(after stating the facts as above). I have alreády expressed myself as dissatisfied with the finding of the referee, not so much from what he had before him, as because, with what the bankrupt produced at this Muring, I was1 not as clear as I think I ought to be that at that time he had property concealed. Upon this motion the issues are merely this: Was the order made? Has the bankrupt disobeyed it? Has he the ability now to comply with it? As to the first two they are conceded; the question is of the third. If the order directing him to pay over the money is an estoppel, then that controversy is concluded by the order, and the only question is simply whether the bankrupt since the time of that order has in fact parted with any of the property which was then in his possession. Moreover, though it would be most unwillingly, still if that be law, it would be my duty to commit the bankrupt, even though I felt as much doubt as I do of his possession of the funds.
The question is therefore of the effect of the referee’s order directing him to pay the money. I think it was essential in law, before making a summary order, for the referee to find that the bankrupt had. at the time actual possession or control of the property which he was directed to turn over. The only proper purpose of such an order is to bring into the trustee’s possession property belonging to the estate. Mueller v. Nugent, 184 U. S. 1, 22 Sup. Ct. 269, 46 L. Ed. 405. If the bankrupt has seized and disposed of property belonging to the trustee, that may well be a civil tort, for which the trustee *541might sue him in conversion and get a judgment; but he could not do so in the bankruptcy court. It is true that the Circuit Court of Appeals for the First Circuit (Re Cole, 163 Fed. 180, 188, 90 C. C. A. 50, 23 L. R. A. [N. S.] 255) speaks of such an order as though it might have merely established a debt against the respondent; but they do not indicate whether in their judgment it would be proper to enter such a summary order as a jxidgment upon a debt. Our own Circuit Court of Appeals, in Re Banzai Manufacturing Company, Ex parte Bergstrom, 183 Fed. 298, called attention likewise to the fact that so much of a similar order as adjudicated liability for money which the respondent had paid out could not be enforced for contempt; but it expressed no opinion that such an order was pro tanto proper, and did not have that question before it. Of course, this is a material inquiry here, because, if the determination was not necessary to the order of the referee, which might equally well have passed without it, then, although an express finding of fact, it has not the force of an adjudication and concludes nothing. House v. Lockwood, 137 N. Y. 259, 33 N. E. 595.
Still the question may be whether, though necessary to the order, the finding is conclusive in a separate proceeding like this, in which the court is asked itself to move, as though it were the complaining party. Judge Brown, in Rhode Island, has held that it is not conclusive in Re Davison (D. C.) 143 Fed. 673, deciding that upon the contempt proceedings the court must de novo always be satisfied that the bankrupt can comply with the order. However, the precise point was not mentioned by him whether in reaching that conclusion he was bound to accept as an estoppel that on the date of the summary order the bankrupt had the money, and the general proposition is undoubtedly correct that the issue must be found against the respondent of liis ability to comply. On the other hand, our own Circuit Court of Appeals, in Re Stavrahn, 174 Fed. 330, 98 C. C. A. 202, proceeded upon the theory that the bankrupt upon such a proceeding must show that since the date of the order he had lost ability to comply with it, and that if he did not show that an order of committal was proper. Although it is not expressly so stated, the reasoning appears to be based upon the understanding that the order concluded the controversy up to the date of its entry. The words used are that the order makes a prima facie case; hut, of course, no judgment inter alios makes any case whatever and is immaterial. The reason why the}- did not say that it made a conclusive case was, I think, because the bankrupt might show that since the order he had parted with the funds. In addition, it is of much authoritative weight that it has undoubtedly been the practice in this district to treat such orders as conclusive estoppels upon the date of their entry, and to leave open to the respondent only the issue of showing what he has done with the money since that time.
In Re Marks (D. C.) 176 Fed. 1018, Judge McPherson concluded that at the end of two years from the summary order, he would not commit the bankrupt because he thought him then unable to comply. He says that he was under a “presumption” of ability arising from *542the order. This must mean, I think, what was meant in Re Stavrahn, supra; i. e., that having been shown absolutely to be in such possession at a given date he is presumed to remain able to comply till he shows the contrary. In Boyd v. Glucklich, 116 Fed. 131, 53 C. C. A. 451, though the court went far in its requirements, even to the extent of the old rule that a denial by the respondent was enough, still the summary order was itself under review. In Re Switzer (D. C.) 140 Fed. 976, the same situation existed. In Samel v. Dodd, 142 Fed. 68, 73 C. C. A. 254, the case was quite different. No authority seems to exist to the contrary, but In re Davison, supra.
If anything be left open on authority, however, upon principle the same conclusion follows. It is quite true that 'contempt proceedings in the federal courts have often been called criminal. New Orleans v. New York Mail S. S. Co., 20 Wall. 387, 22 L. Ed. 354; Boyd v. Glucklich, 116 Fed. 131, 53 C. C. A. 451; Kirk v. Milwaukee Dust Collector Mfg. Co. (C. C.) 26 Fed. 501. This means that the court is, as I h^ve suggested, in some sense the moving party, and perhaps formally the proceeding is not between the same parties. That is not enough for the defendant’s purposes, however. The proceeding presupposes that the order disobeyed was regularly and formally promulgated, and no review of it is open. People v. Spalding, 2 Paige (N. Y.) 326. Therefore, in so far as the order directs any one to do anything, he may not in the contempt proceeding question the propriety of the direction; and in so far as the order determines an existing fact, which is necessary in law to the validity of the direction, he may not question its truth. To question such a fact is to question the validity of the direction which depends upon it, and is only an indirect way of reviewing the order. Therefore now to deny the fact that the bankrupt had the money in his possession is in this case to assert that the order directing him to pay it over .was erroneous. On this account, therefore, that fact is concluded, once it be granted that it was necessary to the validity of the order, which I have shown.
Quite reluctantly, therefore, I can only conclude that I was wrong originally to inquire into the merits, and that a committal must issue. However, the authorities are involved in considerable confusion, and, if the respondent wishes, he may forthwith appeal to the Circuit Court of Appeals, and I will stay the warrant meanwhile. In that case I shall permit the account from the books, with a proper affidavit attached, to be considered as a part of the answering papers.