Court Opinion

ID: 8747899
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-26 11:14:31.457563+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:00:46.431019
License: Public Domain

J. B. McPHERSON, District Judge.
I have no doubt that this court, sitting in bankruptcy, has jurisdiction to determine some of the matters set up by the respondent’s answer; but concerning other matters I feel so much hesitation that I think it wiser to refer the whole dispute to the proper tribunal of the state. As was said in Bardes v. Bank, 178 U. S. 524, 20 Sup. Ct. 1000, 44 L. Ed. 1175, the provisions of the bankrupt act touching the jurisdiction of the district court have to do with “the jurisdiction only, and not the merits of a case; the forum in which a case may be tried, and not the way in which it must be decided; the right to decide the case, and not the principles which must govern the decision.” When a petition such as this is presented, asking the district court to make a summary order directing a respondent to surrender the possession of certain property that is alleged by a trustee to belong to the bankrupt’s estate, the court has the undoubted right—indeed, it lies under the duty—to examine the ground set up by the respondent for his refusal to deliver possession, and to determine whether a real, and not merely a pretended, controversy exists upon this subject. And when it appears, as I think it sufficiently appears in the present case, that in some of its aspects, at lea'st, the controversy requires a court to decide upon the validity of a real claim to the property in question, in my opinion the district court is obliged to decline the jurisdiction, and to refer the matter to the appropriate tribunal of the state. To decide that the claim is unfounded would be to assume the jurisdiction that is denied by the act. The order I am about to make, however, must not be regarded as impairing in any respect the effect of the order heretofore entered upon the petition of the Juniata Limestone Company.
The petition of the trustee is therefore refused, but without prejudice to his right to sue in the courts of the state.