In Re Harvey Cole Co., Inc.

2 B.R. 517, 22 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 673, 1980 Bankr. LEXIS 5715
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Washington
DecidedJanuary 14, 1980
Docket18-44312
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 2 B.R. 517 (In Re Harvey Cole Co., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Harvey Cole Co., Inc., 2 B.R. 517, 22 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 673, 1980 Bankr. LEXIS 5715 (Wash. 1980).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM DECISION

SIDNEY C. VOLINN, Bankruptcy Judge.

This matter involves a dispute between two claimants. One is a guarantor who, when called upon to pay a creditor of the bankrupt, secured a full release on his guaranty by paying only part of the debt. The guarantor claims that by virtue of subrogation he is entitled to a dividend from the estate to the extent he paid the debt. The creditor, however, contends that subrogation and payment are not available to the guarantor, despite the release, until the creditor has been paid in full on the original claim.

The creditor, Milton Bradley Company, filed its claim, No. 17, for the full amount of its debt, $29,435.00, on March 10, 1978, prior to payment by the guarantor, Harvey Cole, of $20,000 for a full release from the guaranty. Cole filed his claim, No. 48, on March 17, 1978, in the foregoing sum.

The Debtor reviewed the claims and took the position that the guarantor’s (Cole’s) claim should be allowed in the sum of $20,-000; that the creditor’s (Bradley’s) claim should be allowed in the sum of $9,435, the balance of the account.

No order has been entered approving the debtor’s proposed allowance of claims. The arrangement provided for payment of 35% to general creditors which was to be paid at the rate of 5% the first year and 10% in each of the following three years. Mr. Cole, from the initial disbursement, has received a dividend of 5% on his claim of $20,000, or the sum of $1,000. The creditor, Bradley, has received 5% of the balance of $9,435 or the sum of $471.75. The relief sought by Bradley, incidentally, includes the turning over by Cole of the foregoing $1,000 to it by way of application on the outstanding balance.

Bradley contends that so long as it has a balance outstanding on the original claim, it is entitled to the application of all distributions in the bankruptcy thereon. Cole contends that as a result of payment on the guaranty and pro tanto subrogation to the rights of the creditor, he is entitled to a dividend on the $20,000 paid by him.

Resolution of the foregoing issue involves interpretation and correlation of Section 57i of the Bankruptcy Act, 11 U.S.C. § 93(i), Bankruptcy Rule 304, and its Chapter XI equivalent, Rule ll-33(d). Section 57i makes provision for one who is secondarily liable, such as a guarantor of the debtor or bankrupt, to file a claim in the creditor’s name when the principal creditor has not done so, and to be subrogated and paid a dividend to the extent that he has paid the debt. The equity of such a provision becomes apparent in view of the logical tendency of the creditor to proceed against a solvent guarantor, foregoing any involvement, even to the extent of filing a claim, in a protracted, uncertain bankruptcy case. The statute and the Rules thus provide the possibility of some recovery for the guarantor by making available a method of timely filing a claim; a corollary of this provision is clarification of the bankrupt’s right to a discharge from the claim of the guarantor, cf. 3 Collier on Bankruptcy, Sec. 57.21(1).

Section 57i emphasizes the derivative nature of the claims it encompasses by providing that the guarantor may file such a claim “in the creditor’s name.” It also im *519 poses on recovery by the guarantor a condition or proviso which is at the heart of the problem in this case, to-wit:

“Except that in the absence of an agreement to the contrary, he shall not be entitled to any dividend until the amount paid to the creditor on the undertaking plus the dividends paid to the creditor [of] the bankrupt estate on the claim equal the amount of the entire claim of the creditor. Any excess received by the creditor shall be held in trust for such person.”

It is upon this provision that Bradley bases its claim of a prior right to all dividends on the creditor’s claim until its debt has been fully paid.

Cole contends that the proviso of 57i is dependent for its application on the condition stated at the outset of the section, namely that the principal creditor has not filed a claim, thereby leaving it to the guarantor to file in the creditor’s name. It is difficult to perceive how or why such a result should obtain. In any event, reference to Bankruptcy Rule 304 appears to answer this contention. After providing that the person secondarily liable may file a proof of claim in the name of the creditor, it states:

“No distribution shall be made on the claim except on satisfactory proof that the original debt will be diminished by the amount of the distribution. The creditor may nonetheless file a proof of claim pursuant to Rule 302, and such proof of claim shall supersede the proof of claim filed pursuant to the first sentence of this rule.” (Emph. supp.)

The fact that Bradley filed its claim prior to, rather than after the Cole claim, should not vitiate the effect of this section since it is the creditor’s claim which is the focus of the Rule. Who is to receive distribution thereon is another question.

Cole further contends, in essence, that there is an agreement “to the contrary” which dispenses with application of the proviso in Section 57i. While the release agreement, signed by Bradley on August 8, 1978, makes no mention of claims in the bankruptcy proceeding, let alone payment of dividends thereon, it is argued that two other documents, in effect, show that there was such an understanding or agreement. One of these is language in the amended plan of arrangement forwarded to creditors on August 9, 1978. This language appears in the “introductory outline” to the plan in the context of other subjects. It states:

“Some creditors have been paid, at least in part, by guarantors, who are ratably subrogated to the original creditor’s claim, but the total will remain the same.”

Assuming that one can perceive this language, sent to all of the creditors of the estate, presumably for general information, as somehow imposing on certain unnamed guaranteed creditors an understanding of some kind, it falls far short of expressing “an agreement to the contrary” or a waiver as to the proviso in Section 57i by Bradley in favor of Cole.

The other document alluded to is a full release executed between Cole and Lesney Products Corporation (for part payment) on April 9, 1979, which provides that if the creditor receives more than the balance owed it on the total claim, all excess funds would be paid by Lesney to Cole. Implicit in this language is the proviso of 57i that the creditor must be fully satisfied before the guarantor can have the benefit of sub-rogation. Bradley was not involved in this subsequent transaction. In any event, all it tends to show is that Lesney wanted to state the equivalent of the proviso of Section 57i, or its effect, in the release. The provision was redundant since the statute would have brought about the same result in the absence of such language.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 B.R. 517, 22 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 673, 1980 Bankr. LEXIS 5715, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-harvey-cole-co-inc-wawb-1980.