The general law of pledge requires possession, and it cannot
exist without it, and this is the law in Wisconsin.
Where there is no delivery or change of possession, receipts
issued by a warehouse company are not entitled to the status of
negotiable instruments, the transfer of which operates as a
delivery of the property mentioned therein.
Union Trust Co. v.
Wilson, 198 U. S. 530,
distinguished.
Although the assignee or trustee in bankruptcy stands in the
shoes of the bankrupt, and property in his hands, unless otherwise
provided in the Bankrupt Act, is subject to all the equities
impressed upon it in the hands of the bankrupt, on the facts in
this case and the law of the state, there was no valid pledge of,
and no equitable lien on the merchandise in favor of the holders of
warehouse receipts, which take precedence of the title of the
trustee.
The above-named appellants have appealed from a judgment of the
Circuit Court of Appeals of the Seventh Circuit, affirming a decree
of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of
Wisconsin, dismissing certain petitions of the appellants for want
of equity. 143 F. 32.
Certain creditors filed a petition in bankruptcy October 5,
1903, against the Racine Knitting Company, a company engaged
Page 206 U. S. 416
in manufacturing hose and other knit goods, with factories at
Racine and Stevens Point, Wisconsin. The company was, on the
twenty-sixth of October, 1903, duly adjudged a bankrupt, and the
appellees were appointed receivers and were later elected trustees.
The appellees asserted the right to certain merchandise covered by
receipts issued by the appellants, the security company, which
company thereupon filed in the bankruptcy court an intervening
petition asserting its exclusive possession and control of the
merchandise in question and the issuing of its receipts therefor to
the knitting company, and their negotiation by it prior to its
bankruptcy, and that those receipts were given to the other
appellants in good faith in due course of business as security for
loans. The intervening petitioner alleged that the appellees were
claiming title to the merchandise, and were obstructing the
petitioner in its possession, and the prayer was for an order that
the appellees be restrained from interfering with the petitioner in
its custody and control of the property. The other appellants then
intervened and also set up the same facts, and prayed that the
appellees might be restrained from interfering with the security
company in delivering the merchandise to the petitioners, and from
asserting any right or title to the property as against them.
Issues were joined, and the matters were referred to the referee,
who reported his findings of fact. From these findings it appeared
that the Security Warehousing Company was a corporation of the
State of New York, duly licensed to do business in the State of
Wisconsin, and that it was engaged in the business of "field
warehousing," so called; that it owned no warehouse of its own and
occupied no public warehouse at any place. The warehousing company
leased certain premises from the knitting company in Racine, in the
State of Wisconsin, and also certain premises at a place called
Stevens Point, in the same state. These two places were occupied by
the knitting company with their goods to be sold, and the goods
were placed on the premises really occupied by the knitting
company,
Page 206 U. S. 417
although in form leased by it to the warehousing company, and
the so-called warehouse receipts were given to the knitting company
by the warehousing company, acknowledging the receipt of the
property at such places. There was no change of possession in fact,
and scarcely any in form. These receipts were in turn pledged by
the knitting company to various banks, and moneys obtained upon the
security of such receipts from them. The general character of
business of this form is stated in
Union Trust Company v.
Wilson, 198 U. S. 530, but
the particular facts in this case, given in detail as findings by
the referee and adopted by the district court and circuit court of
appeals, may be found in 143 F. 32,
supra. Reference is
made to that report for the findings of the referee. The report
shows a radically different state of facts from the
Wilson
case.
Page 206 U. S. 420
MR. JUSTICE PECKHAM, after making the foregoing statement,
delivered the opinion of the Court.
A careful reading of the findings of the referee and of the
evidence upon which they were based satisfies us that they ought to
be approved. The findings show that the receipts of the warehousing
company were not entitled to the status of negotiable instruments,
the transfer of which operates as a delivery of the property
mentioned in them. Upon that question the case is sufficiently
stated in the opinion of the court below, wherein it was said that
the "receipts themselves would put the holders on notice of the
facts."
