An intervention to establish his lien by a mortgagee in a
petition by the trustee to sell property of the bankrupt is a
controversy arising in a bankruptcy proceeding within the meaning
of the Bankruptcy Act and the procedure under § 24
a is the
same as under Court of Appeals Act of 1891. General Order No. XXXVI
adopted under authority of § 24
a does not apply in such a
case, and no special findings of fact are required.
Under the law of Wisconsin, as construed by the highest court of
that state, a mortgage of personal property is not valid as against
creditors unless the possession be given to, and retained by, the
mortgagee,
Page 216 U. S. 546
or the mortgage be filed; nor can a mortgagor appropriate
proceeds of sale of the mortgaged property to his own use.
Held that the mortgages in this case, even in the absence
of intentional bad faith, are fraudulent in law, and void as to
creditors.
Although the trustee stands in the shoes of the bankrupt and
takes the property subject to equities impressed on it while in the
bankrupt's hands, he can attack a pledge which is so void a against
creditors that the property could have been levied on and sold
under judicial powers against the bankrupt at the time of the
adjudication.
Provisions in a mortgage for the retention and use of the
mortgaged property by the mortgagor which are prohibited by the law
of the state render the conveyance fraudulent in law, even in the
absence of intent, and as conclusively permit the trustee to attack
it as though the mortgage were fraudulent in fact and intent
existed.
The fact that a trustee might by suit against other parties
collect enough to pay creditors is not a bar against setting aside
a fraudulent conveyance on the entire property of the bankrupt in
his hands.
162 F. 675.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
Page 216 U. S. 552
MR. JUSTICE DAY delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Standard Telephone & Electric Company, a Wisconsin
corporation, was adjudicated a bankrupt in the District Court of
the United States for the Eastern District of Wisconsin. Under its
articles of association, it was authorized to carry on the business
of selling appliances for telephone purposes and operating
telephone exchanges. It had established and was operating a
telephone exchange at the Village of Sheridan, Wisconsin, and was
carrying on the business of manufacturing and selling telephone
apparatus in the City of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, where it had a stock
in trade and trade fixtures. The trustee in bankruptcy filed a
petition to sell all the property of the bankrupt. Appellant Knapp,
as trustee of certain mortgagees given by the telephone company,
intervened and asked to have the lien of the mortgage established
as the first lien on the property and satisfied out of the proceeds
of the sale. The property was sold, and the question is as to the
lien of these mortgages upon the fund.
The trustee in bankruptcy answered the petition of Knapp,
trustee under the mortgage, averring that it was a chattel
mortgage, and fraudulent and void as to creditors, because of
certain agreements contained therein, because it was on
after-acquired property, and because of the failure to file an
affidavit of renewal, as required by the Wisconsin statutes. The
referee in bankruptcy found the facts, and held the mortgage void.
Upon hearing, the district judge reached a like conclusion. 157 F.
106.
The Circuit Court of Appeals of the Seventh Circuit, upon
appeal, affirmed the decree of the district court, holding the
mortgage void for the reasons set forth at large in the opinion of
the district judge. 162 F. 675.
A motion has been filed to dismiss the appeal for want of
findings of fact and conclusions of law in the circuit court of
appeals, as required by General Order in Bankruptcy No. XXXVI.
Whether or not such a finding of facts was required depends
Page 216 U. S. 553
upon the character of the present proceeding. General order in
Bankruptcy No. XXXVI, authorized under subdivision
b of §
25 of the Bankruptcy Act, provides for appeals under the act to
this Court from the circuit Court of Appeals within thirty days
after the judgment or decree, and for the making and filing of a
finding of facts and conclusions of law separately stated, and that
the record upon such appeal shall consist only of the pleadings,
the judgment or decree, the finding of facts, and conclusions of
law.
Section 25
b provides for appeals from any final
decision of a Court of Appeals allowing or rejecting a claim under
the act, under such rules and within such time as may be prescribed
by the Supreme Court of the United States. Such appeals are allowed
when the amount in controversy exceeds the sum of $2,000, and the
question involved might have been taken by appeal or writ of error
from the highest court of a state to the Supreme Court of the
United States, or where some Justice of the Supreme Court of the
United States shall certify that, in his opinion, the determination
of the question or questions involved in the allowance or rejection
of such claim is essential to a uniform construction of the
Bankruptcy Act throughout the United States.
Under authority of subdivision
b, § 25, General Order
No. XXXVI was adopted, and in the cases enumerated a finding of
facts and conclusions of law must be made in the circuit court of
appeals, and the appeal taken within thirty days after the entry of
the judgment or decree.
