Judges: Choate
Filed Date: 12/4/1879
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/6/2024
I do not see any principle on which this bill can be sustained upon the evidence. It is a bill brought by the assignee in bankruptcy of the firm of Lagrave & Otis, praying for an accounting and payment to the complainant of the proceeds of certain goods of the bankrupt, alleged to have been fraudulently and unlawfully taken and disposed of by the defendants in pursuance of a combination between them to that end. It appears that after Lagrave & Otis failed and liad absconded, the defendant Landers, who was a relative of Lagrave, and who was liable as guarantor for Lagrave & Otis to the defendants H. B. Claflin & Co. to the amount of five thousand dollars — the entire debt of Lagrave & Otis to H. B. Claflin & Co. being eight thousand three hundred dollars — obtained the goods from the defendants, George Wagner and George L. Wagner, employés of Lagrave & Otis, in whose possession they were, upon a promise to pay them some one thousand two hundred dollars due to them from Lagrave & Otis, with the avowed purpose of protecting himself against his guaranty by disposing of the goods and paying the proceeds to the defendants, H. B. Claflin & Co., upon the debt of Lagrave & Otis to them. The goods were worth about seven thousand dollars. The Wagners clearly had no right to sell them to Landers in this way, as he well knew', but the sale was made by a transfer of the bills of lading about one or two hours before the creditors’ petition in bankruptcy was filed. Landers was himself a salesman in the employ of the defendants H. B. Claflin & Co. The goods were takpn to H. B. Claflin’s warehouse, and for the sake of secrecy the marks on the cases were altered; they were then removed to H. B. Claflin’s store upon a consent obtained by Lan-ders from one of their employés. and examined and repacked by Landers, and, with the aid of other persons in the employ of that firm, sent to another warehouse. The petition in bankruptcy was filed May 30, 1872. On the 10th of June, 1872. the goods being in warehouse, Landers sought an introduction to Mr. Doyle, of the firm of Doyle & Adolphi, who were also made defendants in this suit, and who were dealers in goods of the same kind as those thus taken by the defendant Landers. This introduction was made at H. B. Claflin & Co.’s store by one Wilkinson, a salesman of H. B.
I think it is a fatal objection to the maintenance of this action that the assignee in bankruptcy has sustained no damage whatever by the wrongful acts complained of. Without question the transfer by the Wagners to Dan-ders was a fraud upon the creditors of the bankrupt, and was also without any authority derived by them from the instructions of Da-grave & Otis or from their power as agents of that firm. So far as these three defendants were concerned, the operation differed little, if at all, from robbery. Nor do I see how the defendants H. B. Claflin & Co. could hold on to the proceeds of the goods as against the as-signee, if the payment to them operated to deprive him of the goods. Those proceeds are clearly traced into their hands. They gave no consideration for them, and they can hardly be held ignorant of the proceedings going on in their own place of business, transacted by their own employes for their own benefit, and of which they took and held the fruits. Nor, it seems, did Doyle & Adolphi take, as against the assignee, any better title than Danders, who, having purchased from agents having no authority to sell as this sale was made, took no title. And even if he took a technical title, which I think he did not, the vein’ suspicious circumstances under which they bought, and not even relying on his apparent possession and ownership, but on Wilkinson’s guaranty, would, it seems, have made their title void as against the assignee, so that he could, after demand, have recovered the goods from them in a proper form of action. If they came not unlawfully into possession of the goods, they could not have held them against the assignee after demand. But the state court has held— and there is no occasion here to question the correctness of the ruling — that the provisional warrant" did not authorize the marshal to take the goods from them if they were in possession, claiming title in them for themselves. And on the ground that the title Of Doyle & Adol-phi, that is, tlieir possession under a claim of title, was a good enough title against a trespasser, the suit was decided against the marshal. This decision appears to be in conformity with the construction given by the supreme court of the United States to those parts of the bankrupt law defining the summary jurisdiction of the district court as a court of bankruptcy, which has been held not to extend to the determination of questions of title be: tween the bankrupt and third parties. In re Waitzfelder [Case No. 17,048]. But the fact that the marshal in this proceeding was a trespasser did not affect the right of the assignee to the possession of the goods. He did not instigate the seizure by the marshal, and is not prejudiced by it. As the court held the law, the marshal, in seizing the goods, was not acting under his warrant at all. When, therefore, the assignee received the goods from the marshal he did not adopt the art of the marshal by which the marshal obtained them. If a thief had stolen tbém from Doyle & Adolphi, and the assignee found them in the thief's
Bill dismissed without costs.