This case presents an interesting ques-_ tion relating to the marshalling of securities. The respondents, Cross-man & Sielcken, pledged certain securities with the firm of H. B. Hollins & Co. before the alleged bankruptcy of the latter, who repledged them to the Chase National Bank. At the same time the securities of the respondents were pledged, H. B. Hollins & Co. pledged with the bank certain securities of their own. Subsequently the respondents paid the bank what was due from H. B. Hollins & Co., and all the securities were turned over to them. The present action is brought to determine whether H. B. Hollins & Co. have a right to require that all the securities which the bank held should contribute pro rata to the payment of the debt due from them to the bank, or whether the respondents had the right to apply in the first instance the securities which belonged to H. B. Hollins & Co. We are not, however, at liberty to decide the question upon the merits, as we think the bankruptcy court was without jurisdiction to hear and determine the matter.
[1] It appears that on November 13, 1913, a petition in bankruptcy was filed against the firm of H. B. Hollins & Co., and that on that day a receiver was appointed. On November 21, 1913, the firm of Crossman & Sielcken, the respondents herein, presented a petition to the District Court wherein they sought to obtain an order directing the receiver to consent to the purchase by the firm from the Chase National Bank of certain notes having a face value of $950,000, drawn to the order of the bank and executed by H. B. Hollins & Co., and to the delivery by the bank to the firm of Crossman & Sielcken upon the purchase of the aforesaid notes of all collateral which had been deposited by the firm of H. B. Plollins & Co. with the bank, consisting of $1,073,000 New York City bonds, belonging to Crossman & Sielcken and by them pledged to H. B. Hollins & Co., together with certain securities which belonged to H. B. Hollins & Co., consisting of 50 shares of the stock of the Northern Pacific Railroad Company, and
[2] The United States District Courts are by the Bankruptcy Act created into bankruptcy courts, and their jurisdiction as such is limited. All the courts of the United States are of limited jurisdiction. They possess only such powers as are either expressly or by necessary implication conferred upon them. Kempe’s Lessee v. Kennedy, 5 Cranch, 173, 3 L. Ed. 70 (1809). Their jurisdiction and powers are derived from the Constitution and the acts of Congress passed in pursuance thereof. Rice v. Minnesota, etc., R. Co., 1 Black, 358, 17 L. Ed. 147 (1861). It is possible under the Bankruptcy Act for a bankrupt to take his estate out of the bankruptcy court. See Remington’s Bankruptcy, vol. 3, § 2345.’ This he may accomplish by means of a composition agreement confirmed by the court. Bankruptcy Act, § 70 f declares that:
“Upon the confirmation of a composition offered by a bankrupt, the title to his property shall thereupon revest in him.”
And section 21g of the act provides that:
“A certified copy of an order confirming a composition shall constitute evidence of the revesting of the title of his property in the. bankrupt, and if recorded shall impart the same nolice that a deed from the trustee to the bankrupt if recorded would impart.”
In Re Frischknecht, 223 Fed. 417, 139 C. C. A. 11 (1915), we held that moneys or accounts in the hands of bankers which they obtained from a bankrupt prior to his bankruptcy revested in the bankrupt at once when the court confirmed a composition made between him and his creditors, and that he took the same free of any claim or right of the trustee. We accordingly affirmed the action of the court below which had refused to order certain creditors, who had attached in the state court those moneys as the property of the bankrupt as soon as the composition was confirmed, to turn the same over to the trustee in bankruptcy.
[3] So in the case at bar the composition restored the estate to the bankrupt and revested the title thereto in H. B. Hollins & Co. That being so, there was no authority in the District Court to exercise jurisdiction of the claim which these petitioners assumed to bring before it by the petition filed on April 21, 1915. The parties cannot by
[4] We have no discretion to consider the case on its merits. No doubt counsel on both sides are not only willing, but desirous, to have this court determine whether the brokers in this case had a right to do what they did with the pledged securities, and whether the respondents are entitled to retain all the proceeds realized from the sale of the securities, or must pay over a part of the same now in their hands to these petitioners. But, as we have said in an earlier part of this opinion, the consent of parties cannot give a court jurisdiction, and the petition should have been dismissed by the lower court on that ground. The court decided that it had jurisdiction, and so decided the case on the merits and denied the petition. As the petition should have been denied for want of jurisdiction, we concur in the result, but disclaim all consideration whatever of the merits,, which the court below had no right to consider, and which we have no right to review. The fact that the parties have not raised the question of jurisdiction in this court does not matter. % x
The order denying the petition is affirmed without prejudice.