The case at bar is not of that class; it is an intervention in a
bankruptcy proceeding, and, within the meaning of the act, a
controversy arising in a bankruptcy proceeding, and the appellate
jurisdiction is the same as in like cases under the Court of
Appeals Act. Bankruptcy Act, § 24
a; Hewit v. Berlin
Machine Works, 194 U. S. 296;
Coder v. Artz, 213 U. S. 223, and
cases therein cited.
As the appeal was in the manner provided for in the Court of
Appeals Act, no special finding of facts was required under
Page 216 U. S. 554
General Order No. XXXVI, and the motion to dismiss the appeal
must be overruled.
The mortgages in question, which were upon all the property and
estate of the mortgagor, acquired or to be acquired, in connection
with or in relation to the business of the mortgagor, contain,
among others, the following provisions:
"Nothing herein contained shall be construed to prevent said
first party from carrying on, in the due and regular course, its
said business and collecting the indebtedness and moneys due or to
become due therein, and applying the same to its own use, except as
hereinafter provided."
The mortgage makes provision for a sinking fund of $2,000
annually, $500 quarterly, out of the proceeds of the business, or,
if necessary, from the general resources, and the mortgage contains
this further provision:
"Said first party further agrees that no dividend shall be
declared or paid on its capital stock at any time when any portion
of said sinking fund or the interest on said bonds shall not have
been duly provided for, according to the terms of this
indenture."
"
Provided, however, That said trustee be and he is
hereby empowered and authorized in his discretion, and in case he
does not procure for the sinking fund any of said bonds at par and
accrued interest, upon application in writing by said first party
to waive the making by said party of full or any payment into or
provision for said sinking fund for any quarter year, and in the
event of said trustee electing not to require said first party to
make such payment into or provision for such sinking fund, the
moneys which would otherwise have been placed therein for the
purchase of said bonds as aforesaid shall remain at the disposition
of said first party, to be divided as dividends, or to enlarge,
extend, improve, repair, renew, or rehabilitate its said described
business and property."
It will be seen that, under these provisions, the mortgagor is
allowed to remain in possession of the property, applying the
proceeds thereof to his own use, except that no dividends shall
Page 216 U. S. 555
be declared or paid without first making provision for the
sinking fund and the interest on the bonds, and with this important
proviso -- that the trustee under the mortgage may, in his
discretion, in case he does not procure for the sinking fund bonds
at par and accrued interest, upon the application of the mortgagor,
waive the payment into or provision for the sinking fund for any
quarter year, and, in such case, the moneys which would otherwise
go into the moneys which would otherwise go into the sinking fund
for the purchase of bonds shall remain at the disposition of the
mortgagor, to be distributed as dividends, or to be used for the
benefit of the business and property in the manner described.
Section 2310, Wisconsin Statutes, provides:
"Every sale made by a vendor of goods and chattels in his
possession or under his control, and every assignment of goods and
chattels, unless the same be accompanied by an immediate delivery,
and be followed by an actual and continued change of possession of
the things sold or assigned, shall be presumed to be fraudulent and
void as against the creditors of the vendor, or the creditors of
the person making such assignment, or subsequent purchasers in good
faith, and than be conclusive evidence of fraud, unless it shall be
made to appear on the part of the persons claiming under such sale
or assignment, that the same was made in good faith and without any
intent to defraud such creditors or purchasers."
Section 2313 provides that no mortgage or sale of personal
property shall be valid against any other persons than the parties
thereto, unless the possession of the mortgaged property be
delivered to and retained by the mortgagee, or unless the mortgage,
or a copy thereof, be filed as required by the statute, except as
otherwise provided therein.
Section 2316
b provides that a mortgagor in possession
of a stock of goods from which he is permitted to make sales and
apply the proceeds upon the debt shall file a statement showing the
amount of sales, amount applied on mortgage, and amount of new
stock bought every sixty days, and, upon his failure to file such
statement, the debt shall become immediately
Page 216 U. S. 556
due, and after fifteen days the mortgage shall cease to be a
lien, except between the parties thereto.
It was found as a matter of fact that no statement was filed of
the amount of the sales, amount of new stock bought, amount applied
on mortgage, etc., every sixty days, as required by the Wisconsin
statute, § 2316
b; that, since the execution of the
mortgage the company, in the course of its business, made sales
from the mortgaged property and applied the proceeds to its own
use; that the property was in possession of the mortgagor; that
Knapp, the trustee, knew that the business was being so transacted;
that it was understood that the business should be so transacted
and sales of the mortgaged property so applied to the mortgagor's
use.
While there was a finding that no intentional bad faith was
shown, still we agree with the court of appeals and the district
judge that, under the law of Wisconsin, as construed by her highest
court, such conditions as were contained in these mortgages
rendered them fraudulent in law and void as to creditors.
Merchants' & Mechanics Bank v. Lovejoy, 84 Wis. 601;
Bank of Kaukauna v. Joannes, 98 Wis. 321;
Charles
Baumbach Co. v. Hobkirk, 104 Wis. 488;
Franzke v.
