Stone-Ordean-Wells Co. v. Mark

227 F. 975, 142 C.C.A. 433, 1915 U.S. App. LEXIS 2370
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 27, 1915
DocketNo. 150
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 227 F. 975 (Stone-Ordean-Wells Co. v. Mark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stone-Ordean-Wells Co. v. Mark, 227 F. 975, 142 C.C.A. 433, 1915 U.S. App. LEXIS 2370 (8th Cir. 1915).

Opinion

SANBORN, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts as above). [1,2] Section 67f of the bankruptcy act provides:

“That all levies, judgments, attachments, or other liens, obtained through legal proceedings against a person who is insolvent, at any time within four months prior to the filing of a petition in bankruptcy against him, shall be deemed null and void in case he is adjudged a bankrupt, and the property affected by the levy, judgment, attachment, or other lien shall be deemed wholly discharged and released from the same. * * * And the court may order such conveyance as shall be necessary to carry the purposes of this section into effect.” Act July 1, 1898, c. 541, § 67f, as amended by Act Feb. 5,1903, c. 487, § 16, and Act June 25, 1910, c. 412, § 12 (U. S. Comp. Stat. 1913, § 9651, pages 4399, 4401).

Counsel for the trustee cite this section and decisions under which orders made thereunder in summary proceedings avoiding liens obtained against insolvents in legal proceedings within four months of the filing of petitions, in bankruptcy against them have been-sustained. But the insolvency of the persons against whom the liens mentioned in this section are obtained is indispensable to their avoidance by sum[977]*977jnary proceedings thereunder. It is liens obtained through legal proceedings against an insolvent, and those only, that are avoided in case he is adjudged a bankrupt, and it is conveyances necessary to effect an avoidance of such liens, and those only, that the court of bankruptcy is empowered by this section to order. If a creditor by legal proceedings obtains a lien by attachment or by the levy of an execution three months before the filing of a petition in bankruptcy against his debtor, who is then solvent, and who does not become insolvent until the day the petition in bankruptcy is filed against him, that creditor does not obtain his lien “through legal proceedings against a person who is insolvent,” but against a person who is solvent “within four months prior to the filing of the petition in bankruptcy against him,” and section 67f grants the court of bankruptcy no power to avoid that lien, or to order conveyances to effect that result in summary proceedings. The evident purpose of the Congress in limiting the power of the court summarily to* avoid liens of the character mentioned in the section to those against insolvents, and in withholding the power to avoid those against solvents, was to* give the power to avoid such as creditors would be likely to know would probably give them a preference over other creditors, and to withhold the power to avoid others.

The natural and pertinent time of that insolvency which conditions the power of the court of bankruptcy to avoid in summary proceedings one of the liens specified in section 67f is the time when the lien is obtained. If the person is then insolvent, the lien is obtained against “a person who* is insolvent”; if he is solvent, then the lien is obtained against a person who is solvent. And the terms of the statute, their natural and rational interpretation, the meaning which first occurs to the mind on reading them, and that which after meditation securely abides, compel the conclusion that it was the intention of Congress and the legal effect of section 67f to grant to the courts of bankruptcy the power to effect an avoidance in summary proceedings of liens of the character there specified, obtained against persons who were insolvent at the respective times the liens were obtained, and those only, and that the insolvency of the person at the time the lien is acquired is an indispensable condition of the existence and of the exercise of the power. Keystone Brewing Co. v. Schermer, 241 Pa. 361, 88 Atl. 657, 31 Am. Bank. Rep. 279, 281, 282; Simpson v. Van Etten (C. C.) 6 Am. Bank. Rep. 204, 205, 206, 108 Fed. 199, 201; 1 Loveland on Bankruptcy, 909, 910, § 437; Severin v. Robinson, 27 Ind. App. 55, 60 N. E. 966; Collier on Bankruptcy (10th Ed.) p. 963, par. “e.”

[3] The petition of the trustee for the order on the Stone Company to pay over the money it had collected by virtue of the levy of its execution on the chose in action of the Cracker Company eight days before the petition in bankruptcy against the latter was filed contains no allegation of the insolvency of the Cracker Company at the time the Stone Company’s lien was obtained by the levy or at any time. It therefore failed to invoke the power of the court of bankruptcy to avoid in summary proceedings the lien of the Stone Company by virtue of section 67f, and that petition and all the subsequent proceedings were challenged, objected to, and protested against by the Stone Company [978]*978at the inception of the proceedings against it, on the expressed ground that the petition made no presentation of any grounds for any relief which the court of bankruptcy had the power to grant in a summary proceeding. No amendment of the petition was made or asked, no issue of the insolvency of the Cracker Company was ever tendered, no answer to the petition was made, and as the burden was on the trustee to plead and prove the insolvency of the Cracker Company in order to bring his case under section 67f, the order directing the Stone Company to pay over the money rests on the presumption that the Cracker Company was solvent when the Stone Company obtained its lien and section 67f and the authorities under it have no relevancy to the questions arising in this case. They.must accordingly be laid aside, including Clarke v. Larremore, 188 U. S. 486, 23 Sup. Ct. 363, 47 L. Ed. 555, in which counsel for the trustee seems to place much faith, but which rests on an adjudication of bankruptcy in a contested case, on the ground that the lien annulled in that case was acquired while the bankrupt was insolvent and that it constituted the act of bankruptcy.' In the case at bar the Stone Company was not a party to the bankruptcy proceedings until the order to show cause why it should not pay over the money it collected was served on it, and in the proceedings prior to the filing of the petition for that order its lien was never mentioned. The result is that this case must be determined as though section 67f had never been enacted.

In Babbitt v. Dutcher, 216 U. S. 102, 113, 30 Sup. Ct. 372, 377 (54 L. Ed. 402, 17 Ann. Cas. 969), the Supreme Court said:

“There are two classes of cases arising under the act of ■ 1898 and controlled by different principles. The first class is where there is a claim of adverse title to property of the bankrupt, based upon a transfer antedating the bankruptcy. The other class is where there is no claim of adverse title based on any transfer prior to the bankruptcy, but where the property is in the physical possession of a third party or of an agent of the bankrupt, or of an officer of a bankrupt corporation, who refuses to deliver it to the trustee in bankruptcy.”

Owners of claims of the first class are adverse claimants and have .the right to an opportunity to prosecute or defend their claims in a plenary suit according to' the course of the common law or the rules and principles of equity jurisprudence. Owners of claims of the latter class may be required to submit to adjudications of them in summary proceedings by a court of bankruptcy.

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Bluebook (online)
227 F. 975, 142 C.C.A. 433, 1915 U.S. App. LEXIS 2370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stone-ordean-wells-co-v-mark-ca8-1915.