If the receipts were not negotiable instruments, it is contended
that the transactions showed a valid pledge of the property to some
of the appellants, and hence they are entitled to its possession
until they are paid the debts due them from the bankrupt. Whether
there was a sufficient change of
Page 206 U. S. 421
possession of the thing pledged to render the same valid under
the law of Wisconsin, we think was correctly answered in the
negative by the courts below.
Geilfuss v. Corrigan, 95
Wis. 651, 665, 669. The general law of pledge requires possession,
and it cannot exist without it.
Casey v. Cavaroc,
96 U. S. 467. There
was scarcely a semblance of an attempt at such change of possession
from the hands of the knitting company to the hands of the
warehousing company. Actual possession of the property in question
was exercised by and existed with the knitting company
substantially the same after the issuing of the receipts as before.
It is a trifling with words to call the various transactions
between the knitting company and the warehousing company a transfer
of possession from the former to the latter. There was really no
delivery, and no change of possession, continuous or otherwise. The
alleged change was a mere pretense, a sham. Upon the subject of
change of possession, the opinion of the circuit court of appeals
contains the following statement of fact:
"In the present case, the main office of the security company
was in New York; the nearest district office was in Chicago; from
there, the receipts were issued, and in Wisconsin the security
company had no office and no warehouses, unless the enclosures
within the buildings of the knitting company at Racine and Stevens
Point be counted such. The receipts themselves would put the
holders thereof on notice of these facts. And at Racine and Stevens
Point, the security company gave no evidences to the public of its
presence. No signs were displayed to the passer-by. No business was
sought from the public. The only property within the enclosures was
the knitting company's. The knitting company did not want storage
room, but collaterals, which the security company agreed to furnish
for a commission upon the amount thereof plus all expenses. The
security company's only agents on the scene were the agents of the
knitting company, who cared for and shipped out its goods. That
this was the only business contemplated is disclosed by the
agreement that the knitting
Page 206 U. S. 422
company should be restored to full possession of the premises at
any time it returned the outstanding receipts. This, in our
judgment, was not warehousing within the law of Wisconsin."
Also:
"So far from the security company's maintaining an open,
exclusive, unequivocal possession during the two years this
arrangement was carried on, it seems to us that the security
company might as well have been eliminated, and the knitting
company have employed its own stockkeepers and shipping clerks as
custodians for intending lenders, directly, instead of indirectly
through the security company. In that view, this becomes one of the
cases 'in which the exclusive power of the so-called bailee,
Union Trust Co. v. Wilson, 198 U. S.
530,
198 U. S. 537, tapers away
to nothingness.
Drury v. Moors, 171 Mass. 252;
Bank v.
Jagode, 186 Pa. 556.'"
The actual transactions in the case at bar differ radically from
the facts as stated in
Union Trust Co. v. Wilson, supra.
The court there held that there was sufficient proof to show a
change of possession, and that the transaction was valid within the
law of the State of Illinois. Assuming the law of Wisconsin to be
the same on the subject of possession by the pledgee of the
property pledged, the facts in this case are so different from the
Wilson case as to prevent that case from forming a
foundation for holding there was a sufficient change of possession
here to make the pledge a valid one.
We are satisfied with the decision of the courts below upon the
merits.
There is, however, an important matter which has been raised by
the appellants aside from the merits. That is whether a trustee in
bankruptcy can question the validity of these receipts, or the
sufficiency of the alleged transfer of the property belonging to
the bankrupt knitting company, to constitute a pledge of such
property. The right is denied by the appellants, and it is
contended that the transfers were valid between the parties; that
the trustee in bankruptcy takes only the title and right of the
bankrupt, and therefore he cannot assert a right not possessed by
the knitting company.
Page 206 U. S. 423
It is no new doctrine that the assignee or trustee in bankruptcy
stands in the shoes of the bankrupt, and that the property in his
hands, unless otherwise provided in the Bankrupt Act, is subject to
all of the equities impressed upon it in the hands of the bankrupt.
This has been the rule under former acts and is now the rule.
Hewit v. Berlin Machine Works, 194 U.
S. 296;
Thompson v. Fairbanks, 196 U.
