Although the right of a trustee in bankruptcy to compel a
conveyance of property of the bankrupt adversely claimed ordinarily
may be asserted only in a plenary suit, a proceeding to that end
may be had summarily before the referee if both parties consent.
Bankruptcy Act, § 23(a), (b);
MacDonald v. Plymouth Count Trust
Co., ante p.
286 U. S. 263. P.
286 U. S.
271.
53 F.2d 27 affirmed.
Certiorari, 285 U.S. 532, to review the affirmance of a decree
quieting a title, which depended upon the jurisdiction of a
referee, in an earlier bankruptcy proceeding, to order a
conveyance.
Page 286 U. S. 270
MR. JUSTICE STONE delivered the opinion of the court.
Petitioner brought this suit in the Arkansas chancery court
against respondent's predecessor in interest to quiet the title to
an oil and gas lease. The cause was removed to the United States
District Court for Western Arkansas, where a trial of the issues
resulted in a judgment for respondent, which was affirmed by the
Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit. 53 F.2d 27. Both courts
held that the issue with respect to the ownership of the lease was
res adjudicata by reason of a proceeding before a referee
in bankruptcy, sitting in the district in which the issues with
respect to the title presented here, had been decided against the
predecessor of petitioner and in favor of the trustee in
bankruptcy, through whom respondent acquired its title to the
lease.
The receiver in the bankruptcy proceeding, later appointed
trustee, had gone into possession of the lease, claiming it as
property of the bankrupt. Lyvers, petitioner's predecessor, filed a
petition before the referee, claiming title to the lease, asking
that he be put in possession, and that the trustee be ordered not
to sell the lease. The trustee answered, setting up that Lyvers was
trustee of the lease for the bankrupt and asking that Lyvers
execute a deed of the property to the trustee. The matter was heard
by the referee, who ordered Lyvers to execute the conveyance. The
order was affirmed by the District Court, and, in conformity with
it, Lyvers then conveyed the lease to the trustee.
The attempt made in the present suit to relitigate the issues
involved in the bankruptcy proceeding is justified chiefly on the
ground that the referee in bankruptcy was without jurisdiction to
try the issues presented in the proceeding before him, and that,
for that reason, the order was void, and could not operate to
adjudicate the issues tendered in the present suit. This Court
granted certiorari
Page 286 U. S. 271
to resolve the jurisdictional question. Many and complicated
questions of fact are involved and were argued here, but, as they
have been found in favor of the respondent by both courts below, we
do not review them (
see Texas & N.O. R. Co. v. Brotherhood
of Clerks, 281 U. S. 548),
and we confine ourselves to the question of the jurisdiction of the
referee in bankruptcy.
The court below held that the referee in bankruptcy had
jurisdiction to decide the issues raised by the petition and
answer, by virtue of the fact that the trustee had gone into
possession of the lease, and that possession gave the referee, as a
court of bankruptcy, jurisdiction to hear and determine all
questions respecting the title, possession, or control of the
property.
Murphy v. John Hofman Co., 211 U.
S. 562. It also held that the referee had power to make
the order, since Lyvers had participated in the litigation without
objecting to its summary form until after the order had been made.
We think that the judgment should be affirmed.
The right asserted before the referee by the trustee in
bankruptcy to compel a conveyance to the bankrupt of property
adversely claimed is one which may be asserted by the trustee in a
plenary suit. By § 23a of the Bankruptcy Act and § 291 of the
Judicial Code, District Courts of the United States, which by §
1(8) of the Bankruptcy Act are courts of bankruptcy, are given
jurisdiction of all controversies in law or equity between trustees
and adverse claimants concerning the property claimed by the
trustee. And, by § 23b,
"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. . . ."
For reasons stated at length in the opinion in
MacDonald v.
Plymouth County Trust Co., ante, p.
286 U. S. 263,
Page 286 U. S. 272
we hold that the referee is a court within the meaning of § 23b
and that, respondent's predecessor having consented to litigate the
issues presented by the petition and answer before the referee, the
latter had jurisdiction to decide the issues presented. The order
of the referee, in the bankruptcy proceeding, affirmed by the
District Court, therefore adjudicated those issues between the
parties, and they may not be relitigated in the present suit by
their successors in interest.
Affirmed.