Hitchon, 105 Wis. 11;
Durr v. Wildish, 108 Wis.
401.
In this case, the stipulations of the mortgages practically
permitted the mortgagor to dispose of the property for his own
benefit, except that it must make certain provisions for a sinking
fund and interest on the bonds; and, with the consent of the
trustee, no provision need be made for the sinking fund or
interest, and the moneys which otherwise would have been placed
therein for the purchase of bonds might be applied for the benefit
of the mortgagor, whether as dividends or for the benefit of its
business and property. Such provisions are clearly within the
Wisconsin decisions, for they permit the mortgagor to have the
benefit of the property, to keep it in his possession, and to
appropriate the proceeds to his own use. The Wisconsin decisions
render such mortgages invalid as to creditors, because the effect
of such provisions is to give the
Page 216 U. S. 557
beneficial use of the mortgaged property to the mortgagor in
possession, and to make possible the use of the mortgage as a
protection against creditors of the mortgagor when they shall
undertake to assert their rights.
But it is said the trustee in bankruptcy may not defend against
these mortgages. It is contended that they are good as between the
parties, and that, as to them, the trustee in bankruptcy occupies
no better position than the bankrupt. This question was raised and
decided in
Security Warehousing Co. v. Hand, 206 U.
S. 415. That case arose in Wisconsin, and it was therein
held that, under the Wisconsin law, an attempted pledge of
property, without change of possession, was void under the laws of
that state. In that case, as in this one, the question was raised
as to whether the trustee in bankruptcy could question the
transaction, and it was contended that, being valid as between the
parties, the trustee took only the right and title of the bankrupt.
The question was fully considered therein, and the previous cases
in this Court were reviewed. The principle was recognized that the
trustee in bankruptcy stands in the shoes of the bankrupt, and that
the property in his hands is subject to the equities impressed upon
it while in the hands of the bankrupt.
But it was held that the attempt to create a lien upon the
property of the bankrupt was void as to general creditors under the
laws of Wisconsin. Applying § 70
a of the Bankruptcy Act,
it was held that the trustee in bankruptcy was vested by operation
of the bankrupt law with the title of the property transferred by
the bankrupt in fraud of creditors, and also that the trustee took
the property which, prior to the filing of the petition, might have
been levied upon and sold by judicial process against the bankrupt.
It was therefore held that, as there had been no valid pledge of
the property, for want of change of possession, it could have been
levied upon and sold under judicial process against the bankrupt at
the time of the adjudication in bankruptcy, and passed to the
trustee in bankruptcy.
Page 216 U. S. 558
The principles announced in
Security Warehousing Co. v.
Hand, 206 U. S. 415.
when applied to the present case, are decisive of the question here
presented. Under the Wisconsin statutes and decisions of the
highest court of that state the conditions contained upon the face
of this mortgage were such as to render it fraudulent in law and
void as to creditors, and prior to the filing of the petition in
bankruptcy the property might have been levied upon and sold by
judicial process against the bankrupt.
It is true that in
Security Warehousing Co. v. Hand,
the Court said that the attempted pledge was a "mere pretense, a
sham," but the courts of Wisconsin have held that such provisions
as are in these mortgages, giving the bankrupt the right to dispose
of the mortgaged property for its own benefit, rendered the
conveyance fraudulent in law, and therefore void as to creditors.
This brings the conveyance within the terms of the Bankrupt Act, as
one which the trustee may attack, as conclusively as it would if
fraudulent intent in fact were shown to exist.
In
Mueller v. Bruss, 112 Wis. 406, it was held that a
trustee in bankruptcy could maintain an action to set aside a
fraudulent conveyance, but that the complaint must aver and the
trustee must show that the estate had not sufficient assets in the
trustee's hands to satisfy the claims filed against the debtor. And
it is insisted that a showing of this character is lacking in the
present case. Without deciding that, under the Bankruptcy Act, the
answer of the trustee in bankruptcy was required to make this
averment, accompanied by proof, if necessary, it is sufficient upon
this point to say that the intervening petition of the trustee of
the mortgage sought to assert a lien upon all the property of the
bankrupt in the trustee's hands. The suggestion in appellant's
brief, that the trustee in bankruptcy may possibly recover against
directors and officers of the corporation for dereliction of duty,
and against stockholders for unpaid subscriptions and additional
liability on their part, presents no reason why he may not resist
an
Page 216 U. S. 559
attempt to take all the available property in his hands to apply
on a mortgage void as to creditors at the time of the
adjudication.
We are of opinion, for the reasons stated, that the mortgages in
question are void, and that, under the bankruptcy law, the trustee
can assert their invalidity.
Judgment affirmed.