Brust v. Irving Trust Co.

129 F. Supp. 462, 1955 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3530
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMarch 4, 1955
StatusPublished

This text of 129 F. Supp. 462 (Brust v. Irving Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brust v. Irving Trust Co., 129 F. Supp. 462, 1955 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3530 (S.D.N.Y. 1955).

Opinion

PALMIERI, District Judge.

This is an action by the successor trustee in bankruptcy of the International Match Corporation (Match) against a former trustee of Match. The plaintiff seeks to recover moneys alleged to have been wrongfuly paid by the defendant as commissions to former referee in bankruptcy Oscar W. Ehrhorn before whom this bankrupt estate was administered. Match was adjudicated a voluntary bankrupt on April 19, 1932 and the case was generally referred to Ehrhorn on the same day. The defendant, Irving Trust Company, was appointed trustee on June 1, 1932, and exercised its duties over a period of about fifteen years, until 1947.

The bankruptcy was probably the largest and most complex in the history of this Court. The total assets, the claims finally allowed, and the total of the sums disbursed amounted to many millions of dollars. Ehrhorn collected as commissions the sum of $339,190.25. This amount was paid in the form of 48 checks, prepared, signed, and issued by the defendant, and countersigned by Ehrhorn, on various dates between November 20, 1937 and May 21, 1947. In In re International Match Corp., 2 Cir., 190 F.2d 458, certiorari denied, 1951, 342 U.S. 870, 72 S.Ct. 113, 96 L.Ed. 655, Ehrhorn was held to have violated, by fraudulent concealment, a standing rule of the judges of this Court that the referees in bankruptcy should limit their earnings to $20,000 in any calendar year. The Court affirmed an order requiring Ehrhorn to repay $236,729.38 plus interest to a trustee who would hold the money for Match’s benefit. Plaintiff was elected trustee after the decision of the Court of Appeals. He promptly discovered that the judgment against Ehrhorn was uncollectible and in February 1952 he initiated this action against the former trustee.

Plaintiff bases his asserted right to recover on two theories. First, plaintiff alleges that defendant charged itself with a reserve fund of $317,715.21 in a report that it filed on October 11, 1945 and that defendant never accounted for liquidation of that reserve. Therefore, plaintiff contends, the estate was never closed, defendant is still accountable for the reserve, and defendant should be required to pay it over to plaintiff for proper distribution. Second, plaintiff alleges that since it has been decided that Ehrhorn had no right to the commissions which were paid to him by defendant, defendant had no right to pay them, and that defendant should repay the unlawfully paid sums to the trustee now that it has been discovered that Ehrhorn cannot do so.

Both theories under which plaintiff seeks to recover depend on what occurred prior to the time when former [464]*464Referee Ehrhorn purported to discharge the defendant as trustee and close the case on June 23 and 24, 1947. On October 11, 1945, defendant submitted to the referee its “Final Report * * * and Petition for Allowance.” This report, consisting of 171 • printed pages, contained one schedule in which the defendant set forth its receipts and another in which it set forth its disbursements for 'the period beginning with its appointment as trustee and ending August 31, 1945. Included among the disbursements was an item called “Reserve set aside representing earned commissions of referee in bankruptcy . $317,715.21.” The schedules concluded with a summary in which the amount of the disbursements, including the aforementioned reserve, was subtracted from the receipts and the remainder stated. From the remainder were deducted certain preferred claims and the sum of the liquidating dividends which had been paid to the general creditors before August 31, 1945, leaving a balance of approximately $2,662,000.

On November 9, 1945, Ehrhorn gave all the creditors notice of the filing of defendant’s “Final Report * * * and Petition for Allowance” and of other applications for allowances. This notice informed the creditors that the applications for allowances would be considered at a “final meeting of creditors to be held before the undersigned Referee * * * on the 6th day of February, 1946” and that at this meeting “the Trustee’s Account will be examined, and if found correct the same will be allowed and an order then -or thereafter entered without further notice discharging the Trustee of its trust; a final dividend will be declared by the Referee * * The notice also stated that the creditors could examine the trustee’s “Final Report * * * and Petition for Allowance” at the Referee’s office and that according to it the balance on hand was $2,662,000.

On February 6, 1946, the creditors held a meeting before Referee Ehrhorn pursuant to the notice of November 9, 1945. None of the creditors voiced any objection to the accounts in the trustee’s “Final Report * * * and Petition for Allowance” when such objections were called for by the Referee. Instead, those present at the' meeting acted on the assumption that the only amount available for further allowances to the trustee, the trustee’s attorneys, and others, and for distribution to the creditors after these allowances had been paid, was the amount which the defendant had given as the balance on hand in its “Final Report * * * and Petition for Allowance,” namely, $2,662,-000. The creditors vigorously attacked the petitions for allowances that had been submitted by the defendant and its attorneys. They argued that if these petitions were granted the cost of administration, in which was included the reserve for referee’s commissions, would constitute too large a portion of the trustee’s total receipts. After argument on the petitions for allowances the referee reserved decision and adjourned the meeting.

Several months later, on July 19, 1946, the referee recommended that the account of the trustee in bankruptcy be approved and that allowances of certain amounts be made to the trustee and its attorney. The referree submitted his recommendations accompanied by the trustee’s “Final Report * * * and Petition for Allowance” and other papers to a judge of this Court. On November 30, 1946 Judge Rifkind filed an opinion in which he stated that an order would be signed approving the account of the trustee as filed. Judge Rifkind accepted all but one of the- referee’s recommendations. He modified the allowance recommended for the attorneys for the trustee by increasing it. And on December 13, 1946 Judge Rifkind signed an order providing that the defendant’s “accounts * * * as heretofore submitted and filed, be and the same hereby are, approved and allowed” and that the de[465]*465fendant pay the “Referee in Bankruptcy 1% on final dividend to creditors when declared.”

On December 20, 1946 the adjourned final meeting of creditors was held. This meeting was attended by the president and counsel of the International Match Realization Co. (Realization) which was the owner of 90% of the creditors’ claims. Defendant submitted accounts bringing its receipts and disbursements up to date. Attached to these accounts was a page headed “Calculation of Balance Available for Final Dividend” which showed the cash on hand on December 17, 1946 as approximately $2,650,000. From this amount there was deducted the allowances as per Judge Rifkind’s order, the estimated expense of closing the case, and the referee’s commission figured at 1% of the final dividend. As a footnote to the expenditure called “Referee’s commission” there was included a calculation of the total commission set aside for the referee, as follows:

"Total distributions to general and
preferred creditors to date........

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Bluebook (online)
129 F. Supp. 462, 1955 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3530, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brust-v-irving-trust-co-nysd-1955.