1. The Court will not answer on certificate questions unrelated
to the pending controversy, or questions unnecessarily general, or
questions which admit of one answer in one set of circumstances and
a different answer in another, the differentiating circumstances
being imperfectly disclosed. P.
298 U. S.
162.
2. The question whether and to what extent a bank owing money to
a railway and owning some of the railway's bonds may be allowed to
set them off in an action on the debt brought by trustees appointed
for the railway in reorganization proceedings under § 77 of
the Bankruptcy Act is not a question that can be answered on
certificate without full knowledge of all the relevant particulars
of the situation. P.
298 U. S.
164.
Certificate dismissed.
Questions certified with relation to an appeal to the court
below from a judgment, 11 F. Supp. 929, allowing a setoff in favor
of the Bank, in an action by the trustees appointed for the
Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Company in
reorganization proceedings.
Page 298 U. S. 161
MR. JUSTICE CARDOZO delivered the opinion of the Court.
On June 7, 1933, the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway
Company filed in the United States District Court for the Northern
District of Illinois its petition for reorganization under §
77 of the Bankruptcy Act.
See 11 U.S.C. § 205.
* At that time,
the railroad had to its credit the sum of $36,908.72 in a checking
account with the Northwestern National Bank & Trust Company of
Minneapolis. The bank was then the owner of First and Refunding
Gold bonds issued by the railroad of the par value of $100,000, not
yet in default in respect of principal or interest. On June 19,
1933, seven days after receiving a copy of an order approving the
petition for reorganization, the bank set off the deposit against
the bonds by appropriate entries upon its books of account.
Trustees of the estate of the railroad were appointed by the court
in accordance with the statute, though whether before the attempted
setoff or thereafter the record does not tell us. They brought suit
against the bank in the United States District Court for Minnesota,
not the court of bankruptcy administration, to recover the amount
of the deposit set off against the bonds. After answer by the bank
and a trial of the issues, the court entered a decree upholding the
validity of the setoff, with a correction not now material as to
the amount of the deposit. 11 F. Supp. 929. The trustees appealed
to the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit. That court,
after certifying the facts substantially as summarized above,
requested our instructions upon the following questions (Judicial
Code, § 239, 28 U.S.C. § 346):
Page 298 U. S. 162
"Question 1. Does the right of setoff recognized by § 68(a)
of the Bankruptcy Act apply to reorganization proceedings under
§ 77 of that act?"
"Question 2. If the first question be answered in the
affirmative, can a bank which owns the unmatured bonds of a
railroad corporation set off a deposit account of the railroad with
the bank against the bonds, upon the filing by the railroad of a
petition for reorganization under § 77 of the Bankruptcy Act,
alleging that the railroad is unable to meet its debts as they
mature?"
"Question 3. If the first and second questions be answered in
the affirmative, may the United States District Court, for the
District of Minnesota, in the suit by the trustees of the
railroad's estate to recover the amount deducted from the account
of t e railroad by the bank under the claimed right of setoff,
recognize and establish as a proper setoff by the bank one which
was not made until after the filing of the petition for
reorganization and which has never been ordered, authorized,
approved, or consented to by the court in which that petition was
filed and approved?"
This Court has had occasion recently to restate the rules
announced in earlier decisions as to the mode of formulating
questions coming here upon certificates.
Mantle Lamp Co. v.
Aluminum Products Co., 297 U. S. 638. We
will not answer abstract questions unrelated to the pending
controversy, or questions unnecessarily general, or questions which
admit of one answer in one set of circumstances and a different
answer in another; the differentiating circumstances being
imperfectly disclosed.
White v. Johnson, 282 U.
S. 367,
282 U. S. 371;
United States v. Mayer, 235 U. S. 55,
235 U. S. 66;
United States v. Hall, 131 U. S. 50,
131 U. S. 52;
Webster v.
Cooper, 10 How. 54,
51 U. S. 55;
Hallowell v. United States, 209 U.
S. 101,
209 U. S. 107;
General Motors Corp. v. United States, 286 U. S.
49,
286 U. S. 63. The
questions now before
Page 298 U. S. 163
us have been framed without adequate regard to these established
rules of practice.
Question No. 1 is too general and abstract, its relation to the
controversy being indirect and problematical.
"In all cases of mutual debts or mutual credits between the
estate of a bankrupt and a creditor, the account shall be stated
and one debt shall be set off against the other, and the balance
only shall be allowed or paid."
Bankruptcy Act § 68a, 11 U.S.C. § 108(a). The precept,
framed on the example of ancient laws across the seas (4 Anne, c.
17, § 11; 5 Geo. II, c. 30, § 28), is now applicable by
force of statute to the liquidation of estates in bankruptcy. We
are asked to announce broadly whether it is applicable with similar
inclusiveness to proceedings to reorganize a railroad, though the
question tells us nothing as to the facts behind the controversy.
"The court has repeatedly held that it will not answer questions of
objectionable generality."
White v. Johnson, supra; United
States v. Worley, 281 U. S. 339,
281 U. S. 340;
United States v. Mayer, supra. Without a showing of the
facts, an answer to this question would declare a mere abstraction
which might seem too narrow or too broad thereafter when the facts
were shown forth. One must see the controversy in its setting
before the implications of a ruling can be prefigured with
assurance.
