Whitman v. Butler

29 F. Cas. 1063, 8 Nat. Bank. Reg. 487, 1873 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12
CourtDistrict Court, D. Rhode Island
DecidedSeptember 23, 1873
StatusPublished

This text of 29 F. Cas. 1063 (Whitman v. Butler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whitman v. Butler, 29 F. Cas. 1063, 8 Nat. Bank. Reg. 487, 1873 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12 (D.R.I. 1873).

Opinion

KNOWLES, District Judge.

Henry Whitman, assignee in bankruptcy of Lewis P. Child, having filed his bill in equity, containing all apt and proper allegations and prayers, by petition ancillary to that suit, prays the court for a preliminary injunction to restrain the defendant, William Butler, from making sale at auction of three several parcels of real estate, under the power of sale contained in seven several mortgages held by him, executed by the bankrupt, Child, between the 31st of March, 1870, and the 14th of March, 1873, inclusive. To the pleas, allegations and evidence of the parties, I have given due consideration; the results of which I would now announce in terms as brief as may be. The controlling facts are few and' undisputed, and in regard to the principles of law involved, the learned.counsel of the parties were understood to be at variance on no point of much practical importance.

It appears that on the 15th of July last, the respondent, in virtue, as claimed, of his powers as mortgagee with power to sell, made sale by auction of divers parcels of real estate embraced in his aforesaid mortgages, among which parcels were two of the three described and referred to in the petition, under consideration. And further, it appears, that the purchasers of these two parcels, acting, as they allege, under advice of eminent counsel, decline both to make a cash payment of five per cent of the purchase money on the day of sale, or to make payment and receive their deeds, on the 25th of July, as prescribed by the conditions of sale, in no one of which, it is proper to remark, was embodied even an intimation, that if the purchaser refused to consummate the sale, the property would be, on a given day. or at any time, again exposed to auction on his account and. risk. And thereupon, it appears, the respondent, on the 2d of August, again, as mortgagee aforesaid, advertised the said two parcels in the same terms as before, but with an appendix in these words: “The above property will be sold for account of whom it may concern.” The de[1064]*1064fendant, it also appeared, on the 19th of July, announced an intended sale by him as mortgagee as aforesaid of a third parcel of land, embraced in each and all of the said seven mortgages, but not offered for sale with the other parcels on the 15th of July. By agreement, the sales of each and all of these three parcels are postponed until the 22d of September inst., subject to the action of this court upon the pending petition.

Now the records of the court show that on the 17th of July, proceedings in bankruptcy were instituted against said Child, and that on the 26th of July he was adjudged a bankrupt; and also that afterward, August the 12th and 13th, Henry Whitman, being chosen and duly appointed his assignee, accepted the trust, and received from the register conveyance of the bankrupt’s property in due course of law. Upon this state of facts, the petitioning assignee asks that the respondent be enjoined from making sale of said parcels, as proposed, and the two • questions presented to the court are: First, can the court rightfully interfere between the parties in this matter? and, secondly, if the court have the requisite power, will it exercise that power against the protests, and to the injury, as alleged, of the respondent?

The right of the court, for satisfactory cause shown, to interpose, as prayed, is not understood to be questioned seriously at this late day in any section of the country. In an opinion reported in Re Snedaker 2 is found an expository paragraph, embodying views believed to be now everywhere recognized as in-controvertable. Treating of the relative rights and duties of the assignee in bankruptcy and the creditor of the bankrupt, secured by pledge or lien of any kind, the learned court says: “For just and equitable purposes and to guard against fraud, the act rightfully takes the pledged property or lien out of the power of the secured creditor's control or management in reducing it to money in his chosen way without responsibility, and places it in the hands of the assignee of the bankrupt, who, being an agent of the court, and at the same time the representative of the rights of all parties in interest is supposed to be above all temptation to fraud, and directs him in such capacity' and under the pledge of his official bond as assignee, and under the direction of the court, to convert such mortgaged or pledged property into money, and to distribute the same under the provisions of the act, with due regard to all the priorities shown to exist in the proceedings in bankruptcy by the proof of the claims against the bankrupt. So far from taking any right or rights from the secured creditors, under the mortgage, lien or pledge by which he holds the same, it simply regulates the modes and means of foreclosing the mortgage or other lien, and of reducing such security to money, in order that the court may be able to enforce exact justice, and to see that the rights of all the creditors are secured to them under the proof of claims, and under the law.

Under this view of the law, it must be conceded and held that from and after the 26th of July, the respondent’s rights and powers as a mortgagee, with power to sell, were such, and only such, as could be exercised consistently with the provisions of the bankrupt law. Prior to that date, his right and duty were to make sales and account for proceeds con-formably with the requirements of the deed of mortgage; but after that date — “ita lex scripta est” — his right was to adjust his claims with the assignee, if happily he could, or to prosecute them adversely against the estate or the assignee, in mode and manner as prescribed by the bankrupt act, or in “masterly inactivity,” as it were, patiently to await the action of the assignee — under the law not less his agent and representative than the agent and representative of the bankrupt and of his other creditors. So far, therefore, as concerns the parcel of land first advertised for sale on the 19th of July, and never jret exposed at auction, it is clear • that the respondent must be restrained from selling save in conjunction with and with the assent, express or implied, of the petitioning assignee.

And now, as concerns the two parcels, which the respondent proposes to expose at auction a second time, “by virtue of a power of sale contained in seven deeds of mortgage” — but, it is to be noted, “for account of whom it may concern,” is the status of these distinguishable in any material respect from that of the third parcel? On the 15th of July, these were set up at auction and stricken off to the bidders, the bidders, bound by the conditions, to pay down on the day of sale five per cent, of the purchase price, and to pay the residue and receive their deeds on the 25th of July. The cash payments were not made, nor does it appear that any purchaser made tender of the purchase price or demand for his deed, on the 25th. No deed passed. The attempt to sell proved, in fact, abortive, and the respondent accordingly, on the 2d of August, in effect saying to the world that no sale had been made on the 15th, advertises the said parcels for sale anew, as above stated. The new sale if made, so far as appears, would be nothing more, nothing less, than a sale under the power by the mortgagee, as would have been the first, had it been consummated by payment and conveyance. The adding to the advertisement the note, that the property will be sold for account of whom it may concern, cannot be construed as affecting the rights and duties of the assignee and the mortgagee, as indicated or defined in Re Snedaker, above quoted.

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Bluebook (online)
29 F. Cas. 1063, 8 Nat. Bank. Reg. 487, 1873 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitman-v-butler-rid-1873.