Hammer v. Tuffy

145 F.2d 447, 1944 U.S. App. LEXIS 2535
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedNovember 2, 1944
Docket32
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 145 F.2d 447 (Hammer v. Tuffy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hammer v. Tuffy, 145 F.2d 447, 1944 U.S. App. LEXIS 2535 (2d Cir. 1944).

Opinion

L. HAND, Circuit Judge.

Mrs. Hammer, as executrix, appeals from an order in bankruptcy affirming a referee’s order, which had allowed interest upon the claims of those creditors of Nichols, the bankrupt, who had filed their claims in season, in priority to the principal of her claim, filed many years later. She also complained of the amount allowed the trustee as compensation. Tuffy, as receiver, appeals from an order affirming a referee’s order, which, in fixing his allowance ‘ did not include in the base for computation under § 48, sub. a (2), 11 U.S.C.A. § 76, sub. a(2), certain claims against two decedents’ estates in which the bankrupt had had an interest. The following were the facts.

Nichols became a voluntary bankrupt on December 18, 1912; she scheduled Valdemar T. Hammer, the appellant’s testator, as a creditor for $3,460; but he did not file any claim within the prescribed period. On the other hand, although she scheduled no assets of value, twelve creditors did file their claims; amounting to $2,563.50 in all. The first referee to whom the case was referred received nine of these, stamped them, “Filed”; and noted them in his docket as “filed claims.” He died and a substituted referee received the other three, which he also stamped as “Filed”; but it does not appear whether he entered them on his docket, or made any formal allowance of them, or of the first nine. The bankrupt never applied for a discharge, and died during the year; no trustee was ever appointed, and on December 8, 1913, the second referee “closed the case” under a local bankruptcy rule. On January 29, 1940, one of the creditors petitioned to reopen the estate in order to administer newly discovered assets consisting of the bankrupt’s interests in two estates of deceased persons; Tuffy was appointed receiver, and later trustee, and after considerable litigation, collected about $18,000. (There remains also a large claim which has not been col *449 lected, but which, at best, is of extremely doubtful value.) On February 15, 1940, Mrs. Hammer, Valdemar T. Hammer’s executrix, filed a proof of claim for $3,460, which was allowed by a third referee to whom the case had been referred, after the reopening of the estate.

This referee allowed to the trustee’s attorney, $6,750, which with other deductions left in the hands of the trustee $8,646.99. He decided that in distributing this the twelve creditors who had filed in season should be paid their interest to the date of payment, which brought their share to $7,290.93 leaving a balance of only $1,-356.06 applicable to the Hammer claim of $3460. Mrs. Hammer protests against this division, and also against the allowance to the trustee’s attorney, which, she asserts, should not have been more than $5000. The questions upon her appeal are therefore: (1) Whether interest should be allowed upon the claims of the creditors who filed in season; and (2) whether the allowance to the attorney for the trustee was too great.

The appeal of Tuffy, as receiver, is from an allowance to him of $250, which he says is too little. He was appointed receiver on January 24, 1940, and trustee on February 15, 1940. The only assets on which anything was ever recovered were the claims against the two decedent estates, already mentioned; during the three weeks in which he served as receiver, he collected nothing on these. The order making him the allowance was 'entered on July 28, 1943; he served a notice of appeal on August 31, 1943. Naturally, he had never served any notice of entry of the order upon himself, and, of course could file no proof of such service in the clerk’s office. On his appeal two questions arise: (1) Whether he had thirty or forty days within which to appeal; and (2) whether he was entitled to an allowance, based upon the value of the amounts collected by himself as trustee upon the two claims after he had ceased to be receiver.

We will take up Mrs. Hammer’s appeal first. The words, “paid in full,” occur, not only in § 57, sub. n but in § 64, sub. a, 11 U.S.C.A. §§ 93, sub. n, 104, sub. a; but no courts have construed them in either section, or in § 64, sub. b. Mrs. Hammer’s brief asserts that the phrase, so far as it touches the priority of wages in § 64, sub. a, “has been uniformly applied as meaning the payment of only the principal”; but she cites no decision in support of the statement, and, as we have just said, after considerable search we have not been able to find any. It is extremely unlikely that in fact there are any, for wages are generally paid in advance of the final distribution of the bankrupt estate, and are of small enough amounts to make interest a trivial item. In the case of taxes we did hold in Re Menist & Co., 290 F. 947, that interest ran to the date of payment; and, although the Supreme Court reversed us as to the amount to be allowed (United States v. Childs, 266 U.S. 304, 45 S.Ct. 110, 69 L. Ed. 299), it did not disturb that ruling. However, at that time § 64, sub. a covered taxes only, and did not contain the words, “paid in full,” so that our decision is scarcely relevant to the case at bar. Whether the priority of taxes under § 64, sub. a (4) includes interest must therefore be regarded as an open question. The New York Court of Appeals in People v. American Loan & Trust Co., 172 N.Y. 371, 65 N.E. 200, held that the priority granted to savings banks deposits by § 130 of the Banking Law of 1892 was limited to principal, although the section gave priority “to the payment in full” of the deposits. This seems to be the generally accepted doctrine when the question arises between two groups of creditors, one of which is entitled to priority by statute or otherwise. Whether or not the priority is stated to be until the group is “paid in full,” the measure of the preference is the payment of the principal. We have collected a number of the cases in the margin. * However, the question as to how far one group of creditors shall be preferred to another, because the origin of their claims entitles them to tenderer treatment, is altogether different from what shall be the division between two groups *450 which have stood originally on a parity, but one of which has asserted its rights within the period granted to it to do so, while the other has let that period pass without action. ■

The history of the law as the section stood before 1938, and the Congressional comment which accompanied the amendment of that year, leave no reasonable doubt as to its meaning. Until 1938, if a bankrupt’s estate turned out to be large enough to pay the claims of all creditors whose claims had been allowed, any surplus went to the bankrupt, In re Silk, 2 Cir., 55 F.2d 917; Burton Coal Co. v. Franklin Coal Co., 8 Cir., 67 F.2d 796. However, that surplus was computed only after interest had been allowed to the time of payment upon the claims of those whose claims had been allowed. Johnson v. Norris, 5 Cir., 190 F. 459, L.R.A.1915B, 884; Brown v. Leo, 2 Cir., 34 F.2d 127. This result was very harsh, especially when the bankrupt had got a discharge, or — even when he had not — if the statute of limitations had run meanwhile.

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Bluebook (online)
145 F.2d 447, 1944 U.S. App. LEXIS 2535, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hammer-v-tuffy-ca2-1944.