Dushane v. Beall, 161 U. S. 513,
followed to effect that the two-year limitation provided by §
5057, Rev.Stat., applies only to suits growing out of disputes in
respect of property and of rights of property of the bankrupt which
came to the hands of the assignee to which adverse claims existed
while in the hands of the bankrupt and before assignment.
Hammond v. Whittredge, 204 U. S. 538.
When a cause of action accrues is a question of state law, and
where the judgment below determining who was in possession of the
land at given time rests wholly on state law and is sufficiently
broad to support the judgment without involving any federal right
asserted by plaintiff in error, this Court has no jurisdiction.
Writ of error to review 128 La. 544 dismissed.
The facts, which involve the jurisdiction of this Court to
review judgments of the state court resting on other than federal
grounds and the construction and application of § 5057,
Rev.Stat., are stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE DAY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a suit by Mrs. Annie E. Brewer as plaintiff, now
defendant in error, brought in the Civil District Court for the
Parish of Orleans, in the State of Louisiana, against
Page 231 U. S. 246
the Yazoo & Mississippi Valley Railroad Company, one of the
plaintiffs in error, to establish title to a certain portion of the
square of ground known as Square No. 150 in the City of New
Orleans. The district court decided the case in favor of Mrs.
Brewer, and the judgment was affirmed upon appeal to the Supreme
Court of Louisiana (
Brewer v. Yazoo & M. V. R. Co.,
128 La. 544), and the case is brought here.
Both parties claim title under one Henry Parish, who in 1848
appears to have been the owner of the land. He died in New York,
and on December 17, 1857, his will was there admitted to probate.
By the will, the square in controversy passed to Peter Conrey in
trust for the benefit of one Henry Parish Conrey, with directions
that it should be conveyed to him. In December, 1859, Henry Parish
Conrey died, and his succession was opened in the Second District
Court for the Parish of Orleans. Inventory was taken, including the
property now in question, and on June 9, 1860, James Grimshaw, as
administrator, executed a notarial act conveying the property to
George Brewer. On December 28, 1875, George Brewer was adjudged a
bankrupt, and on January 15, 1876, his estate, real and personal,
was conveyed to Charles H. Reed, as assignee, who, on November 23,
1876, by order of court, conveyed the property to Mrs. Annie E.
Brewer, plaintiff below. This is the title upon which Mrs. Brewer
relied.
The defendants claimed title from the fact that Daniel Parish on
April 11, 1868, appearing as a resident of the State of New York,
presented a petition to the Second District Court of the Parish of
Orleans, alleging that the will of Henry Parish had been admitted
to probate in that state, and that he had qualified as one of the
executors, and submitted an exemplified copy of the will and of the
proceedings, and prayed that the will be executed, which was
accordingly done. The executor, under an order of sale,
Page 231 U. S. 247
on April 25, 1871, conveyed the property in question to H. C.
Boucher. On January 15, 1872, Boucher sold to George W. Babcock,
and on September 8, 1896, the widow and heirs of Babcock sold to
Benjamin Recurt, and on March 31, 1897, Recurt sold to William
Laferriere, Etienne Gele, and Jean Marie Gele, and these last named
on November 22, 1898, sold a portion of Square 150 to the railroad
company.
For reasons dependent upon the law of the state, which we need
not now recite, the Supreme Court of Louisiana held that the
property had vested in Henry Parish Conrey, and that subsequently,
by the various means stated, had passed to the present defendant in
error, plaintiff below. It also held that the title of the railroad
company was fatally defective for reasons resting upon state law,
which are set forth in the opinion.
It is contended by the plaintiff in error that the record
presents a question decided in the supreme court of the state in
such manner as to deny rights asserted in that court under a
statute of the United States. This contention rests upon the
prescription claimed by Laferriere and the Geles, warrantors of the
railroad company (the various warrantors in title having been made
parties to the suit), which is said to arise under § 5057 of
the Revised Statutes of the United States, which reads as
follows:
"No suit, either 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 assignee, unless brought within
two years from the time when the cause of action accrued for or
against such assignee. And this provision shall not in any case
revive a right of action barred at the time when an assignee is
appointed."
The plaintiff in error insists that, under this statute, the
alleged right of action of Mrs. Brewer was barred, and
Page 231 U. S. 248
that this defense should have been available when invoked in the
state court.
The object of the statute is manifest, and its purposes are
kindred to other statutory provisions looking to a speedy
settlement of estates in bankruptcy. The section was before this
Court in
Dushane v. Beall, 161 U.
S. 513, and it was there held that it applied
"only to suits growing out of disputes in respect of property
and of rights of property of the bankrupt which came to the hands
of the assignee, in which adverse claims existed while in the hands
of the bankrupt and before assignment."
This construction of the act was adhered to in
Hammond v.
Whittredge, 204 U. S. 538,
204 U. S. 550.
It therefore follows that, in order to have barred the cause of
action asserted by Mr. Brewer in the present case, an adverse claim
in favor of the plaintiffs in error must have existed while the
property was in the hands of the bankrupt, and before assignment.
It is the contention of the plaintiffs in error that the claim
existed as against George Brewer, the bankrupt, and as against the
assignee as soon as he was appointed, growing out of the adverse
title recorded by Boucher and Babcock in 1871 and 1872. But this
view was rejected by the Supreme Court of Louisiana, and, dealing
with the prescription claimed for the warrantors because of §
5057, that court said (p. 557):
"The provision of law thus invoked applies, in terms, to causes
of action which have accrued 'for or against such assignee,' but
not to causes of action which arise between persons who purchase
property from an assignee and other persons, long after such
purchases, and long after the assignee has become
functus
officio, and it does not apply to this case, because, in
January, 1876, when Reed was appointed assignee in bankruptcy of
Brewer, the cause of action here sued on did not exist, since
neither the defendant nor any of its authors pretended at that time
to be in possession of the land here claimed, or had even done
anything
Page 231 U. S. 249
to interfere with the constructive possession following the
authentic act by which Brewer acquired his title."
Citing other decisions of the Supreme Court of Louisiana, the
learned counsel for the plaintiffs in error contends that the law
is otherwise -- a contention which is resisted with vigor by the
learned counsel for the defendant in error. The decision of the
Supreme Court of Louisiana in this case upon a question of
Louisiana law is conclusive upon this Court. The Supreme Court of
Louisiana held that no cause of action existed when Reed was
appointed assignee in bankruptcy, and that neither the defendant
nor any of its authors had made any pretense of possession of the
land in controversy, nor had they done anything to interfere with
the constructive possession following the act by which Brewer
acquired title. When the cause of action accrued to recover the
land was a question of state law, not depending upon the federal
statute. In deciding that no cause of action had accrued to Brewer,
available to the assignee, because the plaintiffs in error or those
under whom they claimed were not in possession of the land, the
court rested its decision wholly upon state law. The disposition of
this question by the state court in the manner we have stated
controlled the decision of the case, and was sufficiently broad to
support the judgment without involving the denial of any federal
right asserted by the plaintiff in error.
Waters-Pierce Oil Co.
v. Texas, 212 U. S. 112,
212 U. S.
116.
It follows that the writ of error must be dismissed.