Manufacturers' Finance Corp. v. Vye-Neill Co.

46 F.2d 146, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1589
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedDecember 15, 1930
DocketNo. 4374
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 46 F.2d 146 (Manufacturers' Finance Corp. v. Vye-Neill Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Manufacturers' Finance Corp. v. Vye-Neill Co., 46 F.2d 146, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1589 (D. Mass. 1930).

Opinion

BREWSTER, District Judge.

The above-entitled matter comes before the court on plaintiff’s motion that the ease stand for trial and judgment and on defendant’s motion for leave to amend its answer, setting up the fact that the defendant had been adjudicated a bankrupt subsequent to the bringing' of the suit. There is also to be considered at the same time a petition by the Consolidated Indemnity & Insurance Company for leave to intervene and for a continuance.

The questions presented were argued upon the following facts which appear in the pleadings or in the exhibits attached thereto and which,- for the purposes of the motion, seem to have been conceded to be beyond dispute:

The plaintiff on the 17th day of April, 1930, sued out a writ against the defendant, upon which writ an attachment was made upon the defendant’s property bn the 29th day [147]*147of April, 1930. In order to dissolve the attachment the defendant gave a bond pursuant to the statutes of the commonwealth of Massachusetts, the condition of which obligation was that if the defendant “shall within thirty days after the final judgment in the aforesaid action pay to the plaintiff therein the amount, if any, which it shall recover in such action, and shall also, within thirty days after the entry of any special judgment which may be entered in said action, all as provided for in the General Laws of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, pay to the said plaintiff the sum, if any, for which such special judgment shall be entered, then this obligation shall be void, otherwise it shall be and remain in full force and virtue.”

Within four months from the date of the attachment, to wit, August 7, 1930, the defendant was duly adjudicated bankrupt in this court. It is the contention of the plaintiff that it should be allowed to proceed to judgment against the defendant with perpetual stay of execution in order that it may enforce its rights against the surety company. The defendant, on the other hand, and the surety move for a stay of proceedings to await the action of this court upon the defendant’s application for a discharge, asserting a right to plead such a discharge, if obtained, and thereby preclude the plaintiff from recovering a judgment in this action.

It is clear that inasmuch as the attachment was not four months old no special judgment can be entered under the Massachusetts statute (G. L. e. 235, § 25). This leaves the more perplexing question whether there is anything in the statutes, state or federal, which will prevent the plaintiff from prosecuting his suit to judgment for the purpose of fixing the liability of the sureties.

Under the Bankruptcy Act of 1867 (14 Stat. 517), which was in force until 1878, and the subsequent Insolvency Laws of Massachusetts, the courts of this commonwealth consistently held that no judgment could be entered against a bankrupt defendant other than a special judgment which was first provided for in chapter 68 of the Acts of 1875, the antecedent of section 25, above noted. Loring v. Eager, 3 Cush. (Mass.) 188; Carpenter v. Turrell, 100 Mass. 450; Hamilton v. Bryant, 114 Mass. 543.

The doctrine of the court apparently was based upon the proposition that both the earlier Bankruptcy Act and the Insolvency Laws of Massachusetts provided for a mandatory stay of the action to await the result, of the bankruptcy- or insolvency proceedings when a discharge, if granted, could be pleaded as a full and complete bar to the suit. Bankruptcy Act of 1867, §§21 and 34 (14 Stat. 526, 533); chapter 470 of Acts and Resolves (Mass.) 1889, now G. L. e. 223, § 124.

It was said that, since the bankruptcy or insolvency proceedings operated to stay any suit pending at the time of the institution of the bankruptcy or insolvency proceedings, the court was powerless to enter a judgment •against the bankrupt. Carpenter v. Turrell, supra.

It followed, therefore, that there could never be any breach of the condition of the bond.'

The Massachusetts courts seem never to have proceeded upon the theory, advanced in other jurisdictions, that the obligations of the bond were dependent upon the lien of the attachment and that they fell if the lien of the attachment became void by subsequent bankruptcy proceedings. The attachment is held to have been dissolved, not by bankruptcy, but by the bond, the obligors assuming a new and an independent obligation. Guaranty Security Corp. v. Oppenheimer, 243 Mass. 324, 137 N. E. 644; Livermore Co. v. Fidelity & Casualty Co. of N Y., 259 Mass. 419, 156 N. E. 674.

The Bankruptcy Act of 1898 worked a very substantial change in the law. Section 11a of that Act (11 USCA § 29) provides, in substance, for a mandatory stay of the suit until after adjudication, or dismissal, of the petition. Thereafter it is for the court to determine, in the exercise of sound discretion, whether the suit shall be further stayed or whether it shall be allowed to go to judgment. Under the provisions of the Bankruptcy Act as they now stand, the Massachusetts courts have decided, in no unmistakable terms, that the plaintiff is entitled to a judgment with a perpetual stay of execution. Rosenthal v. Nove, 175 Mass. 559, 56 N. E. 884, 78 Am. St. Rep. 512; Rogers v. Abbot, 206 Mass. 270, 92 N. E. 472, 138 Am. St. Rep. 394; Barry v. N. Y. Holding & Const. Co., 229 Mass. 308,118 N. E. 639. And this, even though bankruptcy proceedings were instituted within four months from the date of the attachment. Smith v. Miller, 226 Mass. 187, 115 N. E. 243, 244; Feigenspan v. McDonnell, 201 Mass. 341, 87 N. E. 624; Berry Clothing Co. v. Shopnick, 249 Mass. 459, 144 N. E. 392, 393.

In Smith v. Miller, supra, the court .states:

[148]*148' “The discretion vested in the trial court by section 11 of the Bankruptcy Act does not depend upon the question whether an attachment was made in the pending action within, or more than four months before, the filing of the petition in bankruptcy, or whether any attachment has been made. It follows that the defendant was not entitled as of right to a continuance of the action after he was adjudicated a bankrupt.”

And in Berry Clothing Co. v. Shopnick, supra, there is this language:

, “The words of this section do not require a peremptory stay of a pending action after adjudication in bankruptcy. The state court has jurisdiction of such action and may proceed to judgment. As pointed out in Boynton v. Ball, 121 U. S. 457, 467, 7 S. Ct. 981, 30 L. Ed. 985, substantial reasons may make it desirable to proceed to trial and to judgment in such a ease. It was decided.in Rosenthal v. Nove, 175 Mass. 559, 56 N. E. 884, 78 Am. St. Rep. 512, with reference to section 11a, that the court in which is pending a suit against a bankrupt is not after the adjudication bound to stay proceedings further therein until the termination of the bankruptcy proceeding, although it may do so and to such extent as justice may require. The action is not barred and the court has power to proceed to judgment. There are numerous decisions tp the same effect.”

It may be taken, therefore, to be settled in this commonwealth that if this aetion'were pending in the state court it could be prosecuted to judgment unless it was made to appear that justice required a further stay for a period not exceeding a year following the adjudication.

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46 F.2d 146, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1589, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/manufacturers-finance-corp-v-vye-neill-co-mad-1930.