Hunkee v. Bing

9 F. 277
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedSeptember 27, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 9 F. 277 (Hunkee v. Bing) 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
Hunkee v. Bing, 9 F. 277 (S.D.N.Y. 1881).

Opinion

Brown, D. J.

This action was commenced on October 31, 1878, by the complainant, as assignee in bankruptcy of the firm of J. Bear & Sons, to have a voluntary assignment made by that firm to the defendant, as assignee in trust for their creditors, on January 2,1878, declared fraudulent and void, and the assigned property or its proceeds turned over to the complainant. Upon an answer substantially admitting the plaintiff’s claims, with an account annexed, an interlocutory decree was entered on March 15, 1879, adjudging the assignment void as against the plaintiff, and referring it to a special master to pass the defendant’s accounts. The master, in his report, dated October 10, 1879, and filed January 3, 1880, allowed to the defendant his charge of $1,618.14 for his “commissions as assignee,” and the sum of $2,000 paid by him to his attorney for his charges and expenses. To each of these items exceptions have been taken as unwarranted and excessive.

A large part of the property of the bankrupts was sold at auction, under the direction of both the plaintiff and defendant, shortly before the commencement of the action, by order of this court, being all the property then remaining unsold, and the defendant’s account accordingly embraces the entire assets of the firm. By this account the gross receipts were $32,415.02; the charges and expenses, as passed and allowed by the master, amount to $11,001.95; leaving net proceeds to the amount of $21,313.07. The charges and expenses, besides the items excepted to, are made up of $2,650 for rent, about §2,200 for salaries of persons employed by the respondent, about [278]*278$1,700 paid for duties and freight, $450 for insurance, and a few hundred dollars for miscellaneous small items of expense.

The respondent’s charge of $1,618.14, for “his commissions as assignee,” was intended as a charge of 5 per cent, upon the gross collections ; and his counsel, upon the argument, claims that sum as his legal right under a statute of the state of New York, passed May 22, 1878, (chapter 318, § 7,) declaring that assignees “shall receive for their services a commission of 5 per centum on the whole sum which shall have come into their hands.” Prior to this act there was no statutory provision in this state fixing the compensation of assignees, but it had long been settled in practice that they were to be allowed the samé rates as' those prescribed by statute for executors and administrators, — Keiley, Ins. Assgts. (3d Ed.) 137; In re Scott, 53 How. Pr. 441; Meacham v. Sternes, 9 Paige, 398, 403; Barney v. Griffin, 2 Comst. 372, — which in this case would amount to less than one-third of the new statutory allowance. The counsel for the complainant contends that the respondent is not entitled to the benefit of this statute, but is limited to the former rule, which was in force on January 2, 1878, when he accepted the trust.

There is nothing in this statute intimating that it was intended to be retroactive. By the ordinary rule of construction it would not, therefore, apply to assignments previously made. The compensation ,of the assignee, as long fixed by practice, might fairly be deemed to be among the implied terms, both of the making and of the acceptance of the assignment. If the statute in question had materially reduced the compensation of assignees instead of increasing it, it would scarcely be contended that anything less than the clearest indications in the statute would justify its application to assignments already accepted and partly executed. And if a retroactive effect would not be given to such a statute to the prejudice of the assignee, it should not, I think, be applied retroactively to the prejudice of the assignor or of the creditors beneficially interested in the assignment. See MS. memoranda of Choate, J., in Rutherford v. Clements, December 29,1880. I have not been referred to any adjudication on the subject in the state courts, and it is not necessary to determine the question here, as there are other considerations in this case which render this statute, as well as the application of any other fixed rule of compensation, inapplicable.

The assignment has been adjudged fraudulent and void as against the complainant, and its further execution by the defendant lawfully interrupted. The assignee in bankruptcy lawfully takes the estate [279]*279into his own hands and is entitled to his legal fees. A duplication of charges, by the payment of full fees to two successive assignees, is not to be tolerated. In re Kurth, 17 N. B. R. 578. A voluntary assignee who accepts the trust, knowing from the beginning that it is liable to be set aside as fraudulent and void in bankruptcy, has not, in strictness, any legal, claim to compensation. Under some circumstances, accordingly, he has been allowed nothing. Burkholder v. Stamp, 4 N. B. R. 597; Clark v. Marks, 6 Ben. 275; In re Stubbs, 4 N. B. R. 376. In other cases he has been considered as simply a creditor of the assignors for his services, and put to his pro rata with other creditors. In re Lains, 16 N. B. R. 168. In this district the equitable rule has been adopted to allow him reasonable charges for such services and disbursements as have been rendered for the benefit of the general body of creditors by the preservation of the fund to their use, or in the advantageous collection of assets, or conversion of the property into money. Platt v. Archer, 13 Blatchf. 351; Havemeyer v. Loeb, MS. Dec. 11, 1877.

The cases in which this rule has been applied, however, are the ordinary cases of assignments which are valid under the state laws, and are operative as against all individual creditors so as to preserve the estate intact, and defeat the acquirement of any preference by one creditor over another through judgments and executions, and which are voidable only under the bankrupt act at the election of the assignee in bankruptcy in a direct suit for that purpose. Wald v. Weld, 6 Fed. Rep. 163, 169. Unfortunately for the general creditors this assignment is not of that character. The state law under which this assignment was made provided that a verified inventory and schedule of the assets and liabilities of the debtor should be filed by the debtor within 20 day after the assignment, and if that were not done that the assignee might, within 10 days thereafter, make and file such inventory and schedule so far as he can, and if not made by either debtor or assignee within 80 days that the assignment shall be void.

The firm of J. Bear & Sons, the assignors, consisted of three co-partners. Immediately upon the execution of the assignment the assignors and other persons about the store, nine in number, were employed by the respondent in preparing the inventory and schedules, which he testifies were prepared under his supervision and the advice of his counsel. Their preparation occupied two weeks, and they were filed on January 16, 1878. On March 11, 1878, a petition of creditors was filed in bankruptcy against the firm; the usual injunction [280]*280was .issued, which was served on the defendant on March 12th; an adjudication of bankruptcy was entered on May 31, 1878; the assignment to the plaintiff was made on August 9th; and this suit commenced on the thirty-first of October following.

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Bluebook (online)
9 F. 277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunkee-v-bing-nysd-1881.