Bray v. Cobb

100 F. 270, 1900 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 392
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. North Carolina
DecidedMarch 15, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 100 F. 270 (Bray v. Cobb) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bray v. Cobb, 100 F. 270, 1900 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 392 (E.D.N.C. 1900).

Opinion

PURNELL, District Judge.

On petition of the trustee, the referee certifies for review the following record:

“Geo. W. Cobb, and B. M. Culpepper, surety, executed a bond in the sum of three thousand dollars, on the 28th day of April, 1897, to Maria C. Cobb, the terms of which are as follows: (1) To pay her, Maria C. Cobb, twenty-five dollars ($25.00) per month during her life; (2) to pay twelve dollars and fifty cents rent monthly for the bank building during Geo. W. Cobb’s life; (3) to pay the taxes upon the property during Mrs. Cobb’s life; (4) to keep- the property insured; and (5j to keep the property in repairs. Geo. W. Cobb failed in October, 1898, and since the 1st of October, 1898, nothing has been paid on the contract marked ‘Exhibit A’ in the evidence. Mrs. Cobb is fifty years of age; Geo. W: Cobb is fifty-six years of age; and, as provided in section 1352 of the Code of North Carolina, Sirs. Cobb’s expectancy is 20Vio years, and G. W. Cobb’s expectancy is I6V10 years. M. B. Culpepper, the surety on the bond, is insolvent. The,contract is for value. 'The amount admitted to-be due on this contract from October 1, 1898, at which time the payments stopped, to February 1, 1900 (10 months), amounts to four hundred dollars. There is due for rent twelve dollars and fifty cents per month, which amounts to two hundred dollars. There is to be credited upon these amounts $81.25,, [271]*271routs paid, and monthly payments of twenty-five dollars to Maria C. Cobli. leaving due fSfilS.Tó. And the court further finds that Mrs. Cobh is entitled to prove her claim in the case of Cobh, bankrupt, for two thousand seven hundred and eighty dollars and twenty-three cents ($2,780.23), being’ the amount allowed as the value, of her1 contract under the agreement to pay her twenty-live dollars per month during her lifetime, and the sum .of one thousand and two dollars (.$1,002.00) is the amount allowed her for the rent of the building during Geo. W. Cobb’s lifetime, making a sum total of $3,782.23. $.118.75 Is the amount due up to February 1, 1000, as covered by the contract, which, together with the other i.wo items, makes a sum total of S4,300.08, and for tliis amount she will be allowed to prove her claim against the estate of Goo. AV. Cobh, bankrupt.”

To tliis record and decision several exceptions, are filed, most of which it will not: he necessary to consider, as the decision of the main question involved disposes of them. They will he noticed later, however.

The record presents one of those hardships of the law which often occur, and sometimes, by appealing to the sympathies, always enlisted for the uniortunaie, the widow, and the orphan, make it hard to decide impartially. That this seems to have been the case on the hearing is a credit to the humanity and kindly feeling of all who participated. It is stated that the claimant and her children signed receipts for seven thousand dollars, and conveyed valuable real estate, as a consideration for the contract upon which the claim under consideration was allowed. This statement, while it presents the hardships to them, is but another case in which, trusting to a man then in apparent prosperous circumstances, honorable, and of excellent report among men, business reverses, failure, and bankruptcy have conn», and rendered him unable to perforin his contract, entered into with the highest motives and purposes,- — a misfortune to him which must fall heavily upon others (creditors with whom he treated and traded at arm’s length, as well as the unfortunate widow and orphan, who gave him their confidence). The consideration for the claim, though, cannot enter into 1he decision of the case at bar. The court must consider the contract and iis status under (he bankrupt law, — a law under which all creditors of the bankrupt have well-defined rights.

Tliis is an involuntary proceeding, and the claim, if claim at all, in the enumeration of (‘hums or debts which may be proved in bankruptcy, must be considered under section (53a, subd. 1: “A. fixed liability as evidenced by a judgment or instrument of writing, absolutely owing at the time of the filing of the petition against: him, whether then payable or not,” etc. The provision requires the debt to be absolutely owing, and includes those debts which are payable at a subsequent: dale. It is sufficient if the debt is a fixed liability absolutely owing when the petition in bankruptcy was filed. Il: is the actual value of the debt owing at the commencement of the proceedings (hat is provable. In re Bartenbach, Fed. Cas. No. 1,068; In re Haake, Fed. Cas. No. 5,883; In re New Brunswick Carpet Co. (D. C.) 4 Fed. 514. The liability must be ascertained at the date of filing the petition. Accrued interest is a part of the debt provable, but interest to- accrue is not provable. Sloan v. Lewis, 22 Wall. 150, 22 L. Ed. 832.

[272]*272The basis of the claim is a contract, with security to pay certain sums of money for certain-stated purposes, and must be considered as a contract, without giving it any greater dignity than that to which it is entitled as a contract. The surety is admittedly insolvent, and the fact that there was a surety does not give to the contract any priority or special dignity. The covenants of the contract are that the bankrupt shall pay to claimant during her life the sum of $25 per month — $12.50 per month as rent for the bank building, formerly occupied by the bankrupt — during the life of the said G-. W. Cobb, bankrupt. An adjudication in bankruptcy terminates all contractual relations of the bankrupt. The object of the proceeding is to administer completely the bankrupt estate, to collect his assets, apply them to the payment of his debts then owing, and discharge him from further liability.

As to the rent of the bank, the contractual relations being terminated, a landlord is not entitled to prove a claim for rent against a bankrupt after such bankrupt ceases to use the building. The relations of landlord and tenant are severed by operation of the bankrupt law. The trustee of his estate may, after adjudication, occupy and use the rented or leased premises for the estate, but under such circumstances it would be chargeable to the estate, not as rent under bankrupt’s contract, but as cost and expenses of administering the same. If the trustee elects to reject the lease, and surrenders the premises, neither the trustee nor the bankrupt’s estate is liable for rent after the election of the trustee, and the property ceased to be used for the administration of the estate. Even of a lease which might be levied on and sold under judicial process against the bankrupt previous to adjudication, and which passes to the trustee, the legal title only passes, and the trustee is not bound to take the lease, and charge the estate with the payment of rent. He may elect not to take the lease when it would be a burden, and not a- benefit, to the estate. Loveland, Bankr. § 165, ■and cases cited. It does not appear whether the trustee used the bank or not. If he did not, his election not to assume the lease may be presumed, and the inference from the testimony is he did not, especially as there was no necessity for such use. If he did so use the bank, he or the estate would be chargeable with the rent for ■ the time it was used. The same reasoning and authorities would apply to the other covenants, as to taxes, insurance, and repairs.

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Bluebook (online)
100 F. 270, 1900 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 392, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bray-v-cobb-nced-1900.