Whether the taking possession of after-acquired property within
four months of the filing of the petition in bankruptcy, under a
mortgage made in good faith prior to that period, is good or is
void as against the trustee in bankruptcy depends upon whether it
is good or void according to the law of the state.
Thompson v.
Fairbanks, 196 U. S. 516.
Held that such a taking is under the circumstances of this
case good according to the law of Massachusetts as construed by its
Supreme Judicial Court.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
Page 198 U. S. 92
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an action brought by a trustee in bankruptcy, the
defendant in error, to recover an alleged preference. The case was
heard on agreed facts, which may be summed up as follows: Davis
filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy on May 23, 1901. Two years
before, on May 6, 1899, being then solvent, he executed to the
plaintiff in error, Humphrey, a mortgage of his present and
after-acquired stock in trade and fixtures, which covered the goods
in controversy, but the mortgage was not recorded, and the goods
remained in Davis' possession. On April 30, 1901, Humphrey, having
reasonable cause to believe that Davis was insolvent, took
possession of the goods, in accordance, it fairly is implied, with
the terms of the mortgage, although against the wishes and protest
of Davis. The defendant in error was qualified as trustee on June
18, 1901, and at once demanded the goods without payment of the
mortgage debt. The case went from the superior court to the Supreme
Judicial Court of the state, and the latter court ordered judgment
for the plaintiff, 184 Mass. 361, which was entered below, and
thereupon the case was brought here.
It may be assumed, in view of the recent decision in
Thompson v. Fairbanks, 196 U. S. 516,
that if the taking possession was good as against the trustee in
bankruptcy so far as the Massachusetts law is concerned, it should
be held good here. We assume also, without deciding, that if, as
against the trustee, the mortgage is to be regarded as first having
come into being when the mortgagee took possession, it would be
void. In the latter view, the anomalous case would be presented of
a mortgage of all a man's stock in trade to secure a past debt,
executed to one who had reasonable cause to believe that the
mortgagor was insolvent and that he was receiving a preference, but
executed without intent to prefer on the part of the mortgagor.
There would be a preference within the definition in §
60
a, and the mortgagee would know it, but he
Page 198 U. S. 93
could not be said in a strict sense to have reasonable cause to
believe that it was intended to give a preference. We assume, for
purposes of decision, that such a case must be regarded as falling
within the intent of the act.
The question, then, is one of Massachusetts law, and
unfortunately the decision does not leave us free from doubt upon
that point. If hereafter the supreme court of the state should
adopt a different view from that to which we have been driven, this
case would cease to be a precedent. The language of the
Massachusetts statute is,
"unless the property mortgaged has been delivered to and
retained by the mortgagee, the mortgage shall not be valid against
a person other than the parties thereto, until it has been so
recorded, and a record made subsequently to the time limited
[fifteen days] shall be void."
Mass.Rev.Laws, c. 198, § 1. There are cases which indicate
that an assignee in bankruptcy is a universal successor, like an
executor or a husband, and so that, as it is put in Lowell,
Bankruptcy, § 309, the assignee is the bankrupt.
Phosphate
Sewage Co. v. Molleson, 5 Ct. of Sess.Cas. (4th series) 1125,
1138;
Bank of Scotland v. Cuthbert, 1 Rose, 462, 481;
Selkrig v. Davies, 2 Dow 230, 248, 2 Rose 291, 317. So, in
the Roman law,
Bonorum emptor ficto se herede agit. Gaius,
IV. § 35. But it is the settled law of Massachusetts that such
a fictitious identity does not satisfy the statute, that the
trustee in bankruptcy is "a person other than the parties thereto,"
and that therefore, as against him the mortgage is void.
Bingham v. Jordan, 1 Allen 373;
Blanchard v.
Cooke, 144 Mass. 207, 226;
Haskell v. Merrill, 179
Mass. 120, 124-125.
Haskell v. Merrill is cited and relied
on in the supreme court of the state, and we assume that it and the
other cases cited still correctly state the law. It is clear under
these cases that recording or taking possession after the
qualification of the trustee would be too late, and it certainly
would seem not illogical to hold that, as against him, the mortgage
was to be treated as nonexistent at any earlier date, until the
things were done which made it good under the
Page 198 U. S. 94
act. In this case, the court speaks of "the proceedings by which
the mortgagee obtained his lien, three weeks before the filing of
the petition," which at least suggests, if it does not adopt, the
idea that the mortgage then first came into being as against the
trustee.
On the other hand, the court says in terms that
"the defendant's acquisition of possession of the mortgaged
property before the commencement of the proceedings in bankruptcy,
and before third persons had acquired liens or rights by attachment
or otherwise, gave him a title which was good at common law against
creditors, and which would have been good against an assignee in
insolvency under the statutes of this commonwealth, or against an
assignee in bankruptcy under the United States Bankruptcy Act of
1867."
We feel bound, on the whole, to take this as expressing a
deliberate attitude of the court on the question under discussion,
as undoubtedly that has been its attitude in the past.
In
Briggs v. Parkman (1841), 2 Met. 258, a messenger in
insolvency took possession of the mortgaged property on July 15 at
half-past one. At half-past three, the mortgage was recorded. The
first publication of the notice of issuing the warrant to the
messenger was on July 16, and that, by the terms of the insolvent
law fixed the time when the property passed. It was held that the
mortgage was valid as against the assignee in insolvency. In
Mitchell v. Black (1856), 6 Gray, 100, a similar decision
was made as to a bill of sale by way of security, and it was
intimated that the law did not interfere with the action of
purchasers in perfecting a title under a contract to which there
was no legal objection when made. This case was relied on in
Sawyer v. Turpin, 91 U. S. 114, a
case like the present, decided as we decide this, and cited by the
court below. In
Bingham v. Jordan (1861), 1 Allen 373,
which decided that the assignee in insolvency was not a "party"
within the statute,
Briggs v. Parkman was referred to for
its implications in favor of that view, without a hint that the
decision was disapproved and seemingly with no
Page 198 U. S. 95
consciousness of inconsistency. Finally, in
Folsom v.
Clemence (1873), 111 Mass. 273, twelve years after
Bingham
v. Jordan, it was held that a mortgage made more than six
months before the date of a petition in bankruptcy, and recorded
within the six months, was valid. This case also betrays no sense
of inconsistency with its predecessor, and is cited by the Supreme
Court of Massachusetts as authority for its last-quoted statement
of law.
See further Bliss v. Crosier, 159 Mass. 498.
As the Supreme Court of Massachusetts says that taking
possession under the mortgage within four months would be valid as
against the trustee in bankruptcy but for supposed peculiarities of
the present bankruptcy law, and as
Thompson v. Fairbanks,
196 U. S. 517,
although distinguishable from the present case, decides that it is
valid under the present bankruptcy law if good by the laws of the
state, it follows that the mortgagee was entitled to keep his
goods, and that the judgment against him was wrong.
Judgment reversed.