McKeever v. Local Finance Co.

80 F.2d 449, 1935 U.S. App. LEXIS 3313
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedNovember 21, 1935
Docket7851
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 80 F.2d 449 (McKeever v. Local Finance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McKeever v. Local Finance Co., 80 F.2d 449, 1935 U.S. App. LEXIS 3313 (5th Cir. 1935).

Opinion

HUTCHESON, Circuit Judge.

This appeal tests primarily whether a propertyless debtor, who has applied under section 74 of the Bankruptcy Act, as amended (see 11 U.S.C.A. § 202) for an extension, has obtained it upon the condition of pledging a portion of his future monthly earnings, and has thereafter incurred new debts, may take voluntary bankruptcy. It tests, too, whether such bankruptcy is as to both new and old creditors, what is its effect on the extension agreement, and whether the debtor may withdraw from and dismiss the debtor proceeding. Full conclusions of fact and law were fded below. This is what they show:

McKeever was, on December 8, 1933, a salaried man, without property and without debt-paying ability, except out of his earnings as railroad engineer, of $220 per month. On that date, being indebted in the amount of $1,620, largely to small money lenders, and all of the debts due, he filed under section 74 of the Bankruptcy Act, as amended, a debtor’s petition for an extension. The extension proposal was made, accepted, and on December 26, confirmed under the practice prevailing in that district that the debtor would deposit monthly for application to his scheduled debts until they had all been paid in full, a part, in this case $50, of his future earnings. By March 30, 1935, the debtor, under Ills agreement to deposit $50 a month, had made substantial payments, to wit, nearly $600, on the debts scheduled in the extension proceeding. On that date, finding that he had accumulated more new debts, again to small money lenders, than he had paid old ones, and that his last state was worse than his first, being now in *450 debted in the sum of $1,885.18, McKeever decided to abandon his extension proceeding and take the benefits of voluntary-bankruptcy. On April 10 following, he filed, in the same court in which his debtor proceeding was pending, the usual voluntary verified petition in bankruptcy. All of -those to whom he owed debts, those whom he had listed in the debtor proceeding and the additional creditors he had since acquired, were listed indifferently as his creditors. - The only asset he listed was accrued wages of.$89.19 due him by the Southern Railway Company and claimed by him as exempt. He was duly adjudged a bankrupt, a'nd the cause was referred to Bondurant, one of the referees in bankruptcy, who ordered the scheduled wages to be paid into the bankruptcy court.

The Local Finance Company having lodged with the railroad company an assignment the bankrupt had given it of the wages he had scheduled as an asset, the referee on April 23, on motion of. the bankrupt, issued a rule nisi citing the finance company to show cause why the assignment should not be dismissed and held for naught. That company, appearing to the rule, filed a petition objecting to the jurisdiction of the bankruptcy court on the ground that the debtor’s petition was pending undismissed in the same court, and that Nesbitt, another referee to whom it had been referred, had exclusive jurisdiction of the debtor and his property. Bondurant, upon the stipulation of the parties that on account of usurious interest paid, the bankrupt was not indebted to the finance company, dismissed its objection to the court’s jurisdiction, ordered it to dismiss its assignment, and directed the railroad company to pay the wages in question into the court. The finance company brought a proceeding to review, and, when the matter came on for hearing before the District Judge, filed in addition to the pleadings it had filed below a petition to vacate and set aside the bankruptcy adjudication. Another creditor, listed as such in both schedules, alleging that the application to be adjudicated and the adjudication was a fraud on the court and the bankrupt’s creditors, moved that the adjudication be set aside, the proceeding dismissed, and that Nesbitt, the special referee, be directed to proceed with the liquidation of the estate in the debtor proceeding. The bankrupt, on his part moving to strike the creditor’s petitions to vacate the adjudication, asserted that the fact that the debt- or extension proceeding had been filed and was still pending was no bar to a subsequent voluntary bankruptcy, especially as to debts since incurred. He pointed out that the adjudication was regular on its face, and insisted that no facts were shown to invalidate it. He urged that the extension agreement pledging payment from his future wages until his debts were paid did not purport to and could not bind him not to take bankruptcy, and, particularly, that neither the debtor proceeding nor that of bankruptcy subjected his future earnings to the jurisdiction of the court. He prayed in the alternative, that if the creditors’ petitions were maintained, and his adjudication set aside, the' bankruptcy proceeding and the debtor proceeding be consolidated, and that the bankrupt be allowed to dismiss his debtor proceeding and be adjudged a bankrupt. The District Judge denied the bankrupt’s motion to strike the creditors’ petitions. He vacated the adjudication in bankruptcy. Consolidating the bankruptcy with the debtor proceeding, he denied the bankrupt’s motion to be allowed to dismiss his debtor petition and to be adjudicated a bankrupt. He found “that this Court in this consolidated proceeding has sole and exclusive jurisdiction over both the person and estate of the debtor in said debtor proceeding until the said debts be paid or said proceeding dismissed. And that it has jurisdiction over all wages earned by the bankrupt from the filing of the debtor proceedings to the entry of this decree and over all future subsequent wages until the debtor proceeding be finally disposed of,” adjudging that the bankrupt was able out of his future earnings to pay into the debtor’s court all claims against him, 1 and that the debtor proceeding and the extension agreement bound the bankrupt to continue depositing there from *451 his future earnings until not only the original, but subsequent creditors were paid, 2 he directed all money paid or to be paid in the bankruptcy proceeding to be transferred to the debtor proceeding. Directing Nesbitt to continue that proceeding in the interest of all creditors, both old and new, he directed him to inquire into and examine the validity of all claims old and new, and make findings on them all.

Appellant urges here that these findings in effect pledge his future earnings indefinitely subject only to the court’s discretion to terminate the pledge; that they mortgage his future to his past, operating to nullify at once the Alabama statute 3 prohibiting pledging future earnings, Littleton v. Littleton, 224 Ala. 103, 139 So. 335, the federal statute authorizing voluntary bankruptcy, section 4 Bankruptcy Act, as amended, title 11 U.S.C.A. § 22, and the general public policy underlying the Bankruptcy Act, Local Loan Co. v. Hunt, 292 U.S. 234, 54 S.Ct. 695, 78 L.Ed. 1230, 93 A.L.R. 195.

Appellees, pointing to the morality manifest in the order requiring the appellant to pay his just debts, insist that the legality of the order is equally manifest. They urge that both expressly and by implication sections 73 and 74 of the Bankruptcy Act, as amended (see 11 U.S.C.A.

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Bluebook (online)
80 F.2d 449, 1935 U.S. App. LEXIS 3313, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckeever-v-local-finance-co-ca5-1935.