An assignee in bankruptcy cannot transfer to a purchaser the
bankrupt's adverse interest in real estate in the possession of
another claiming title if two years have elapsed from the time when
the cause of action accrued therefor in the assignee, and the right
of the purchaser in such case is as fully barred by the provisions
of Rev.Stat. § 5057, as those of the assignee.
It is unnecessary to decide in this case whether the provisions
contained in Rev.Stat. § 5063 refer to a case in which only
the interest of the bankrupt is ordered to be sold, without
attempting to affect the title or interest of other persons.
This was a writ of error to bring before the Court for review a
judgment rendered by the Supreme Court of Michigan in an action of
ejectment in which the plaintiff in error, who was plaintiff below,
claimed title under a deed from an assignee in bankruptcy. The case
is stated in the opinion of the Court.
Page 122 U. S. 215
MR. JUSTICE BRADLEY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an action of ejectment, brought by Wisner, the plaintiff
in error, against the defendants in error for a lot of land
Page 122 U. S. 216
in Isabella County, Michigan. The plaintiff claims the land as
purchaser from one Gillette, assignee in bankruptcy of Alfred
Willey. The defendants claim the same under a number of tax sales
and a deed from Willey, the bankrupt. It appeared on the trial that
Willey filed his petition in bankruptcy September 19, 1871, in the
District Court of the United States for the Eastern District of
Michigan, and set forth in the schedule thereto annexed the land in
question (with other lands) as his property, and it was shown that
he had purchased it several years before. He was decreed a bankrupt
September 3, 1872, and Gillette was appointed his assignee February
21, 1873. On the third day of April, 1880, more than seven years
after his appointment, Gillette filed a petition in the district
court praying for leave to sell the land in question and the
several other lots mentioned in the schedule at private sale for
any sum not less than $100. The petition alleged that Willey, at
the time of filing his petition in bankruptcy, claimed an interest
in the lands, describing them, and then proceeded as follows:
"Your petitioner, having no funds belonging to said estate in
his hands, did not investigate the title of said bankrupt to said
land, and, believing that said lands were of little value, paid no
attention to them until recently, when application was made to your
petitioner to purchase the right of said bankrupt in said lands.
From examination of the records, it appears that the lands have
been sold for taxes to private parties for a number of years,
beginning in 1867; that the right acquired by virtue of the sale of
said lands for delinquent taxes is held by one party; in addition
to such title has been obtained a deed from the bankrupt of said
lands; that another party has, by virtue of a sale on execution,
based upon a judgment obtained against said bankrupt before he was
adjudicated a bankrupt, acquired a title to said lands; that the
title to said lands is complicated in this manner, both parties
claiming to own said lands by virtue of the title they have
acquired thereto in the manner above stated; that from inquiry and
examination, your petitioner believes that the title which may be
vested in him as assignee of said bankrupt is of but little value
with
Page 122 U. S. 217
out a lengthy litigation, and your petitioner has no funds in
his hands to carry on such litigation or pay taxes that may be
assessed thereon; that from information your petitioner sets forth
that said lands were located for the pine timber that originally
was on the land, which having been removed, the lands were not
considered by the bankrupt of sufficient value to pay taxes
thereon; that petitioner is offered one hundred dollars for the
conveyance of the title which he holds as assignee of the said
bankrupt to said lands, and, upon information and belief, your
petitioner affirms that said sum is all the interest of said estate
in said lands is worth, and that the acceptance of said offer, and
the conveyance of said title to said lands accordingly, would be
for the interest of the creditors of the estate of said bankrupt.
And your petitioner prays that an order may be made in this case
authorizing your petitioner to sell said lands at private sale as
he may deem advisable, but not at a less sum than one hundred
dollars."
The court, on the 5th of April, 1880, made an order authorizing
Gillette, the assignee, to make the sale as proposed by this
petition, and the same was made accordingly to the plaintiff in
error for the sum of $100, and on the 13th of April, 1880, a deed
was given him by the assignee for the lands. No notice was given to
the adverse claimants of the land either of the of the application
to the district court for authority to sell or of the intention to
sell the same.
