In re Accounting of Barnes

18 F. 158, 1883 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 140
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedOctober 8, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 18 F. 158 (In re Accounting of Barnes) 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
In re Accounting of Barnes, 18 F. 158, 1883 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 140 (S.D.N.Y. 1883).

Opinion

Brown, J.

In determining the exceptions arising upon the report of the special examiner on the accounts of the above assignee, I find it impossible. to reach any satisfactory result.- The difficulties attending the administration of this estate through nearly 13 years have been extraordinary; the necessary expenses seemingly intolerable; and to these are added further claims, which are clearly inadmissible as they stand, but which cannot be wholly disallowed without evident injustice.

\The assets collected, exclusive of interest on deposits, have been about $114,000. The collections were all made, except about $7,000, prior to January 1,1873, or within less than two years of the assignee’s [159]*159appointment. Oí these collections about $34,000 were ordered distributed by a dividend among the general creditors in' September, 1871, prior to the presentment of the claim of the United States. The claim of the latter, amounting to about $100,000, for the value of property forfeited by the bankrupts through frauds in importations several years before the bankruptcy, was presented in 1872, and adjudged a legal demand by the district and circuit courts, and would absorb all the residue of the assets. A. payment of $3,000 on account of this claim was ordered and paid in 1882.

By the assignee’s accounts presented to the special examiner all the residue of the estate, however, above the two sums above paid, or ordered paid, would be absorbed in the expenses of its administration. Some further collections are expected to be made from several life-insurance policies adjudged to belong to the estate; but these cannot swell very much the aggregate amount realized from the estate; and from the policy on the life of T. H. Vetterlein it is doubtful if as much can be realized as the estate has already expended in keeping it alive, and the wisdom of the course adopted, and of the orders allowing the payments to be made upon it, may well be questioned. In re McKinney, 15 Fed. Rep. 535. Deducting these and other similar advances for the preservation of the estate, there remain some $80,000 of charges and allowances asked for in the as-signee’s account upon collections which may possibly reach $130,-000, besides interest. Difficult and extraordinary as this bankruptcy has been from its inception, it does not warrant any such excessive proportion of expenses to collections as would arise from an allowance of the charges claimed.

The main large items making up the bulk of this amount of expenses are:

(1) The fees of various attorneys in New York and Philadelphia, about ------- $25,000

(2) For Mr. Sharp, as book-keeper, 13 years, about, - - 16.000

Í3) Pent of offices, 13 years, about - 6,000

(4) Extra allowance asked for assignee, - - - 24,000

Of the remainder, some $4,000 already paid, and $2,000 not yet paid, were incurred in the endeavor to procure a remission by the secretary of the treasury of the claim of the United States above referred to. Of the first three items, more than three-fourths have been incurred since January 1, 1873, during which period only about $7,000 have as yet been collected; while upwards of $105,000 was collected prior to that time. There have been several attacks by suit against the assignee, involving, it is said, the entire assets in his hands, against which it was necessary for him to defend; and most of the collections were obtained through suits in one form or another; so that the estate has thus been kept in perpetual litigation, not merely in the enforcement of the rights of the assignee against others, but in self-defense against unfounded claims.

[160]*160In the careful report submitted by the special examiner he has allowed the attorneys’ bills without reduction.. For the item of bookkeeper he has allowed $7,500; for rent, $650, during the first 13 months only; and he has not recommended any extra allowance to the assignee; making a reduction in the gross amount claimed of $34,275. Both the assignee and the government have excepted to the report: the former for the disallowance of the amounts charged in the first three items above stated; and the government for the allowance of certain portions of attorneys’ fees.-

1. It is impossible to justify the employment of Mr. Sharp as a bookkeeper, at a large expense to the estate, during the long period of 13 years, as claimed. There was nothing sufficient to warrant his long retention at such an expense. After January 1,1873, little remained to be done in the ordinary business of a book-keeper. The collections were already chiefly made. The extraordinary litigations which followed doubtless required the frequent services of Mr. Sharp, or of some competent person, as an expert to examine the books, and to testify in the various causes. In the remission- proceedings, also, Mr. Sharp doubtless rendered services of a most laborious and painstaking character. These purposes, however, are not, in my judgment, sufficient, with the little ordinary business of the estate remaining after January 1,1873, to justify the continuous employment of a book-keeper during 10 years following at a constant salary of $1,200. During most of this-; time Mr. Sharp was also employed in other business- in which the assignee personally was interested; and the charge of $1,200 is an apportionment of his salary made by the as-signee by a general estimate, upon data which do not sufficiently appear to make it possible for the court to sanction it. Charges in gross, made in this manner, for the services in part of a person otherwise employed by the assignee individually} cannot pass in that shape, and can never be allowed, except upon proof of the services rendered, their necessity, and their reasonable value.

From the entry of .October 17, 1871, it appears that Mr. Sharp’s services began June 28, 1871, at the rate of $2,000 per year; and there is nothing indicated by the debit and credit sides of the assignee’s account, or in all the explanatory evidence, from which I am satisfied that it was necessary to continue his services at such a salary beyond the end of December, 1872, a period of 18 months, which, at $2,000 per year, would amount to $3,000. In allowing $7,500 for Mr.. Sharp’s entire services, the examiner has, in effect, allowed $4,500 for subsequent services, — a liberal amount, as it seems to me, for everything which the proof discloses; and to reach this sum, at least $1,000 or $1,500 must be charged to the account of his services in the remission proceedings. The same remarks apply in part to the charges for rent. The sum of $1,300, charged by the assignee for the first 13 months at the rate of $100 per month, is an apportionment made by the assignee of a larger sum paid by him [161]*161for offices which were in part used for his own business, the rent of which was “equated” by him, as he says, according to the space occupied by each; but neither the whole rent paid nor other sufficient data are given in evidence, from which the court can see whether the apportionment made was proper or not, and it must, therefore, be disregarded, and only such allowance be made for rent as the evidence shows to have boon necessary and proper for the uses of the estate.

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234 A.D. 279 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1932)

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Bluebook (online)
18 F. 158, 1883 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-accounting-of-barnes-nysd-1883.