Question No. 2 is dependent, by its terms, upon an affirmative
answer to question No. 1. It is open, however, to objections on its
own account. Like question No. 1, it is far too general in its
range. Moreover, it is silent as to facts which a court of equity
should know before hazarding an answer. A proceeding to reorganize
is not a bankruptcy, though an amendment to the bankruptcy act
creates and regulates the remedy. From the fact, without more, that
such a proceeding has been initiated, one cannot know that it will
be necessary to have recourse to § 68,
Page 298 U. S. 164
which was meant in its enactment to prescribe the rule of setoff
upon a distribution of the assets. That stage of administration, or
the analogous stage of a revision of the debts, may never be
attained in a proceeding to reorganize, though a petition has been
approved and trustees have been appointed. If a plan of
reorganization is not proposed or accepted, or, being proposed and
accepted, is not confirmed by the court within a reasonable time,
the whole proceeding may be dismissed, § 77(c)(7), the title
to the estate thus reverting to the debtor. By that time, there may
even be ability to pay demands as they mature. What is done at the
beginning amounts to little more than a provisional sequestration
to give protection for the future.
The right of setoff must fit itself to these procedural
conditions. It is not susceptible of definition in the abstract,
without reference to the time or occasion of the controversy or the
relation of the suit to the primary proceeding. Irrespective of the
acceptance or confirmation of a plan, the trustees must have the
power to gather in the assets and keep the business going. To
exercise that power, they may find it necessary to sue, and the
suit may turn upon the right of setoff, as it does in the case at
hand. In a suit for such a purpose, a suit collateral to the main
proceeding and initiated at a time when the outcome of that
proceeding is still unknown and unknowable, § 68 of the
statute does not control the disposition of the controversy
ex
proprio vigore. It governs, if at all, by indirection and
analogy according to the circumstances. The rule to be accepted for
the purpose of such a suit is that enforced by courts of equity,
which differs from the rule in bankruptcy chiefly in its greater
flexibility, the rule in bankruptcy being framed in adaptation to
standardized conditions, and that in equity varying with the needs
of the occasion, though remaining
Page 298 U. S. 165
constant, like the statute, in the absence of deflecting forces.
Scott v. Armstrong, 146 U. S. 499,
146 U. S. 507;
North Chicago Rolling Mill Co. v. St. Louis Ore & Steel
Co., 152 U. S. 596,
152 U. S. 615;
Scammon v. Kimball, 92 U. S. 362,
92 U. S. 366;
Sawyer v.
Hoag, 17 Wall. 610,
84 U. S. 622;
Clark Bros. & Co. v. Pou, 20 F.2d 74, 77-78;
Greene v. Darling, 5 Mason, 201, 210 (Story, J.);
Gray v. Rollo,
18 Wall. 629,
85 U. S. 632;
Dade v. Irwin's
Executor, 2 How. 383,
43 U. S.
390-391;
Studley v. Boylston National Bank,
229 U. S. 523,
229 U. S.
528-529;
Pond v. Harwood, 139 N.Y. 111, 119, 34
N.E. 768;
Frank v. Mercantile National Bank, 182 N.Y. 264,
268, 74 N.E. 841;
Lockwood v. Beckwith, 6 Mich. 168, 175;
Story, Equity Jurisprudence (14th Ed.) §§ 1871, 1872.
The defects of the certificate, its incomplete disclosure of the
facts conditioning an answer, are thus exhibited in clear relief.
"Insolvency" in proceedings to reorganize (§ 77) is often very
different from "insolvency" in ordinary bankruptcy (§ 1(15)).
There is at least a possibility that, at times, the difference may
be great enough to vary the resulting equities. When things are
called by the same name, it is easy for the mind to slide into an
assumption that the verbal identity is accompanied in all its
sequences by identity of meaning. A court of equity, in allowing or
rejecting setoff, will not be guilty of that fallacy. To know "the
justice of the particular case" (
Scott v. Armstrong,
supra; Story, Equity Jurisprudence,
supra), one must
know the case in its particulars. More concretely, one must know
the value of the assets, the temporary or permanent character of
the debtor's inability to pay its debts as they mature, the liens,
if there are any, superior to the bonds in controversy, the
probability of an understanding that the bonds, though unmatured,
would be used to cancel the deposits, all the circumstances, in
brief, that might affect the judgment of the chancellor in weighing
the competing equities of the
Page 298 U. S. 166
interested factions and shaping his decree accordingly. We have
no thought at this time to foreshadow the result of an exploring
expedition directed to those ends. When all the facts are known,
they may be found to offer no excuse for a departure from the rule
in bankruptcy which, as indicated already, is generally, even if
not always, the rule in equity as well. They may point, on the
other hand, to the need for an exception, or may even lead to a
decree in the nature of a compromise, the moneys being paid into
the registry of the court to abide its future action. A decision
balancing the equities must await the exposure of a concrete
situation, with all its qualifying incidents. What we disclaim at
the moment is a willingness to put the law into a straitjacket by
subjecting it to a pronouncement of needless generality.
Question No. 3 is so framed as not to call for an answer unless
an affirmative answer is given to questions Nos. 1 and 2.
Our conclusion as to the defective form of the certificate is
borne out in a striking way by the concession of the parties.
Before the argument on the questions, plaintiffs and defendant
joined in moving us for an order to bring up the whole case. That
motion was denied. Nothing in the nature of the controversy called
for a writ of certiorari in advance of a decision by the court of
intermediate appeal. The significant thing, however, is that, in
briefs submitted on that motion, both parties admitted that the
second question was defective. The plaintiffs said: the statement
"is not sufficiently complete to enable this Court to answer the
second question as applied to this case." The defendant made a like
objection. Plaintiffs and defendant fortified their general
criticism by the enumeration of particular defects.
The certificate is
Dismissed.
* The references in this opinion are to § 77 as enacted
March 3, 1933, 47 Stat. 1474, and not to the amendments of August
27, 1935, 49 Stat. 911, 926.