Larson v. First State Bank

21 F.2d 936, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2796
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedOctober 5, 1927
Docket7785
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 21 F.2d 936 (Larson v. First State Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Larson v. First State Bank, 21 F.2d 936, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2796 (8th Cir. 1927).

Opinion

WALTER II. SANBORN, Circuit Judge.

On November 21, 1923, James G. Eggen was adjudicated a bankrupt on his voluntary petition. Within four months before he filed his petition in bankruptcy he owed the First State Bank of Vienna, S. D., $22,488.60, evidenced by his promissory notes, upon which a suit was pending against him by the bank, and he settled the litigation concerning that debt on October 1, 1923, and conveyed to the bank in payment thereof a largo amount of his real estate. Thenceforth the State Bank of Vienna was in charge of the superintendent of banks of the state of South Dakota and other officers of that state, who conducted its affairs and managed its business, and their acts were in legal effect the acts or failures to act of the bank, and will be so called.

On February 26, 1926, the bank filed its verified claim as an unsecured creditor of Mr. Eggen for the $22,488.60 originally evidenced by his promissory notes. To the filing and allowance of this elaim John Larson and Mel-ham Bros. Lumber Company, two of his general creditors, whose claims had been proved and allowed, objected on the ground that the elaim of the bank to file its claim as an unsecured creditor, and to share as such in the proceeds of the property of the bankrupt, was barred by limitation by reason of section 57n of the Bankruptcy Act of 1898 (11 USCA § 93), because Eggen was adjudicated a bankrupt on November 21, 1923, and that section limited the time for such filing to one year after the adjudication. The referee overruled the objections of the two objecting creditors on May 19, 1926, and allowed and ordered the bank’s elaim to be paid as that of the claim of the bank as an unsecured creditor. The objecting creditors prayed the court below for a review of this order and decree. The District Court granted the review, but affirmed the allowance of the elaim, and its payment as an unsecured claim, and the objecting creditors appealed to this court.

The question they present is: Was the bank estopped from obtaining the allowance and payment of its claim as an unsecured creditor by the fact that it did not file its formal proof of that claim until February 26, 1926, two years and two months after the adjudication in bankruptcy? But the actual, the decisive, question in this case is: Were not the objecting creditors and their representative, the trustee in bankruptcy, estopped by their inaction and action in the time between the adjudication in November, 1923, and their filing on or about February 26, 1926, of their objections to the proof and allowance of the elaim of the bank as a general creditor?

Eggen, within four months before he filed his petition in bankruptcy, settled his pending litigation in the state courts of South Dakota over his indebtedness of $22,488.60 by conveying and delivering possession of a large amount of his valuable real property to the bank in payment of or as security for the payment of that debt. The record contains no proof or evidence that the trustee in bankruptcy, who represented all the creditors, including the two objecting creditors here, gave any notice to the bank, or made any claim to the bank or others, that any of them claimed that the settlement of the litigation between the bank and Eggen constituted a voidable preference until many months after the year subsequent to the adjudication prescribed by section 57n as a limitation of the time for the bank to file its claim as an unsecured creditor. About September, 1925, for the first time the trustee in bankruptcy demanded of the bank $1,100, which at some time in 1925 it had collected in payment of the rent for the year 1924 on *938 some of the real estate which it had received from Eggen in settlement of their litigation. The bank refused to pay over this sum. The trustee applied to the referee in bankruptcy for an order that the bank pay this money over to the trustee, on the ground that the settlement of the litigation constituted a voidable preference. The bank opposed this application, there was evidently a full hearing and careful consideration of the issue presented, and then an adjudication by the referee of the issues presented, for his order and decree, made and recorded on October 23, 1925, was that Eggen owed the bank $22,488.60 for which proofs of claim had not been filed, that the $1,100 in controversy was derived by the bank from the rent of the property which' Eggen conveyed to the bank in settlement of that debt, that the bank should pay over to the trustee this $1,100, and that the said claims of the First State Bank of Yienna in the sum of $22,488.60 “be filed and allowed as general claims against the said estate, and be allowed to participate in any dividends 'that may be declared.” This order and decree proved to be the final order and decree adjudicating the rights of the trustee and the creditors and the bank in this litigation. None of the parties to the litigation sought, by petition for review or appeal or other proceeding, to reverse or modify it.

A court of bankruptcy is a court of equity, and its judicial officers, its judge and its referee in bankruptcy, in deciding and adjudging the rights and duties of parties entitled to their decision, are governed by the principles and rules of equity jurisprudence. This order and decree remained unchanged by any direct proceeding, and estopped these objecting creditors from reversing or modifying it by their subsequent objections to the .formal proof of the amount owing the bank by "the bankrupt.

The trustee was the legal representative of these objecting creditors and also of the other unsecured creditors in this proceeding instituted by him in their behalf against the bank to prove this voidable preference, and all the parties to that order and decree were bound by its terms. These objecting creditors, whom he represented in his prosecution of the claim of the creditors that the settlement of October 1, 1923, was á voidable preference, were estopped equally with the trustee, their representative, from subsequently questioning the terms of that decree. Pursuant to that order and decree the trustee obtained and still retains the $1,100, which that decree required the bank to pay over to the trustee, and he and these objecting creditors are equally estopped by accepting the benefits of that decree from avoiding the burdens it east upon them.

Even if the bank had been barred by the limitation of the time for filing its claim as an unsecured creditor by section 57n to one year, the referee had plenary jurisdiction, and it was his duty as a chancellor to make his order and decree of October 23, 1925. The bank did not commence the proceeding which resulted in that order. It was instituted by the trustee as the representative of the general creditors. Established principles and rules of practice in equity are that he who seeks equity may be required to do equity, and that a chancellor or a court of equity may condition the grant of equitable relief to the complainant or the moving party with the enforcement of a defendant’s opposing equities, although those equities are barred by limitation to such an extent that they may not be enforced by an original suit or proceeding by the latter. Farmers’ Loan & Trust Co. v. Denver, L. & G. Co. (C. C. A.) 126 F. 46, 51; Bumes v. Bumes (C. C. A.) 137 F. 781, 791; Lynch v. Burt (C. C. A.) 132 F. 417, 432; Union Central Life Ins. Co. v. Drake (C. C. A.) 214 F. 536, 548.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 F.2d 936, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2796, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/larson-v-first-state-bank-ca8-1927.