Covington v. Barber

Beck, P. J.

(After stating the foregoing facts.) We are of the opinion that the court erred in granting the order and judgment excepted to. It is cogently urged in the brief of counsel for defendants in error that the attorney at law for the plaintiff in the distress warrant did not have authority to consent for the sheriff to deliver the property to the receiver of the bankruptcy court, and that the State court could not be divested of its jurisdiction to control and have administered the property in this way. We will not enter upon a discussion of the extent of the authority of - the attorney for the plaintiff in the distress warrant and in the mortgage fi. fa., but rest the decision which we make upon facts which clearly appear in the record. The sheriff of the county had seized and taken possession of the property on April 28, 1917, and had put locks upon the door of the building containing it. The attorney of record for the plaintiff in the proceeding under which the property was seized consented for the sheriff to deliver . the property to the receiver appointed by the bankruptcy court. *807This consent, and the action of the sheriff in making delivery of the property to the receiver, vested the receiver with such possession and custody of the property that it should not be taken from him by a peremptory order from the superior court; especially in view of the fact that the bankruptcy court had granted an order requiring the receiver to hold the property. The possession of the property by the receiver had not been procured by fraud, force or violence, «but upon an application to the State official, who complied with the request contained in that' application after the consent of the attorney of record for the plaintiff in the proceeding under which the sheriff had first seized the property. If it be true, as contended by counsel for defendants in error, that the attorney for the plaintiff in the distress warrant was without authority to consent for the sheriff to deliver the custody of the property to the receiver, and if it be true that this delivery could not be complete without the consent of the superior court, those questions can be raised and be adjudicated in the bankruptcy court Upon application duly made for the restoration of the goods to the custody of the sheriff. Unless this course is taken, we will have the case of a peremptory order from the State court coming in conflict with an order from the bankruptcy court over the possession of property held by the receiver in bankruptcy. It is insisted by the defendant in error, that the jurisdiction of the administration of the property was in the State court, and that this court could not be deprived of its jurisdiction without its order; that in fact it has never lost jurisdiction; and that the question of its jurisdiction will be determined by the pleadings in the case. But it will be observed that the court below heard evidence to ascertain who had the possession of the goods and under what circumstances that possession was procured. It will also be borne in mind that the officer of the bankruptcy court who had possession of the goods at the time of the hearing of this case in the court below was specially appointed to take possession of these goods, and his possession was unquestionably the possession of the bankruptcy court; whereas the State officer had seized the goods under a distress warrant issuing from a justice’s court. And while seizure by the sheriff and custody by him might, in some sense of the term, be custody of the court, it is not in the same sense that the custody of the receiver is the custody of the bankruptcy court. If the *808superior court in proceedings for that purpose had appointed a receiver to take charge of these goods, and such receiver had seized and taken charge of them, it is doubtless, true that he could not have divested himself of the control and custody of them without an order of the superior court; and if without such an order a State court receiver had surrendered property to á receiver in bankruptcy, a very different question would arise, upon his attempt to recover possession, from that which is presented*by this record. In connection with the question which we have decided the follpwing authorities may be considered: Collier on Bankruptcy (11th ed.), 533; Wright v. Harris, 221 Fed. 736; Murphy v. John Hofman Co., 211 U. S. 562 (29 Sup. Ct. 154, 53 L. ed. 327). Other decisions will be found cited in the cases just referred to, and we think it unnecessary to multiply authorities here.

Judgment reversed.

All the Justices concur, except Fish, O. J., absent.