U.S. Supreme Court JONES v. SPRINGER, 226 U.S. 148 (1912)
226 U.S. 148 FRANK H. JONES, Trustee in Bankruptcy of the Oro Dredging Company, Appt., v. CHARLES SPRINGER. No. 23. Argued October 30 and November 4, 1912. Decided December 2, 1912. [Page 226 U.S. 148, 149] Messrs. Elmer E. Studley, J. E. MacLeish, Frank H. Scott, and Edgar A. Bancroft for appellant. [Page 226 U.S. 148, 151] Messrs. Ernest Knaebel, Charles A. Spiess, Aldis B. Browne, Alexander Britton, and Evans Browne for appellee. [Page 226 U.S. 148, 153] Mr. Justice Holmes delivered the opinion of the court: This case comes here upon appeal from a judgment denying the title of the appellant, as trustee in bankruptcy, to property formerly belonging to the bankrupt and sold in this suit by order of the local court. The facts are these. The property in question is a mining dredge. It was attached on February 27, 1906, and a receiver was appointed on March 19. On May 1, a petition was filed for an order directing the dredge to be sold on the ground that it was 'of a perishable nature, and liable to be lost or diminished in value before the final adjudication of the [Page 226 U.S. 148, 154] case,' within the Compiled Laws of New Mexico, 1897, 2716, and an order to that effect was made on the same day. The ground of the finding on which the sale was ordered was that the dredge was anchored in an embanked pond fed by a mountain stream subject to heavy floods, and was liable to damage from that source. The sale took place on June 26, and the dredge was bought in good faith and without notice of the defendant's insolvency, at a price of $5,000, paid into court by the appellee, Springer. The sale was confirmed on July 17. But on March 12, 1906, a petition in bankruptcy had been filed in the northern district of Illinois against the Oro Dredging Company, the defendant in this suit. On April 23, the company was adjudged a bankrupt. On July 9, the appellant was appointed trustee, and on July 19 qualified. On August 2, he first appeared in this cause, that being the first notice of the adjudication received by the parties concerned or the court. He filed an intervening petition praying that the order of sale be set aside, the attachment dissolved, and the property turned over to him. The petition, so far as it affects the dredge, was denied, the judgment was affirmed by the supreme court of the territory, and the trustee appealed. The main ground of the appeal is that by 70 of the bankruptcy act1 the title of the trustee related back to the date of the adjudication of bankruptcy, and that, as matter of law, Springer could not be a bona fide purchaser within the proviso of 67f, saving the title of a bona fide purchaser for value who shall have acquired the property by the attachment without notice or reasonable cause for inquiry. It is argued that filing the petition in bankruptcy was a caveat to all the world (Mueller v. Nugent,If you are already a vLex customer, access here
