Smith v. Mason

81 U.S. 419, 20 L. Ed. 748, 14 Wall. 419, 1871 U.S. LEXIS 1007
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 20, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by59 cases

This text of 81 U.S. 419 (Smith v. Mason) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Mason, 81 U.S. 419, 20 L. Ed. 748, 14 Wall. 419, 1871 U.S. LEXIS 1007 (1871).

Opinion

Mr. Justice CLIFFORD

delivered the opinion of the court.

Jurisdiction, power, and authority in cases in bankruptcy, when the bankrupt resides in this District, are conferred upon, and vested in, the Supreme Court of the District, to the same extent and subject to the same rules, regulations, and restrictions as are enacted and prescribed in Respect to the jurisdiction, power, and authority of the District Courts of the United States, where the bankrupt resides in any one of the judicial districts within the several States.

By the terms of the act establishing the Supreme Court of the District the court consists of four justices, any three of whom may hold a general term, and anyone of them may hold a Circuit Court or special term for the purposes and under the conditions therein prescribed, or may hold a District Court of the United States, in the same manner and with the same powers and jurisdiction as are possessed and exercised by the Federal District Courts within 'the several States.

Enough appears in the record to show that one Frederick P. Sawyer, of the firm of Sawyer, Risher & Hall, was adjudged bankrupt by the Supreme Court of this District sitting in bankruptcy, and that George Mason, the appellee in this case, was appointed assignee of his estate by decree of the bankrupt court. He commenced the proceeding in this case by the petition exhibited in the transcript, in which he represents that George Taylor, as agent of .that firm, had collected from the United States the sum of; four thousand seven hundred and forty-four dollars and nineteen cents for *426 the-firm, and that other funds due to the firm, it was expected, would soon come into his hands; that Risher & Hall, the other two members of the. firm prior to the bankruptcy of the senior partner, made an assignment of the claim, from which that amount was realized, to George E. Biddle & Co., as collateral security for the payment of a certain indebtedness of their firm to the said assignees, which indebtedness the petitioner believes has been paid; that the assignees of the claim afterwards made an assignment of their interest in the same to James R. Smith, as collateral, security for their indebtedness to him, which, as the petitioner believes, has also been paid: wherefore he prayed that the, said George Taylor might be restrained from paying out said money, or any other money which might come into his hands belonging to the same firm, pending the petition, and that the respondent might be required to give bond for the safekeeping of the money and for its production in court when ordered.

Such an order was issued, and the party holding the money Was enjoined and required to give bond as prayed. Subsequently the petitioner presented another petition to the same court, in which he represented that James R.

Smith also claimed an interest in the fund in question, and prayed that an order might be made requiring him to show cause on a day therein named why the fund should not be paid to the petitioner. Smith appeared and filed an answer to the rule, to the effect following: (1.) That the court had no jurisdiction to proceed against him in that mode. (2.) That the money enjoined came to him by regular assignment for a valuable consideration before the senior partner of the firm, was adjudged bankrupt, and that he was, and is, the bond, fide owner of the claim. (3.) That neither ■the assignee of the bankrupt’s estate nor his creditors have any right to any part of said funds.

Before the hearing the other partners of the firm, to wit, Risher and Hall, intervened, and alleged that the money enjoined rightfully-belonged to them and not to the respondent in the rule, because the assignment of the claim, as they *427 represented, was made by the senior partner of their firm merely as a security.to the said assignees, to be applied by them to the payment of the debt due by their firm to those assignees; that it was expressly understood that if the assignors paid the debt before the claim was collected from the United States the claim should revert to them, the assignors; that they paid their entire, debt to those parties before the claim was allowed at the Treasury Department, and that they, as the representatives of the firm since the bankruptcy of the senior partner, are entitled to the money: wherefore they pray that an order may be passed directing the depositary to pay the same to them, or, if it be paid to the said assignees, that it be so paid to their use.

Evidence waé introduced by the intervenors tending to show that the indebtedness of the original owners of the claim to the assignees of the same had been paid, and that the respondent in the rule held the claim merely as collateral security for his assignors. On thé other hand the respondent in the rule was examined, and he testified that he obtained the assignment of the claim in- good faith and for Value, without notice that his assignors held it subject'to any conditions, or that it was not their property in ease the indebtedness of their assignors vras discharged before the claim was collected. He produced the assignment duly executed by the original owners, directing the depositary to pay the amount to the assignees when collected at the proper department, and also introduced the deposition of the senior partner of the firm to which'the claim was assigned, and he deposed that his firm transferred and assigned-the same to the respondent in the rule with the knowledge and consent of the original owners'; that they, the assignees, took the order or draft at its date in the regular course of business, and that they assigned the same for.Value to the respondent, and that the accounts of the original owners with his firm have never been settled, but that they are still largely indebted to his firm. Hearing was had, but the court was of the opinion that the respondent took the order or draft *428 merely as collateral security; that he was not a bond fide purchaser of the same; that he was to credit the proceeds when collected to his assignors, and that they were to credit the same to the original owners.

Pursuant to that finding the court entered a decretal order that the depositary of the claim should pay the net balance in his hands to the assiguee in bankruptcy for the benefit of the creditors of the original owners. Immediate application was made by the respondent for an .appeal to the general term, which was granted on the following day. Due appearance was entered not only by the appellant but also by the interveuors as well as by the assignee in. bankruptcy, and they were again heard before all the justices of the court; and the court being of opinion that there was error in the decree and that the intervenors,as the solvent partners of their firm, were entitled to the money, entered a decree dissolving the injunction, and directing the depositary of the money to pay the net balance in his hands to those parties as the survivors of the original owners of the claim : whereupon the respondent appealed to this court.

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Bluebook (online)
81 U.S. 419, 20 L. Ed. 748, 14 Wall. 419, 1871 U.S. LEXIS 1007, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-mason-scotus-1871.