In re Drake

7 F. Cas. 1046, 14 Nat. Bank. Reg. 150
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedMarch 15, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 7 F. Cas. 1046 (In re Drake) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Drake, 7 F. Cas. 1046, 14 Nat. Bank. Reg. 150 (D.N.J. 1876).

Opinion

NIXON, District Judge.

The accounts of the assignee having been audited and allowed by the register, and no creditor objecting, they will also be passed by the court, and the assignee is discharged from liability, under section 5090 of the Revised Statutes.

There is also before me a petition from, gentlemen, signing themselves as attorneys of the assignee, asking for an additional allowance of two hundred and fifty dollars, for professional services in the settlement of the estate. Upon an examination of the account, I find that the whole assets consist of two items: to wit, proceeds of the sale of personal property, three hundred and eighty-four dollars and thirty cents, and of real estate, nine hundred and seventy-five dollars, making an aggregate of one thousand three hundred and fifty-nine dollars and thirty cents. The disbursements for reducing the assets into money consist principally of two items: to wit, two hundred and forty dollars and sixty-nine cents, paid to these attorneys for their expenses and allowance for filing the petition in bankruptcy, and two hundred and seventy-one dollars and forty-one cents, also paid to-them; the bulk of which is an allowance of two hundred and fifty dollars on account of professional services to the assignee. The register makes the assignee’s commissions one hundred and thirtyrthree dollars and ninety-eight cents, and adds, for register’s and clerk’s fees, seventy dollars and ten cents. Including a few small items imprinting, postage, etc., the disbursements amount to seven hundred and twenty-six [1047]*1047dollars and three cents—more than fifty per cent of the amount collected—leaving for distribution amongst the creditors six hundred and thirty-two dollars and twenty-seven cents. From this sum, before any dividend is struck, the attorneys ask for an additional allowance of two hundred and fifty dollars.

The cáse seems to be a proper one in which to make some observations in regard to the administration of estates in bankruptcy. It requires a constant and distasteful struggle on the part of the court to keep down expenses. In view of the lack of success in this matter, I do not wonder that so strong a sentiment exists in the public mind for the repeal of .the bankrupt law [of 1867 (14 Stat. 530)]; creditors cannot be expected long to favor a system of liquidation and settlement which allows the great bulk of the small estates to go into the pockets of the attorneys, assignees, and other officers. If no power- and disposition exist in the court to control the expenses, the sooner the law is repealed the better it will be for the creditors and the public morals. The evil is not new; it has been a source of serious complaint, and has long characterized bankruptcy proceedings in England. Lord Eldon signalized his advent to the woolsack, in 1801, by freely expressing his opinion in regard to the existing abuses in that court, and his determination not only to reduce expenses, but to repress all dishonest practices. It is said by the reporter, at the opening of the sixth volume of Yesey, Jr., lleports, that the lord chancellor took the first occasion to observe with warmth, that "the abuse of the bankrupt law is a disgrace to the country, and it would be better at once to repeal all the statutes than to suffer them to be applied to such purposes. There is no mercy to the estate; nothing is less thought of than the object of the commission; as they are frequently conducted in the country, they are little more than stock in trade for the commissioners, the assignees, and the solicitor. Instead of solicitors attending to their duty as ministers of the coiut, for they are so, commissions of bankruptcy are treated as matters of traffic,” etc.

I am satisfied that the chief source of the extravagant expenditure in the winding up of estates in bankruptcy can be traced to ilie creditors themselves, who have the largest interest in a faithful administration, and who are the loudest in their complaints of the expenses of the settlement.

First. The act confers upon them the choice of the assignee. This is the most important step in all the proceedings, because so much depends upon his character, qualifications, and habits of business; and yet they rarely give any personal attention to these traits in making their selection. AYhenever any of their debtors go or are put into bankruptcy, they generally prove and then surrender their claim to the lawyer—who too often makes it his business to look up such matters for professional management — and after clothing him with full powers by executing a letter of attorney, they dismiss the subject from their thoughts; if afterward they are surprised by a dividend, they regard it as so much saved from a total wreck, and as clear gain; whether this indifference is the result of past disappointments in realizing from the estate in bankruptcy, or whether it comes from their greater absorption in other and more profitable business affairs, I am not able to say— but the fact exists; and I am clear that the most salutary amendment which could be made to the act to-day, would be to take the power of selecting assignees from creditors, and, in the first instance, to vest it in the register, subject to the supervision of the court, on the appeal of any of the creditors.

The case before me is an illustration of the practical working of the present method. The bankrupt was a married woman residing in Hudson county, New Jersey, and carrying on the business of hatting at No. 9 Bowery, New York; she had some eight or ten creditors, whose claims aggregated nearly six thousand dollars; she owned real estate in New Jersey, which one of the creditors, in the course of these pi'oceedings, swore was worth, above the incumbrances, about twelve thousand dollars; her stock of goods, in her store, was valued at four hundred dollars, and this was seized on attachments issued against her husband, and held by the sheriff of New York, for the payment of his debts. Her creditors became alarmed, and finding that she had committed an act of bankruptcy, by allowing her commercial paper to go to protest, they filed a petition of bankruptcy against her in this court; no opposition was made, and an adjudication followed as a matter of course. The register gave notice of the first meeting of creditors for the choice of an assignee, and on the day appointed, one of the members of the legal firm who filed the petition appeared before the register, with eight proofs of claim, from as many creditors, and with eight powers of attorney to vote thereon, and cast the eight votes for the present assignee: whether the creditors knew anything about the gentleman thus selected does not appear. The court knows nothing to his detriment, except that he has given very little attention to a solemn trust, which he voluntarily assumed. If the affidavits of the members of the law firm, filed in these pi'oceedings to exhibit to the court the character and extent of their services, be true, he has done nothing since his selection except to allow these attorneys the use of his name, in the performance of the duties which he undertook when he consented to the appointment.

Second. The bankrupt act gives to creditors a voice, and a large control over the expenses of the administration of estates in bankruptcy. The 2Stli section of the original law makes provision for the third meeting of [1048]

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Bluebook (online)
7 F. Cas. 1046, 14 Nat. Bank. Reg. 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-drake-njd-1876.