In re JOHN G. GASTEIGER & CO., Inc.
Ex parte FIDELITY & DEPOSIT CO. OF MARYLAND.
No. 760.
Circuit Court of Appeals, Second Circuit.
April 9, 1928.*643 Frederick Behr, of New York City, for appellant.
Harry H. Schutte, of Brooklyn, N. Y., for appellee.
Before MANTON, L. HAND, and AUGUSTUS N. HAND, Circuit Judges.
L. HAND, Circuit Judge (after stating the facts as above).
When the amendment of 1926 was passed the time had long expired within which claims could be filed in this estate. The divisor for dividends had been therefore finally fixed, except in so far as any claims were in process of liquidation, of which, so far as appears, there were none. True, the assets may not have been fully collected, but that was irrelevant; the creditor's rights had been settled in accordance with the law as it then stood, and the appellant enjoyed no priority. We are to decide whether the change in section 64 (b) (7) is "practicable and applicable" in such a situation.
The act of 1926 is an innovation in bankruptcy legislation, the amendments of 1903 (section 18 [11 USCA § 41]) and of 1910 (section 14 [11 USCA § 32]) being both expressly made prospective only. The canon is well settled which interprets statutes prospectively unless the language admits of no other construction (Chew Heong v. U. S., 112 U.S. 536, 559, 5 S. Ct. 255, 28 L. Ed. 770; Shwab v. Doyle, 258 U.S. 529, 42 S. Ct. 391, 66 L. Ed. 747, 26 A. L. R. 1454; Fullerton Co. v. Northern Pacific R. Co., 266 U.S. 435, 45 S. Ct. 143, 69 L. Ed. 367), and we are not sure that the clause, "so far as practicable and applicable," means to go further than to make the amendments "applicable" to pending proceedings in matters of procedure, though perhaps it may. Even if it does, it gives the courts a wide discretion in determining when it is "practicable" so to apply it, and by "practicable" we understand that we must decide whether it is just to disturb vested rights.
There may be cases in which the occasion is so important that this will be tolerable, but we think that this is not one. There appears to us no paramount public interest in the priority of the United States among those who have taken the same risks and engaged in the same ventures as itself. Moreover, there would be an especial injustice in allowing it here, since the interest and the power are both its own. It had yielded a prerogative commonly asserted in such cases and during the period of its complaisance these rights attached. It is quite true that in this case the creditors could scarcely have relied upon their rights, because as the decision stood they had none until after the law of 1926 was passed; but in fact those rights existed, and that too only by the act of the United States itself. While it was free to resume its prerogative when it chose, we are not to suppose that it meant to take back what once it had given, unless there is no escape from the conclusion. The repugnance of most people to such changes in front does not arise alone from the fact that they *644 may disrupt settlements made on the faith of the earlier assurance. The mere inconstancy of a sovereign in respect of what has once been granted is itself a grievance, and seems an injustice to most men. For these reasons it seems to us that it is not "practicable" to apply retroactively section 64 (b) (7) to cases where the claims have all been filed and the rights all fixed.
The cases, so far as they have yet construed section 18 are impliedly in accord. Dreyfuss Dry Goods Co. v. Morgan (C. C. A. 5) 23 F.(2d) 54; Morton v. Snider (C. C. A. 3) 20 F.(2d) 469; In re Wyatt (D. C.) 23 F. 350.
Order affirmed.