Summary
In Longstreth v. Pennock (1874) 87 U.S. (20 Wall.) 575, 577, 22 L. Ed. 451, the Supreme Court, under a former bankruptcy act, held that the Pennsylvania statute above mentioned entitled the landlord to be paid out of the proceeds of goods taken and sold by the assignee in bankruptcy.
Summary of this case from In re WallOpinion
OCTOBER TERM, 1874.
The Pennsylvania statute of June 16th, 1836, which provides that where property upon demised premises, and liable to distraint, is seized on execution and sold, the officer making the sale shall pay the rent (provided it does not exceed one year's rent) in preference to the judgment on which the execution issued, extends, by an equitable intendment, to a seizure of goods similarly situated, by an assignee in bankruptcy. A landlord's claim is accordingly, in Pennsylvania, first paid out of the bankrupt's goods liable to distress on demised premises, and before making a dividend of their proceeds among the creditors generally.
Mr. J.C. Longstreth, for the assignee, plaintiff in error; Mr. J.B. Townsend, contra.
ERROR to the Circuit Court of Pennsylvania; the case being thus:
A Pennsylvania statute of June 16th, 1836, enacts as follows:
Purdon's Digest, edition of 1873, p. 879.
"The goods and chattels being in or upon any messuage, lands, or tenements, which are or shall be demised for life or years or otherwise, taken by virtue of an execution, and liable to the distress of the landlord, shall be liable for the payment of any sums of money due for rent at the time of taking such goods in execution: Provided, That such rent shall not exceed one year's rent.
"After the sale by the officer, of any goods or chattels as aforesaid, he shall first pay out of the proceeds of such sale, the rent so due, and the surplus thereof, if any, he shall apply towards satisfying the judgment mentioned in such execution."
This statute being in force, Pennock rented a warehouse in Philadelphia to Wattson De Young, at the yearly rent of $4500, payable in equal quarterly instalments. Wattson De Young, the lessees, being in possession of the premises, and having therein a stock of goods more than sufficient to pay the rent if a distress had been made, were adjudicated bankrupts, and Longstreth, their assignee, took possession of the premises, and of the stock upon them. The landlord claimed of him the rent due and accrued up to the date of the issuing of the warrant in bankruptcy, and it having been paid to him under a stipulation to restore the same if the assignee were not allowed credit therefor on the settlement of his account, and he not having been allowed such credit, this action was brought by him to test his right to get back what had been so paid for rent accruing prior to the warrant, which was for much less than a year's rent. The Circuit Court adjudged that the payment was rightfully made, and that the assignee could not recover it back. The assignee now brought the case here.
The assignee acquired his title to the movable property found on the demised premises, subject to the rights of all other persons. The rent in question was for a period which terminated when the assignee took possession, and the entire period was within a year of that time. Before the commencement of the proceedings in bankruptcy, the defendants in error might have distrained; and it is agreed that the property upon the premises was more than sufficient to satisfy the demand. The statute of Pennsylvania, of June 16th, 1836, provides that where property under such circumstances is seized and sold under execution, the rent due for a period not exceeding one year shall be paid first out of the proceeds of the sale. This case is within the equity of that statute. The question presented is one belonging to the local law of Pennsylvania. We think it was correctly decided by the Circuit Court.
Gibson v. Warden, 14 Wallace, 244.
Sedgwick's Statutory and Constitutional Law, 296.
JUDGMENT AFFIRMED.