Under the Bankruptcy Law, as amended in 1903 and 110
[§§ 23
b, 6O
b, and 2(20)], a suit by the
trustee to set aside a transfer of property, as a preference
voidable under § 60
b, and to recover the property or
its value, is cognizable by the district court within whose
district the property is situate, though not the court in which the
bankruptcy proceeding is pending, and without regard to the consent
of the defendant or the residence of the trustee, the bankrupt, or
the defendant. P.
249 U. S.
547.
In this respect, the jurisdiction is the same whether the suit
is based on § 60
b, or §§ 67
e and
70
e, as amended.
Id.
Such a suit is local, in the sense of Jud.Code § 54, so
that a defendant residing in another district of the same state may
be served there with original process. P.
249 U. S.
550.
Such local suits, apart from the terms of the Bankruptcy Act,
are excepted by § 51 of the Code from the general provision
that a defendant may not be sued in any district other than that of
which he is an inhabitant.
Id.
Jurisdiction of the district court over a suit by a trustee in
bankruptcy to set aside a transfer
held not affected by
the pendency of a prior action for damages brought by the
transferee against the bankrupt in a state court, which acquired no
lien on the property.
Id.
The plaintiff's claim
held to be sufficiently
substantial to entitle him to a decision on the merits in the court
below.
Id.
Reversed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 249 U. S. 546
MR. JUSTICE VAN DEVANTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This suit is equity was brought in the District Court for the
Southern District of Texas by a trustee in bankruptcy. A motion to
dismiss the bill for want of jurisdiction was sustained, and the
propriety of that ruling is the sole question presented on this
direct appeal.
See Judicial Code, § 238; c. 22, 38
Stat. 804.
The allegations of the bill are to this effect: March 17, 1917,
a petition in bankruptcy against Ford C. Cotten was filed in the
District Court for the Northern District of Texas, on which in due
course he was adjudged a bankrupt. The plaintiff became the
trustee. On December 22, 1916, and for some time theretofore,
Cotten was the owner and in possession of certain real and personal
property in Wharton County, Texas, and on that day transferred the
same to James R. Adams, the defendant. Adams was then asserting
that Cotten was indebted to him in the sum of $45,311 for property
obtained from him through deceit and fraud, and a suit to enforce
that claim was pending in a state court in Collin County, Texas. In
August, 1916, a writ of attachment in that suit had been levied on
the property here in question, but, under the laws of Texas, the
attachment lien was void and of no effect. The transfer from Cotten
to Adams was made with the purpose of effecting a settlement of
that suit and the claim involved therein, and, at the time of the
transfer, the parties entered into a written agreement wherein it
was stipulated that, if Cotten was not adjudged a bankrupt on a
petition presented within four months after the transfer was filed
for record, Adams should dismiss the suit and pay the unpaid costs,
and, if on a petition so filed Cotten was adjudged a bankrupt,
Adams should have the
Page 249 U. S. 547
right to prosecute the suit to judgment and to enforce all liens
acquired through the attachment. The deed transferring the real
property was filed for record shortly after it was executed, but
the agreement never was so filed, and constituted a secret
understanding between the parties. Following the transfer, Adams
took possession of the property, real and personal, was still in
possession, claiming title and exercising the rights of an owner,
when this bill was brought, and had refused, on demand made, to
surrender the property to the trustee. At the time of the transfer,
Cotten was insolvent, and intended thereby to effect a preference
in favor of Adams, all of which the latter knew or had reasonable
cause to believe, and in fact the transfer resulted in such a
preference, for the assets were not sufficient to pay all
creditors. The property transferred was not exempt, but was such as
creditors lawfully could subject to the payment of their claims.
Some or all of the personalty has been disposed of by Adams. The
real property is in the Southern District of Texas, where this suit
was brought. Cotten and the trustee reside in the Northern
District, where the bankruptcy proceeding is pending, and Adams
resides in the Eastern District. The suit in the state court has
not been dismissed, but is still pending in substantially the same
condition as when the transfer was made.
The bill contains a prayer for the recovery of the real property
or its value, for an accounting as to the proceeds of the
personalty, and for other relief the detail and propriety of which
require no attention here.
The motion which the court below sustained challenged its
jurisdiction on the grounds (1) that the bill could not be brought
in that court without the defendant's consent, which was not given;
(2) that the bill was not brought in the district where the
bankruptcy proceeding was pending or in that of the residence of
the defendant, and (3) that the subject matter of the bill already
was involved
Page 249 U. S. 548
in the pending suit in the state court in Collin County, a court
of competent jurisdiction, and adequate relief could be had in that
suit.
On its face, the bill shows very plainly that it is brought to
avoid a transfer by the bankrupt which the trustee regards as a
voidable preference within the meaning of § 60
b of
the Bankruptcy Act, and to recover the property transferred or its
value. There are also present some indications of a purpose to
claim relief under §§ 67
e and 70
e, but
this does not call for special comment, for, in point of
jurisdiction, there is no distinction between a suit under these
sections and one under § 60
b.
