U.S. Supreme Court
Matter of Riggs, 214 U.S. 9
(1909)
In re Mary Hatch Riggs
No. 11, Original
Argued April 12, 1909
Decided May 17, 1909
214 U.S.
9
APPLICATION AS ADMINISTRATRIX OF THE GOODS, CHATTELS AND
CREDITS OF CLARENCE B. RIGGS, DECEASED, IN BEHALF OF HERSELF AND
ALL OTHERS SIMILARLY SITUATED, FOR A WRIT OF MANDAMUS AGAINST THE
HONORABLES GEORGE C. HOLT AND CHARLES M. HOUGH, JUDGES OF THE
DISTRICT COURT OF THE UNITED STATES FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF
NEW YORK, AND AGAINST THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE UNITED STATES FOR
THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK
Syllabus
Mandamus is not a proper substitute for a writ of error.
Where the bankruptcy court, in adjudicating a corporation a
bankrupt, is called upon to decide, and does decide, a question of
fact, or of mixed law and fact, that adjudication cannot be
reviewed by proceedings in mandamus.
In re Pollitz,
206 U. S. 323;
In re Winn, 213 U. S. 458.
Where the evidence sustaining an application for an adjudication
in bankruptcy is not disclosed, this Court will not assume that it
was not sufficient.
Mandamus to the bankruptcy court to dismiss proceedings in
bankruptcy against a corporation because the petition failed to
show that the principal business of the bankrupt was trading,
printing, publishing, mining, manufacturing or a mercantile
pursuit, refused.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
Page 214 U. S. 12
MR. JUSTICE BREWER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an application by the petitioner for mandamus against
Judges Holt and Hough of the District Court of the United States
for the Southern District of New York and the
Page 214 U. S. 13
district court of that district, commanding them and each of
them to dismiss all proceedings in bankruptcy against the New York
Tunnel Company, or, in the alternative, to reopen the adjudication
in bankruptcy, and allow the petitioner or any party in interest to
appear and be heard in opposition to the petition and adjudication
thereof, or, in still further alternative, forbidding them from
taking any further proceedings in the matter of the tunnel company,
its property, assets, and effects.
The facts, briefly stated, are that the tunnel company was
engaged in constructing a tunnel from New York to Brooklyn, to be
used for the purpose of a railroad between the Boroughs of
Manhattan and Brooklyn. On May 23, 1907, certain creditors of the
tunnel company filed a petition in bankruptcy in the District Court
of the Southern District of New York, upon which petition, on May
29, 1907, Judge Holt entered an order adjudicating it a bankrupt
and appointing a receiver. By direction of the bankruptcy court,
the receiver proceeded with the construction of the tunnel and
successfully completed the work. At the time of the petition in
bankruptcy, this applicant had an action pending in the state court
to recover damages on account of the death of her husband,
resulting, as charged, from the negligence of the tunnel company.
On May 31, 1907, Judge Holt issued an order to show cause why that
action should not be restrained, and proof of the claim be made
before a special master. An order of restraint was granted upon
this application, which was afterwards set aside by the court of
appeals, and the applicant, on May 25, 1908, reduced her claim to
judgment.
It is contended by the applicant that, although the petition in
bankruptcy alleged that the tunnel company was "engaged in the
business of building and contracting," it failed to show that the
principal business of the company was "manufacturing, trading,
printing, publishing, mining, or mercantile pursuits," that being
the language of the Bankruptcy Act of 1898, as amended.
Page 214 U. S. 14
We have recently given full consideration to the circumstances
under which mandamus will be issued by this Court to restrain the
action of inferior tribunals.
In re Winn, 213 U.
S. 458. Hence, we deem it unnecessary to go into other
details of the proceedings in the bankruptcy or the state courts,
nor to consider the many questions fully and elaborately presented
in briefs and argued by counsel. Obviously this application is
largely in the nature of a writ of error to review the action of
the District Court of the Southern District of New York and its
judges, and a writ of mandamus is no proper substitute for a writ
of error.
The allegation in the petition in bankruptcy is general in its
terms, that the tunnel company is engaged in the business of
building and contracting, but it fails to disclose the particular
kind of work for which it is contracting or which it is engaged in
building. It might be inferred from the work which it was shown it
was doing in this particular case, as well as from its name, that
its principal business was that of contracting for the construction
of tunnels, but that would be only an inference, and not
conclusive. Its principal business may have been that of
manufacturing, and contracting for such manufacturing, and this
particular work only a small part of that which it was generally
engaged in. What evidence was presented to the district court to
sustain the application for an adjudication in bankruptcy is not
disclosed. We may not assume that it was insufficient, or that it
failed to make certain or probable that the principal business of
the company was that of manufacturing and contracting for such
manufacturing. We do not deem it necessary to decide the question
which is argued by counsel, whether the adjudication of the
bankruptcy court can be challenged collaterally, or whether,
indeed, this is only a collateral attack.
Manson v.
Williams, 213 U. S. 453. We
rest our conclusion upon the proposition that the district court,
in adjudicating the tunnel company a bankrupt, was called upon to
decide, and did decide, a question of fact or of mixed law and
fact, and that such adjudication cannot be reviewed
Page 214 U. S. 15
by proceedings in mandamus.
In re Pollitz, 206 U.
S. 323,
206 U. S. 331;
In re Winn, 213 U. S. 458.
The rule is discharged and the writ of mandamus
denied.