The plaintiff in error, to sustain the action on his part,
introduced proof of the proceedings in the bankrupt court of the
title of Willey and of the deed from the assignee to himself. The
defendants, on their part, deduced title to the premises in
controversy by virtue of certain deeds made in pursuance of sales
for taxes for the years 1867, 1868, and subsequent years, and also
by a quitclaim deed from Willey, the bankrupt, to the defendant
Brown dated September 11, 1875, and duly recorded. The defendants
also proved by the testimony of Brown that he had no notice of the
proceedings in bankruptcy until after he had obtained the said deed
from Willey, nor until after the plaintiff in error had purchased
the land from the assignee.
Page 122 U. S. 218
The plaintiff then proposed to go into the validity of the tax
titles, but the judge before whom the case was tried, being of
opinion that the plaintiff had shown no title, directed the jury to
find a verdict for the defendant. A bill of exceptions was taken
and the case was carried to the Supreme Court of Michigan by writ
of error, and that court affirmed the judgment of the court below.
The present writ is brought to review the judgment of the supreme
court on the ground that its decision was against the validity of a
title claimed under the laws of the United States -- namely under
the proceedings in bankruptcy.
The principal ground on which the Supreme Court of Michigan
placed its decision was the want of notice by the assignee to the
adverse claimants of the property. The petition of the assignee for
authority to sell, shows that the title to the land was in dispute
and that the adverse claimants were known to him, but he proceeded
without giving them any notice either of his intended application
to the court or of his intention to sell. The court inferred that
notice was required by the 25th section of the bankrupt law, §
5063 of the Revised Statutes, which provides that
"Whenever it appears to the satisfaction of the court that the
title to any portion of an estate, real or personal, which has come
into the possession of the assignee or which is claimed by him is
in dispute, the court may, upon the petition of the assignee and
after such notice to the claimant, his agent or attorney as the
court shall deem reasonable, order it to be sold under the
direction of the assignee, who shall hold the funds received in
place of the estate disposed of, and the proceeds of the sale shall
be considered the measure of the value of the property n any suit
or controversy between the parties in any court."
As it is a question of doubt whether § 5063 refers to a
case in which only the interest of the bankrupt is ordered to be
sold without attempting to affect the title or interest of other
persons, and as there was another ground on which the court of
trial might unquestionably have instructed the jury to find a
verdict for the defendants, and which also involved a question of
the plaintiff's right of action under the bankrupt law,
Page 122 U. S. 219
we have deemed it unnecessary to consider the validity of the
point on which the case was actually decided. The other ground to
which we refer is that of the two-years limitation within which the
assignee can bring suit. It is declared by § 5057 of the
Revised Statutes that
"No suit at law or in equity shall be maintainable in any court
between an assignee in bankruptcy and a person claiming an adverse
interest touching any property or rights of property transferable
to or vested in such an assignee unless brought within two years
from the time when the cause of action accrued for or against such
assignee."
This act, as well as the statute of limitations of Michigan, was
pleaded by the defendants in bar of the action. Now the assignee in
the present case received his appointment on the 15th of February,
1873, and the property in question was at that time adversely held
by the defendants under tax sales made by the auditor general of
the State of Michigan, and continued to be so held until the
commencement of this suit. It is clear, therefore, that from and
after the 15th of February, 1875, the assignee himself was
precluded by the statute from bringing an action to recover the
lands, and he could not, after that time, by selling them to a
third person, enable the latter to maintain an action therefor. The
sale made by the assignee to the plaintiff in April, 1880, could
have no such effect. This point was directly decided in
Gifford
v. Helms, 98 U. S. 248. The
complainant in that case had purchased the lands from the assignee
more than two years after the latter's appointment, and they had
been continuously held under an adverse title. In delivering the
judgment of the court, Mr. Justice Clifford said:
"Nothing can be plainer in legal decision than the proposition
that the complainant did not acquire, by the conveyance made to him
under that sale, any greater rights than those possessed by the
grantor,"
and in conformity with that conclusion it was held that the
complainant, equally with the assignee, his grantor, was bound by
the limitation prescribed by the statute, and the bill was
accordingly dismissed without any attention's being given to the
question of the validity of the sale, in that case, as in this,
there having been apparently no notice of the application to sell,
although the sale itself was by public auction.
Page 122 U. S. 220
Our conclusion, therefore, is that the instruction to find for
the defendants was right at all events, for they were entitled to
such an instruction on the bar of the two-years limitation whether
they were so for the reason assigned by the judge or not.
The judgment is therefore affirmed.