S. 516,
196 U. S. 526;
Humphrey v. Tatman, 198 U. S. 91;
York Mfg. Co. v. Cassell, 201 U.
S. 344,
201 U. S.
352.
In the
Hewit case, there was a sale of property to the
bankrupt upon condition that the title should not pass until the
property was paid for. Such a conditional sale was good in New York
state, where the contract was made, and it was held good as against
the trustee in bankruptcy, because it was good against the
bankrupt. It was further held that the property was not, under the
facts and the law of New York, such as might have been levied upon
and sold under judicial process against the bankrupt, nor could she
have transferred it, within the meaning of § 70 of the
Bankrupt Act. It was a clear case for the application of the
doctrine that the trustee stands in the shoes of the bankrupt, and
there was nothing in the act which made any inconsistent
provision.
In
Thompson v. Fairbanks, the question arose as to the
validity of a chattel mortgage (which had been duly filed) upon
after-acquired property as against the trustee in bankruptcy of the
mortgagor. The mortgagee took possession of the mortgaged property
before the filing of the petition in bankruptcy, and the question
raised was whether there was a violation of any provision of the
Bankruptcy Act. It was held that the validity of such a mortgage
was a local, and not a federal, question, and that in such case,
this Court would follow the decisions of the state court, and as in
Vermont such a mortgage was good, and the taking possession of the
property related back to the date of the mortgage, even as against
an assignee in insolvency, it was good as against the trustee in
bankruptcy. It was said:
"Under the present Bankrupt Act,
Page 206 U. S. 424
the trustee takes the property of the bankrupt, in cases
unaffected by fraud, in the same plight and condition that the
bankrupt himself held it, and subject to all the equities impressed
upon it in the hands of the bankrupt, except in cases where there
has been a conveyance or encumbrance of the property which is void
as against the trustee by some positive provision of the act."
As there was no provision therein making such a mortgage void,
the mortgagee was permitted to enforce his mortgage as a valid
instrument, and to retain possession of the property. There was no
fraud in fact and no transfer of any property in fraud of
creditors, and the property was not, at the time of the filing of
the petition in bankruptcy or at the time of the adjudication,
liable to levy and sale under judicial process against the
bankrupt. It had already been taken possession of by the mortgagee
under a valid mortgage, and was not subject to any other liability
of the mortgagor.
Humphrey v. Tatman reiterates the principle that
whether such a mortgage as is referred to in the
Fairbanks
case is good or bad depends upon the state law.
In
York Mfg. Co. v. Cassell, the same question arose as
in the
Hewit case. There was a sale of property to one who
thereafter became bankrupt, with a condition that no title to the
property should pass until it was paid for. Such a conditional sale
was good under the Ohio law, where the instrument was executed,
except as to those creditors who, between the time of the execution
of the instrument and the filing thereof, had obtained some
specific lien upon the property. There were no such creditors, and
hence there was no one who could question the validity of the
instrument at the time the trustee's title would have accrued,
unless it was the trustee in bankruptcy. He made the claim that the
adjudication in bankruptcy was equivalent to a judgment or an
attachment or other specific lien on the property, so as to prevent
the vendor from asserting its title and its legal right to remove
the property on account of the nonpayment of the purchase price. We
held that, as he conditional sale was valid
Page 206 U. S. 425
by the law of Ohio, except as to a certain class of creditors,
if there were no such creditors, there was no one who could
question the validity of the instrument; that the adjudication in
bankruptcy did not give the trustee the right to do so, because in
that case the adjudication did not operate as the equivalent of a
judgment or attachment or other specific lien on the property. The
trustee represented no one who had that right, as there were no
creditors who had liens on the property when the title of the
trustee to the property of the bankrupt accrued. Section 70 of the
Bankrupt Act had no application. T here was no property within
either the fourth or fifth subdivision of that section. The fact
that, if there had been a creditor of the bankrupt of the class
mentioned who had obtained a specific lien on the property prior to
the adjudication in bankruptcy, the trustee could in that case have
enforced the same, did not make any difference, because no such
thing had been done when the adjudication in bankruptcy was made.
