Western Tie & Timber Co. v. Brown

196 U.S. 502, 25 S. Ct. 339, 49 L. Ed. 571, 1905 U.S. LEXIS 917
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 20, 1905
Docket232
StatusPublished
Cited by102 cases

This text of 196 U.S. 502 (Western Tie & Timber Co. v. Brown) 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
Western Tie & Timber Co. v. Brown, 196 U.S. 502, 25 S. Ct. 339, 49 L. Ed. 571, 1905 U.S. LEXIS 917 (1905).

Opinion

Mr. Justice White,

after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.

Before coming to the merits we dispose of an objection to the jurisdiction.

■ The appeal was prosecuted under clause b (1) of section 25 of the bankrupt act of July 1, 1898, 30 Stat. 544, 553, providing that from any final decision of a Court of Appeals, allowing- or rejecting a claim under the act, an appeal may be had "where the amount in controversy exceeds the sum of two thousand dollars, and the question involved is one which might have been taken on appeal or writ of error, from the highest court of a State tó the. Supreme Court of the United States.” .

The provision of the Revised Statutes regulating the revision of judgments and decrees of state courts, which is relied upon, in conjunction with the portion of the -bankruptcy act just quoted, is'that portion of section 709, which authorizes'the reexamination of a final judgment or decree in any suit in the highest court of a State in which a decision in the suit can be had “where any title, right, privilege, or immunity is claimed under . . . any . '. .- statute of . . . the United States, and the decision is against the title,1 right, privilege, or immunity specially set up or claimed, by either party, under such . . . statute, . . .”

The appellee does not question that this , appeal is from a decree rejecting a claim, within the meaning of the statute, and that the requisite jurisdictional amount is involved, but the particular objection urged is that a right was not claimed under an act of Congress, nor was a right of that nature denied' .by the lower court.

The objection is not tenable. It clearly appears from the .record that in the claim filed on behalf of the tie company there *507 was embodied, as an integral part thereof, as a proper credit- or set-off, the sum retained from the wages of employes for supplies furnished by the bankrupt,, and the rejection of the claim was based upon the denial of the right to set-off. As the right of set-off is controlled by the provisions of section 68v of the bankrupt act, the assertion of such a right, in a pro-, ceediiig in bankruptcy, as was the case here, is necessarily based upon those provisions of the act of Congress, and in this case the construction of such statutory provision was undoubtedly involved. That the Circuit Court of Appeals un-' derstoód that reliance’ was had by the tie company upon the set-off- clauses of the act is shown by its opinion, where, after sustaining the claim of the trustee that the credits in question constituted a preference, it prefaced a particular discussion of the contention, as to a right of set-off, by the following statement

“Finally, it is said that this $2,210.73 was á credit to.Harrison, and that the- company should be’ permitted to set it off against his debt to it, and should be allowed to prove its claim for- the balance remaining without restriction, on the ground that these claims were mutual debts and credits under section 68 of the bankrupt law.”

The record, we think, sufficiently presented á claim, of Federal right, Home for Incurables v. New York, 187 U. S. 155, and the objection to the jurisdiction is therefore overruled.

Passing to the merits of the controversy:

We must, at the outset, in the. light of the facts found below, determine the exact relation existing between the bankrupt and the tie company, in order to fix the true import of the transactions by which the tie company, in making its claim against the bankrupt estate, asserted a right to retain and set off the sums which, in its proof of claim, it described as “deductions from pay rolls.”

We think the findings establish that Harrison sold the goods, not to the tie company, but to the laborers, and therefore the result of the sale was to create an indebtedness for the price *508 alone between Harrison and the employés. This is not only the necessary consequence of the facts stated/ but likewise conclusively flows from the nature of the proof .of claim made by the tie company, since that proof, so far as the items com cerning the price of the goods sold to the employés'are concerned, based the indebtedness by the tie company to Harrison, not upon any supposed original obligation on the part of the tie company towards Harrison to pay for the goods, but upon the "deductions from pay rolls,” made by the tie company in . paying .its employés; The effect of this was to trace and limit the origin of the debt due by the tie company to Harrison solely to the fact that the tie company had deducted, in pay-" ing its' employés,' money due to Harrison by the employés which, from the fact of the deduction,, the tie company had become bound to pay to Harrison. We think, also, the facts found establish that the course of dealing between' Harrison ánd the tie company concerning the deductions from pay rolls was that the tie company,, when it made the deductions, was .under an obligation to r'eniit the money collected from, the laborers for account of Harrison to him, irrespective of any debt which he might owe the tie company. This follows from the finding that, although there was a debt existing between . Harrison and the tie company, the course of dealing between them was that when the tie company made deductions from the wages of the laborers of sums of money . due by them to ' Harrison the tie company régularly remitted the proceeds of the deductions to Harrison. This conclusion, moreover, is the. result of the finding that. Harrison had no- intention to give the tie company a preference, for if Harrison, being insolvent, to the knowledge of the company,- within the prohibited period, gave to. the tie company authority to collect the sums' due to him by the laborers for goods sold them, with the right, or even the option, to apply the money to"'a prior debt due by IJarrisonto the company, the necessary result of the transaction would have been to create a voidable preference. And if the inevitable- result of- the transaction, would have been to' *509 create such a preference, then the law would conclusively impute to Harrison the intention to bring about the result necessarily arising from the nature of the act which he did. Wilson v. City Bank, 17 Wall. 473, 486. To give effect, therefore, to the finding that there was no intention on the part of Harrison to prefer, we must consider that the authority given by him to the tie company to collect from the laborers did not give that company the right or endow it with the option,when it had collected, to retain the money for its exclusive benefit, and to-the detriment of the other creditors of Harrison.

The result of the facts found then is this: Harrison sold his goods to the laborers and agreed with the tie company that that company when it paid the laborers should deduct the amount due by the laborers from the wages which the tie company owed them, and after making the deduction should remit to Harrison the amount thus deducted, irrespective of any indebtedness otherwise due by Harrison to the tie company. Did this give rise to a voidable preference within the intendment of sections 57g and 605 of the bankrupt act?

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Bluebook (online)
196 U.S. 502, 25 S. Ct. 339, 49 L. Ed. 571, 1905 U.S. LEXIS 917, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-tie-timber-co-v-brown-scotus-1905.