Section 24a of the Bankruptcy Act provides for appeals in
controversies arising in bankruptcy proceedings and controls a
proceeding brought by the trustee to restrain a landlord from
prosecuting a suit for rent in the state court. In such a case, the
appeal takes the course prescribed in the Circuit Court of Appeals
Act of 1891.
Although a case taken to the circuit court of appeals under
§ 7 of the Act of 1891 is not one of the class made final by
§ 6 of that act, the jurisdiction of this Court under § 6
relates solely to final orders of the district court reviewed by
the circuit court of appeals.
An interlocutory decree of the district court granting a
temporary injunction against prosecuting a suit in the state court
is not a final order, and from the judgment of the circuit court of
appeals affirming it there is no appeal to this Court.
This Court cannot entertain an appeal from a judgment of the
circuit court of appeals upon a petition to revise under § 24b
of the Bankruptcy Act.
Appeal from 193 F. 616 dismissed.
The facts, which involve the jurisdiction of this Court of
appeals in controversies arising in bankruptcy proceedings, are
stated in the opinion.
Page 232 U. S. 380
MR. JUSTICE DAY delivered the memorandum opinion of the
court:
An involuntary petition in bankruptcy was filed against the Keck
Manufacturing Company on February 8, 1909, in the District Court of
the United States for the Southern District of Ohio, and it was
later adjudicated a bankrupt. Upon application, a receiver was
appointed for the Duhme Jewelry Company, an adjunct of the Keck
Manufacturing Company, all of the stock of the former being owned
by the latter company, and subsequently the receiver, in pursuance
of an order of the court, transferred all the property and assets
of the Duhme Jewelry Company to the trustee of the bankrupt, by him
to be kept under separate account.
The Mitchell Store Building Company had leased certain premises
to the Duhme Jewelry Company, which on June 30, 1910, the rent
being paid to that time, the latter company vacated, although the
lease had not yet expired. The Mitchell Store Building Company
brought suit against the Duhme Jewelry Company in the Common Pleas
Court of Hamilton County, Ohio, to recover under the lease, also
applying to the district court for an order on the trustee to
withhold sufficient in amount of the assets of the Duhme Jewelry
Company to satisfy its claim, which was eventually refused by the
referee, and is now before the district judge upon petition for
review.
Upon the petition of the trustee, the Mitchell Store Building
Company was made a party to the bankruptcy proceeding in the
district court, and later the trustee
Page 232 U. S. 381
sought to restrain that company from prosecuting its suit in the
state court. The district judge granted a temporary injunction,
and, upon appeal, the circuit court of appeals affirmed the order
of the district court. There was also a petition to review the
order of the district court granting the temporary injunction, but
that was not passed upon by the circuit court of appeals. The case
was then brought to this Court by appeal, the petition for appeal
stating that
"this cause is one in which the United States Circuit Court of
Appeals for the sixth circuit has not final jurisdiction, and that
it is a proper cause to be reviewed by the Supreme Court of the
United States on appeal."
The jurisdiction of the appellate courts of the United States,
including this Court, under the Bankruptcy Act is regulated by
§§ 24 and 25 of that act. Under the latter section,
appeals may be taken in certain cases from the district court to
the circuit court of appeals, and, under certain limitations,
appeals may be allowed from the latter court to this Court, from
final decisions of the circuit court of appeals allowing or
rejecting claims. This case does not come within § 25. Section
24a provides for appeals in controversies arising in bankruptcy
proceedings, and controls the present case. In such cases, the
appeal takes the course prescribed in the Circuit Court of Appeals
Act (Act of March 3, 1891, 26 Stat. 826, 828, c. 517).
See
Hewit v. Berlin Machine Works, 194 U.
S. 296;
Coder v. Arts, 213 U.
S. 223.
It is undertaken to sue out the appeal in this case from the
circuit court of appeals under § 6 of the Circuit Court of
Appeals Act, as the petition for allowance of appeal shows; while
the appeal to the circuit court of appeals was under § 7 of
that act, as amended (Act of June 6, 1900, 31 Stat. 660, c. 803),
providing for an appeal from an interlocutory order of a district
or circuit court granting an injunction to the circuit court of
appeals
Page 232 U. S. 382
in a cause in which an appeal from a final decree might have
been taken under the act. No provision is made in this section or
in any other for a further appeal concerning such interlocutory
orders to this Court.
Section 6 regulates appeals from the circuit court of appeals to
this Court, providing that cases not made final by that section
shall be entitled to review in this Court. While this case, taken
to the circuit court of appeals under § 7, is not one of the
class made final in that court by § 6, it is well settled that
this Court's jurisdiction under § 6 relates solely to final
orders of the district court reviewed by the circuit court of
appeals. The decree in the district court being an interlocutory
order granting a temporary injunction, and the circuit court of
appeals simply affirming that order, it is not a proper case for
appeal to this Court.
Kirwan v. Murphy, 170 U.
S. 205.
If this case were treated as an appeal from the judgment of the
circuit court of appeals upon a petition to revise under § 24b
of the Bankruptcy Act, this Court would not entertain the appeal.
Holden v. Stratton, 191 U. S. 115.
It follows that the appeal
Must be dismissed. The petition for a writ of certiorari
filed in this cause is denied.