Mann v. Flower

25 Minn. 500, 1879 Minn. LEXIS 41
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMarch 7, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 25 Minn. 500 (Mann v. Flower) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mann v. Flower, 25 Minn. 500, 1879 Minn. LEXIS 41 (Mich. 1879).

Opinion

Gileillan, C. J.

Appeal from an order sustaining demurrers to the complaint. The allegations of the complaint, are, in substance, that one Taylor, while doing business as a retail dealer in books, stationery, etc., being largely indebted to divers persons, executed to the defendant Flower a chattel mortgage upon all his stock, to secure a certain debt to him, with the understanding between them that Taylor should retain possession of the property, and sell and dispose of the same as his own, in the ordinary course of his business, without accounting to Flower for the proceeds, or applying them to-the satisfaction of the debt; and that for a time Taylor did,. [503]*503with the knowledge and consent of Flower, conduct his business as before, and sell a portion of the property; and that the mortgage was executed with intent to hinder, delay and defraud Taylor’s creditors. That afterwards, in February, 1875, Taylor made an assignment for the benefit of creditors, to Cornish, who took possession of the property; and, after that, Flower commenced a suit against Cornish in the court below, to enforce his mortgage and recover the property, or proceeds of the property, and such proceedings were had in the action that, by order of the court, the property was sold, and the proceeds brought into court to abide the result of the suit, and so remain. After this, Taylor was, upon his own petition, duly adjudged a bankrupt in the United States district court; and after an assignee had been appointed and removed, the plaintiff was duly appointed assignee in bankruptcy of Taylor, and as such sues for the proceeds of said property so in court, and asks that the same be paid to him. The defendants, Flower by himself, and Thompson and Auerbach by themselves, demurred to the complaint, on the grounds: 1. That the action is not brought within the time prescribed by law. 2. That the court has already adjudicated and determined that the money belongs to one of the parties in the action referred to. 3. That the plaintiff does not show himself entitled to the money. 4. That several causes of action are improperly united. 5. That plaintiff has no legal capacity to sue. 6. That the court has not jurisdiction of the subject of the action. 7. That the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The demurrer was sustained, on the last of these grounds.

The first and fifth of these grounds are not urged here, nor do we see that there is anything in them. We shall consider the others in their order, treating the third and seventh as one.

The second ground assigned is not true in'fact. The complaint shows an action pending for the money in controversy between other parties, from neither of whom does this plaintiff [504]*504derive his title, in which the court, to preserve the property, directed a sale, and the proceeds to be brought into court to abide the event of that action. No judgment in that action, determining that either of the parties to it was entitled to the fund, appears from the complaint to have been rendered. Had there been such judgment, it could not have affected the rights of plaintiff, for he does not claim under Cornish, the voluntary assignee, nor under Flower, the mortgagee. His title, if any he has, is vested in him by operation of the bankrupt law, for the benefit of the creditors, and as against which the mortgage under which Flower claims is void. A determination in an action between two litigants claiming adversely to him of course could not bind him.

There is but one cause of action set up in the complaint. It is in the nature of a bill in equity to reach a fund so situated that it cannot be reached by any action at law. The cause of action depends on the plaintiff’s title and the situation of the fund. Certainly, in an action for such cause, it is proper to join those at whose instance, and upon whose claim of title, the fund is so placed and held that it cannot be reached, except by such action. If the property from which ihe fund proceeded were in the joint possession of Cornish and Flower, an action against both to recover the possession would lie; and it would be no answer to an action against both, that each claimed title from a separate source. The title of each would be determined in such action. Notwithstanding such separate claim of title, the cause of action against them would be single.

It is claimed that U. S. Eev. St., § 711, vested exclusive jurisdiction of actions by an assignee in bankruptcy, to recover assets of the bankrupt, in the courts of the United States. The bankrupt act of 1867, § 1, constituted the district courts of the United States courts of bankruptcy, and gave them original jurisdiction, within their respective districts, in all matters and proceedings in bankruptcy, and extended such jurisdiction “to the collection of all the assets of the bankrupt.” [505]*505In Lathrop v. Drake, 91 U. S. 516, the question was, whether, by the jurisdiction thus conferred, suits to collect the assets belonged in each case solely to the district court in which the petition in bankruptcy had been filed, to the exclusion of district and circuit courts in other districts ? It was held that it did not exclude jurisdiction of such actions in other district or circuit courts, and the court said: “The state courts may undoubtedly be resorted to in ease of ordinary suits for the possession of property, or the collection of debts. ” In Claflin v. Houseman, 93 U. S. 130, the question of the jurisdiction of state courts, in suits by assignees in bankruptcy to recover assets, was directly raised, and their jurisdiction sustained. The case depended on the act of 1867. It was decided in the supreme court after the Revised Statutes, and the court, referring to section 711, say, “whether this regulation will, or will not, affect the cognizance of plenary actions and suits, it is not necessary now to determine.” See also Eyster v. Gaff, 91 U. S. 521.

Section 711 reads: “The jurisdiction vested in the courts -of the United States, in the cases and proceedings hereinafter ■ mentioned, shall be exclusive of the courts of the several states: * * * Sixth, of all matters and proceedings in bankruptcy.” What are matters and proceedings in bankruptcy, it ■is not easy to define; but it seems to us, that they are such matters and proceedings (including remedies) as are created, provided and prescribed by the bankrupt law. With this definition, we cannot see that section 711 changed the rule of jurisdiction, as it existed under the act of 1867. Of such matters and proceedings the jurisdiction of the federal courts must necessarily ‘ have been exclusive, for congress cannot ■create a jurisdiction, nor regulate proceedings, in the state courts. The prosecution by an assignee in bankruptcy, as owner, of a remedy open to any owner of property, is not a matter or proceeding created, provided or prescribed by the bankrupt law, and, therefore, not a matter or proceeding, of ■which, either under the law of 1867, or the Eevised Statutes, [506]*506exclusive jurisdiction was vested in the federal courts. It is,indeed, connected with the proceedings in bankruptcy in this,, that in such action the assignee must derive his title through, and to establish it must prove, the proceedings in bankruptcy down to the assignment to him.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 Minn. 500, 1879 Minn. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mann-v-flower-minn-1879.