This Court had theretofore approved the remark in
In re New
York Economical Printing Company, 110 F. 514, 518, that the
present Bankrupt Act contemplates that a lien good as against the
bankrupt and all of his creditors at the time of the filing of the
petition in bankruptcy should remain undisturbed.
Hewit
case,
supra. Upon these facts, it was reiterated that the
trustee takes the property as the bankrupt held it.
The case at bar bears no resemblance in its facts to the cases
just cited. There was no valid disposition of the property in the
case before us, or any valid lien. The so-called warehouse receipts
issued by the warehousing company to the knitting company, upon the
facts of this case, gave no lien under the law in Wisconsin, in
which state they were issued. In such case, this Court follows the
state court.
Etheridge v. Sperry, 139 U.
S. 266;
Dooley v. Pease, 180 U.
S. 126.
By § 70a, the trustee in bankruptcy is vested, by operation
of law, with the title of the bankrupt to all property transferred
by him in fraud of his creditors, and to all property which, prior
to the filing of the petition, might have been
Page 206 U. S. 426
levied upon and sold by judicial process against him; and, by
subdivision (e) of the same section, the trustee in bankruptcy may
avoid any transfer by the bankrupt of his property which any
creditor of the bankrupt might avoid, and may recover the property
so transferred, or its value. Here are special provisions placing
the title to the property transferred by fraud or otherwise, as
mentioned, in the trustee in bankruptcy, and giving him the power
to avoid the same.
The title to this property was in the knitting company. There
had been no valid pledge of it, because the possession had been at
all times, in the knitting company, and it could have been levied
upon and sold under judicial process against the knitting company
at the time of the adjudication in bankruptcy. The security company
had, of course, full knowledge that the knitting company in fact at
least, shared in the possession of the property. It was itself an
actor, or it acquiesced in the arrangement under which it had, at
most, but a partial possession, and even that was subject to the
control of the knitting company.
The method taken to store the property was, as found by the
district court, a mere device or subterfuge to enable the bankrupt
to hypothecate the receipts, and thus raise money upon secret liens
on property in the possession of the pledgeor and under its
control, and such scheme, the court said, ought not to receive
judicial sanction. Such a scheme, under the facts, and as carried
out in this case, and with regard to Wisconsin law, was a fraud in
fact, and neither the receipts nor the so-called pledge could be
asserted against any of the creditors.
It was held by the circuit court of appeals, in a case arising
in Wisconsin relative to a chattel mortgage which gave power to the
mortgagor to make sales from the mortgaged property for his own use
and benefit, that such a mortgage was fraudulent in fact so it
could not be asserted even against general creditors, citing
Wisconsin cases.
In re Antigo Screen Door Co., 123 F. 249,
254.
Page 206 U. S. 427
A further question was ruled upon in the above-cited case. It
was in respect to a second mortgage upon chattels, which had not
been properly filed, but the mortgagee had taken possession of the
mortgaged property prior to the filing of the petition in
bankruptcy, although long subsequent to the giving of the mortgage,
and it was held that the mortgagee might hold the property as
against the trustee in bankruptcy representing general creditors.
There was no fraud in fact alleged. It was said by Judge Jenkins,
in delivering the opinion of the court:
"When the statute (Rev.Stat. Wis. 1898, § 2313) declares
that a chattel mortgage shall be invalid against any other person
than the parties thereto, unless possession be delivered and
retained, or the mortgage be filed, there being no actual fraud and
no collusive delay in the filing or the taking of possession, we
think the statute must be construed to mean that the omission to
file or to take possession renders the mortgage invalid only as to
the creditor who, by execution or attachment, has acquired a lien
upon the property."
The case illustrates the distinction taken between fraud in fact
and the mere failure to file a mortgage otherwise valid against the
world.
Under the circumstances of this case, we are satisfied there was
no valid pledge and no equitable lien in favor of the interveners
which would take precedence of the title of the trustee by virtue
of the special provisions of the Bankrupt Act.
The decree is
Affirmed.