Shainwald v. Lewis

5 F. 510, 6 Sawy. 585, 1880 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 252
CourtDistrict Court, D. Nevada
DecidedDecember 11, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 5 F. 510 (Shainwald v. Lewis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Nevada primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shainwald v. Lewis, 5 F. 510, 6 Sawy. 585, 1880 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 252 (D. Nev. 1880).

Opinion

Hillyee, D. J.

This is a motion to vacate a former order of this cotii't, appointing Ealph L. Shainwald receiver of the property of the defendant, Lewis, in the district of Nevada. The plaintiff is the assignee in bankruptcy of the firm of Schoenfeld, Cohen & Co., and of Louis S. Schoenfeld, Isaac Newman, and Simon Cohen, who have been adjudicated bankrupts by the district court of California. After his appointment as assignee the plaintiff filed a bill in equity in the district court of the United States for California, against the defendant, Harris Lewis, by which he sought to have a certain judgment obtained by Lewis against the bankrupts set aside on the ground that the judgment was fraudulent. In that suit the plaintiff obtained a decree setting the said judgment aside, declaring the evidence upon which it was based fraudulent, and the defendant, Lewis, a trustee of all the property acquired by him under said judgment for the benefit of the creditors of the bankrupt firm and of the assignee. He was also decreed to pay a large amount of money, nearly $100,000, by way of damages, interest, and costs. Upon this [511]*511judgment an execution was issued to the marshal of California, and by him returned milla bona.

These facts appear from the bill filed in this court, and it also appears on the face of the bill that Harris Lewis is a citizen of California as well as the plaintiff; and that be has property in Nevada which the plaintiff seeks to apply to the satisfaction of his decreo, obtained as aforesaid in California.

It is further averred in the bill, on information and belief, that the defendant, Harris Lewis, is secreting his property with the view of preventing the plaintiff from levying upon and applying it to the satisfaction of said decree; that said Lewis is possessed and the owner of large and valuable property, real and personal, within the district of Nevada, and within the jurisdiction of this court; that for the purpose of hindering, delaying, and defrauding the plaintiff, said Lewis has Loen, since the rendition of said decree, making and issuing his notes and other evidences of indebtedness, and has procured a suit or suits to be brought against him, and has confessed, or intends to confess, judgment against himself, all for the purpose of preventing the plaintiff from obtaining satisfaction of said judgment and decree; that in a certain other suit, brought as such assignee against the defendant, Lewis, in the district court of the district of California, and founded upon said decree, an order was made appointing Ralph L. Shainwald, of the city and county of San Francisco, receiver of the estate of said defendant, Harris Lewis; that he duly qualified and is now acting as such receiver.

A copy of the decree of the district court of California is made part of the bill, and the prayer is for judgment that said Lewis pay the amount thereof, and for an injunction and a receiver, with the usual powers of a receiver under a creditors’ bill. Upon the filing of this bill, an order for the appointment of a receiver was made, without notice to the defendant. A special appearance has been entered by the defendant, Lewis, and a motion on behalf of certain creditors is made to vacate the order appointing the receiver, chiefly on the ground that this court has not, and cannot acquire any jurisdiction of the case, the said Lewis being a resident [512]*512of California, and not found in this district at the time of serving the writ of subpoena; and also that it does not appear from the bill that the plaintiff has exhausted his legal remedies in this jurisdiction. Some other grounds were mentioned,—as the want of notice, the insufficiency of the averments in the bill to show a case of urgency, etc.,—but the case must be decided upon the first two grounds named.

The subpoena has been returned, and shows a service on the defendant in California. This, together with the allegation in the bill that the defendant, Lewis, is a citizen of California, is enough, upon the uniform construction which the eleventh section of the judiciary act, now section 739 of the Revised Statutes, has always received, to deprive this court of jurisdiction, unless, as is most earnestly and strenuously urged, that seotion does not apply to a suit like the present. It is argued that it does not apply, because this is a suit in equity to enforce a lien or claim against property within the meaning of Rev. St. § 738, and also because this is a matter or proceeding in bankruptcy over which this court has jurisdiction irrespective of the residence or citizenship of the parties. In argument upon this latter proposition, great stress is laid upon the very broad and comprehensive language in which the whole subject of bankruptcies is given to the district courts in section 4972—especially upon that clause which extends the jurisdiction to the collection of all the assets of the bankrupt. And it is said, since this is done, there must be power somewhere in the bankruptcy courts to collect assets; i. e., debts due the bankrupt’s estate in those cases in which a debtor resides in one district and has property in another. The case at bar is, I take it, substantially such a case, for Lewis, while not originally a debtor of the bankrupts, has been, by the decree against him, turned into a trustee for the creditors and the assignee and adjudged to pay a large sum as' damages for their benefit.

It is said again that the district courts are auxiliaries of each other in these bankruptcy matters, and that the proceedings in California are a sufficient warrant for proceeding here against the property of the defendant, Lewis, as has been [513]*513done, without finding him (he being a non-resident) in this district. Therefore, it is further argued from these premises, there must be the power here claimed, that there may be no failure of justice—no failure to collect all the assets.

Counsel have read much from that line of decisions which maintains the right of an assignee in bankruptcy to sue in another than the district of his appointment to recover debts or other property. They find in the language used by the courts in deciding those cases, as they think, support for their position. But, when these courts say the powers of the bankruptcy courts are full and complete for all purposes of the act, they must not be understood as meaning that’ the usual methods of acquiring jurisdiction need not be pursued. Assignees may find it necessary to sue in other districts for the recovery of assets. If so, the courts of those districts are open to them. Lathrop v. Drake, 91 U. S. 516.

In this sense the courts of other districts are auxiliary, not in any sense implying power to carry out and enforce the judgments and orders of one another except upon due process in the particular district. Nowhere do I find any intimation that it is not necessary to acquire jurisdiction of persons and property by the same means employed in other cases.

In the present instance the district court of this district is open to the assignee for the collection of assets. The court has jurisdiction to hear and determine such a case; but before it will have jurisdiction of this particular defendant he must be duly subpoenaed, unless, as contended, there is something in the nature of this suit which renders it unnecessary. What is said in speaking of the general powers of the bankruptcy courts under the law to act at all, must not be confounded with and applied to their power to proceed in the particular instance.

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Bluebook (online)
5 F. 510, 6 Sawy. 585, 1880 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shainwald-v-lewis-nvd-1880.