In re Bruce Sewing Mach. Co.

2 F. Supp. 330, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2233
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Illinois
DecidedJune 20, 1930
DocketNo. 3912
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2 F. Supp. 330 (In re Bruce Sewing Mach. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Bruce Sewing Mach. Co., 2 F. Supp. 330, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2233 (S.D. Ill. 1930).

Opinion

FITZHENRY, District Judge.

The questions submitted by the certificate for review might all be included in one proposition : Did the referee err in making the statutory allowances to himself and the trustee and an allowance for an attorney’s fee to the trustee, in the light of the circumstances shown by the record ?

In answer to the rule to show cause, the First State Trust & Savings Bank saiddt had filed its bill in the circuit court of Sangamon county, 111., to foreclose its said mortgage and thereafter it was restrained by the order of the United States District Court for this district from further proceeding in said foreclosure suit and the said suit was still pending. In other words, prior to the institution of the proceedings to sell real estate in this case, the mortgagee had elected to pursue its remedy in the state court and had filed its bill. Upon the order to show cause, it gave a limited consent to sell the real estate in question, free and clear of the lien of the mortgage, “provided, that if said real estate failed to bring a sum in excess of the amount of defendant’s debt, interest and costs as aforesaid, this defendant be permitted to purchase said real estate at said sale for the amount of said debt, interest and costs, surrendering its lien thereon in payment of the purchase price, and provided further that in event said real estate shall sell for more than sufficient to pay the debts, interest and costs due this defendant as aforesaid, the lien of the defendant’s mortgage shall be and become a first and prior lien upon the proceeds of such sale.”

The referee’s order discloses there was reasonable cause to believe that there was an equity in the mortgaged premises, the value of which was one of the assets of the bankruptcy estate, s.o that there can be no question but that the bankruptcy eourt had jurisdiction in the premises.

Section 67d of the Bankruptcy Act (11 USCA § 107 (d) provides that properly recorded and valid liens shall not be “affected by this Act.” Would the taxing of fees against a fund created by the sale of property subject to such a valid lien, where there is no general fund, violate this provision?

Under section 48 of the act (11 USCA § 76), the trustee is entitled to receive a commission on “all moneys disbursed or turned over to any person, including lien holders.” By section 40 (11 USCA § 68), governing referees’ fees, it is provided that he shall have one per cent, commission on all moneys “disbursed” to creditors of the estate. The purpose of bankruptcy proceedings is to collect, marshal, administer, and distribute the assets of bankrupts and to determine priorities of [331]*331the parties where those questions arise. This power to marshal liens and determine their validity and priority implies the power to require, upon due notice, lienholders to set up their alleged liens within a stated reasonable time, or forever be barred from asserting the same. Remington, § 2742%. However, in exercising these very vital powers the burden is upon the officers of the court to always keep in mind the provisions of section 67d, 11 US CA § 107 (d), which plainly lays down the mandate that such liens shall not be “affected by this Act.”

Congress vested in bankruptcy courts tho power and duty of marshaling and distributing assets for tho exclusive benefit of general creditors. Under the Bankruptcy Law the proceedings relative to liens is necessarily inquisitorial, for the purpose of determining: (1) Whether the lien is a bona fide one; (2) the exact amount due and owing to the lienor; and (3) the fund over a,nd above a sufficient amount to cover the valid lions, for the benefit of the general creditors.

The rale applicable to a case where, in the sale of mortgaged property, the proceeds of the sale produce nothing for the benefit of general creditors, was early laid down in this, the Seventh Circuit, by the Circuit Court of Appeals, in Re Utt, 105 F. 754, 755, in a ease which went up from this court. The holding of the court is well digested in the syllabus: “On petition of tho trustee the court ordered the first mortgage paid from the proceeds, but displaced the second in favor of the costs and expenses incurred in both the bankruptcy proceedings and tho injunction suit, including fees allowed to counsel for tho creditors and trustee. No other assets of the bankrupt came into the hands of the trustee. Held, that such order was erroneous, except in so far as it directed payment of the costs incurred in selling the property, including compensation to the trustee not exceeding that to which tho master in the state court would have been entitled.”

The opinion in Re Utt, supra, was handed down prior to the amendment to the Bankruptcy Act of June 25, 1910, and this same question was discussed by the Circuit Court of Appeals of the Fifth Circuit in Gugel v. New Orleans National Bank, 239 F. 676, 678, in the light of the amendments to sections 40, 48 and 67d (11 USCA §§ 68, 76, 107 (d). In discussing the amendment to section 48, covering trustee’s commissions and attorneys’ fees, it was said:

“The contention of the trustee is that, whatever may have been the law before the amendment of June 25, 1910, to the Bankruptcy Act, as to the right of the trustee to commissions and attorney’s fees to be paid out of the funds realized from the sale of the mortgaged property, though tho funds were insufficient to satisfy the mortgage liens om it, the matter is set at rest by that amendment, which provides that trustees shall receive commissions on all moneys disbursed or turned over to any person, including lienholders. If the reference in the added words is to the source of payment, the language is undoubtedly broad enough to include payment at the expense of the lienholder. However, there seem to bo two possible eonsfametions that may be given to the language — one, that it relates to the basis of computation of tho commission, and has no reference to the source from which payment is to ho made} and tho other, that it has reference to th® source of payment as well. There is nothing in the language of the amendment that would, force tho latter construction. It is neeessary,. therefore, to look beyond the language to the purpose to bo subserved and the results that follow from the respective constructions, in, order to reach a conclusion.

“Tho purpose of Congress was evidently to increase the compensation of the trustee) but not necessarily at tho expense of lien-holders and with the effect of displacing their liens. Section 67d forbids such a construction. The purpose to increase is worked out by enlarging the basis of computation, so as to include amounts paid or turned over to lienholders, upon which, before tho amendment, commissions wore not, in many districts, computed, even where the payments of commissions, when so computed, were to be made out of the fund going to unsecured creditors. There was, therefore, a field of operation fox' the amendment without attributing to it the effect to displace liens and mortgages. To give it this broader construction would have the effect of imposing on the lienholder the burden of the expense of the general administration of the bank nipt estate, in which he has no interest and from which he derives no benefit. Wo cannot think that Congress intended any such inequitable result. Imposing upon the lienholder the burden of the cost of tho general administration of an insolvent estate, when he has ample security fox' his debt, is a denial of an adequate remedy for the collection of the debt secured by the lien.

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Bluebook (online)
2 F. Supp. 330, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2233, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-bruce-sewing-mach-co-ilsd-1930.