It well may be that, under the original terms of the Bankruptcy
Act, c. 541, 30 Stat. 544, the bill could not have been brought in
the court below without the defendant's consent,
Bardes v.
Hawarden Bank, 178 U. S. 524, but
the act was amended materially in 1903 and again in 1910 (c. 487,
32 Stat. 797; c. 412, 36 Stat. 838), and it was after those
amendments became effective that the bill was brought. The
pertinent provisions, with the amendments affecting jurisdiction in
italics, are as follows:
Section 23
b:
"Suits by the trustee shall only be brought or prosecuted in the
courts where the bankrupt whose estate is being administered by
such trustee might have brought or prosecuted them if proceedings
in bankruptcy had not been instituted, unless by consent of the
proposed defendant,
except suits for the recovery of property
under section sixty, subdivision b; section sixty-seven,
subdivision e, and section seventy, subdivision e."
Section 23
b:
"Suits by the trustee shall only be brought or prosecuted in the
courts where the bankrupt whose estate is being administered by
such trustee might have brought or prosecuted them if proceedings
in bankruptcy had not been instituted, unless by consent of the
proposed defendant,
except suits for the recovery of property
under section sixty, subdivision b; section sixty-seven,
subdivision e, and § seventy, subdivision e."
Section 60
b:
"If a bankrupt shall have procured or suffered a judgment to be
entered against him in favor of any person or have made a transfer
of any of his property, and if, at the time of the transfer, or of
the entry of the judgment, or of the recording or registering of
the transfer if by law recording or registering thereof is
required, and
Page 249 U. S. 549
being within four months before the filing of the petition in
bankruptcy or after the filing thereof and before the adjudication,
the bankrupt be insolvent and the judgment or transfer then operate
as a preference, and the person receiving it or to be benefited
thereby, or his agent acting therein, shall then have reasonable
cause to believe that the enforcement of such judgment or transfer
would effect a preference, it shall be voidable by the trustee, and
he may recover the property or its value from such person.
And,
for the purpose of such recovery, any court of bankruptcy, as
hereinbefore defined, and any state court which would have had
jurisdiction if bankruptcy had not intervened, shall have
concurrent jurisdiction. *"
Sections 1(8) and 2 define "courts of bankruptcy" as including
the several district courts of the United States, and § 2(20)
invests the courts of bankruptcy with power to
"
exercise ancillary jurisdiction over persons or property
within their respective territorial limits in aid of a receiver or
trustee appointed in any bankruptcy proceedings pending in any
other court of bankruptcy."
The amendments are couched in plain words, and effect a material
change in the jurisdiction of suits by trustees to avoid
preferential transfers and recover the property or its value under
§ 60
b. The exception ingrafted on § 23
b
takes such suits out of the restrictive provisions of that section;
the sentence added to § 60
b makes them cognizable in
the courts of bankruptcy, as well as in such state courts as could
have entertained them if bankruptcy had not intervened, and the new
clause in § 2 dispels any doubt that otherwise might exist
respecting the power of a court of bankruptcy other than the one in
which the bankruptcy proceeding is pending to entertain such a suit
where the property sought to be recovered is within its territorial
limits.
Page 249 U. S. 550
The court below is a court of bankruptcy, and the property in
question is within its territorial limits, so the jurisdiction
under the terms of the Bankruptcy Act is plain. The suit is a local
one in the sense of § 54 of the Judicial Code, and this
enabled the court to reach the defendant, who resides in another
district in the same state, by original process sent to and served
in the district of his residence. Such a suit, apart from the terms
of the Bankruptcy Act, is excepted by § 51 of the Code from
the general provision that a defendant may not be sued in any
district other than that of which he is an inhabitant.
Of the objection based on the pendency of the suit in the state
court in Collin County it is enough to say that the trustee is not
a party to that suit, and that it has none of the elements of a
suit to avoid the transfer in question. Whether, if this were
otherwise, it would affect the jurisdiction of the court below as a
court of the United States we need not consider.
See Louisville
Trust Co. v. Knott, 191 U. S. 225;
Courtney v. Pradt, 196 U. S. 89;
Mississippi Railroad Commission v. Louisville & Nashville
R. Co., 225 U. S. 272,
225 U. S.
279.
We conclude that the court should have overruled the objections
urged against its jurisdiction, but we intimate no opinion on the
merits other than that the case made by the bill has enough of
substance to entitle the plaintiff to a decision therein in the
court below in regular course.
See Geneva Furniture Co. v.
Karpen, 238 U. S. 254,
238 U. S.
258-259.
Decree reversed.
* A sentence like that in italics was added to §§
67
e and 70
e by c. 487, 32 Stat. 797.