided by the effect of the act which purports to have been approved on that day. But we entirely concur with Mr. Justice Story, in thinking that where the question is as to effect of a proceeding instituted on the same day on which an act affecting the validity of such proceeding was passed, the precise time at which the act became a law may be properly inquired into.' See Winsor v. Kendall [Case No. 17,SS6]. And in this we think ourselves warranted also by the reasoning of the supreme court. Gardner v. Collector, 6 Wall. [73 U. S.] 511.

Now, it is in proof that the deed of trust was recorded about 4 p. m. March 2, 1867; and it appears from the senate journal of the session during which the act was passed that the day denominated March 2, in the journal, and in the approval of the statute by the president, consisted in fact of Saturday, March 2, of Sunday the third, and of Monday the fourth, until noon; and it appears further that the bill which afterwards became the bankrupt law was not enrolled and delivered to the proper committee, to be presented to the president for his signature, until after the recess, which ended at 7.30, p. m. on Sunday, and was not reported to the senate as actually signed by the president until after 9.40, a. in. on Monday. Senate Journal, 2d Sess. 39 Cong. 1866-67, pp. 432, 458; Rev. Code, 1860, p. 560, § 5. It can not be doubted, then, that the deed of trust was in fact recorded nearly two days before the bankrupt bill became a law; and we think ourselves not only warranted, on general principles, but bound by the constitution, to notice the fact thus appearing upon the public records. It may well be questioned, indeed, whether, if the act had been approved before the recording of the deed, the effect of the latter would have been altered. Nothing in the thirty-fifth section touches the deed; and nothing in any other except the fourteenth. It may be, and we think it is, true that if the deed had remained unrecorded when the petition in bankruptcy was filed the title of the assignee would have prevailed against any claim under the deed, for the assignee represents the creditors, and the statute of Virginia expressly declares “any deed of trust void as to creditors,” until and except from the time it is duly admitted to record. It is not an unreasonable construction of the bankrupt act, as we think, which regards it as vesting in the assignee, for the benefit of creditors in general, the estate of the bankrupt, discharged of liens or trusts which at the time of the petition are valid inter partes under the statute of the state in which they are claimed to exist. But we do not see how the mere enactment of the law could affect a deed previously executed.

It is not, however, necessary to consider these points here. The important question in the case is whether under the fourteenth section of the bankrupt act this deed must be regarded as inoperative against the assignee.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 F. Cas. 752, 4 Nat. Bank. Reg. 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-wynne-circtdva-1868.