In re Kreuger

196 F. 705
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Kentucky
DecidedDecember 15, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 196 F. 705 (In re Kreuger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Kreuger, 196 F. 705 (E.D. Ky. 1911).

Opinion

COCHRAN, District Judge.

This cause is before me on petition for review filed by C. C. Cullen & Co., creditors, of an order of the referee, made November 11, 1911, refusing to approve the appointment of T. B. Rodman as trustee, and directing the appointment on the same day of another trustee, when W. F. Baumeister was appointed; on another petition for review, filed by the same creditors, of an order of the referee, made November 27, 1911, after the filing of the first petition for review, directing that on December 8, 1911, depositions be taken of certain witnesses to put into the record the evidence of facts upon which the referee had based his refusal to approve the election of T. B. Rodman as trutsee; and on petition of W. F. Baumeister, trustee, to the referee, for an order requiring T. B. Rodman, receiver herein, to pay over to him as trustee funds in his hands as receiver, which the referee has certified to the court for consideration and action.

At the election held for trustee, said Rodman and Jonas Fish were voted for. Rodman received the votes of 25 creditors, whose claims amounted to $9,166.42. and Fish received the votes of T8 creditors, whose claims amounted to $2,767.65. Immediately upon the election being had and so resulting, the referee refused to approve the election of Rodman as trustee for these reasons, to wit:

“The bankruptcy law provided there shall be no official trustee. The trustee shall represent alike the ci-editors and the bankrupt, and be the special representative of no particular interest or individuals. The trustee elected by the powers' of attorney held by two of the attorneys in this proceeding lives remote from the place where the trust must be administered. This same man has been elected with such frequency by these same attorneys as the trustee of bankrupt estates in difficult and remotely separated sections of the state [707]*707as to give color to the impression that his being so repeatedly elected by these same men might be in furtherance of some agreement or interest which should not be a controlling one in this proceeding. That there may be no reason to suspect in the least degree that the trustee in this proceeding is the representative directly or indirectly of any special interest, the referee declines to approve the election of this trustee and directs that the creditors do now proceed to the election of some other for the position.”

The second petition for review and the petition of Baumeister, trustee, hang upon the disposition of the first petition for review bringing in question the validity of the order of the referee disapproving the election of Rodman and directing the election of another. I will therefore proceed at once to a consideration of that petition.

By section 44 of the Bankruptcy Act provision is made that the creditors shall elect, or rather, in the language of the section, “appoint,” the trustee; and by section 45 the sole qualification prescribed for the position by an individual is that he be “competent to perform tlie duties of that office and reside or have an office in the judicial district within which they are appointed.” The sole power conferred by the Bankruptcy Act on the referee or judge in relation to the appointment of a trustee is contained in section 44,- where it is provided that, if the creditors do not appoint, “the court shall do so.” The act, therefore, contains no provision conferring on the referee or judge the right to disapprove an appointment made by the creditors. The right so to do is to be found in General Order No. 13 (89 Fed. vii, 32 C. C. A. xvii) prescribed by the Supreme Court pursuant to section 30 of the Bankruptcy Act, which provides that:

“The appointment of a trustee by the creditors shall be subject to be approved or disapproved by the referee or by the judge, and he shall be removable by the judge only.”

Collier on Bankruptcy (8th Ed.) p. 528, questions the validity of this order, but it has always been accepted by the courts as valid. They all, however, recognize that the primary right of appointment is in the creditors, that the right of disapproval is not to he lightly exercised, and that it cannot be exercised arbitrarily but only for cause. In the case of In re Lloyd (D. C., Wis.) 17 Am. Bankr. Rep. 96, 148 Fed. 92, Judge Quarles said:

“It must be remembered, however, that by the terms of the act the creditors are empowered to select a trust.ee. It is a serious matter to disfranchise creditors, and deprive them of rights expressly conferred by the Bankruptcy Act.”

And in the case of In re Van De Mark (D. C., N. Y.) 23 Am. Bankr. Rep. 760, 175 Fed. 287, Judge Hazel said:

“The statute plainly and unequivocally provided that the creditors shall have the power to appoint a trustee or trustees, subject to the approval or disapproval of the referee; and this statutory right without adequate cause cannot be taken from them by the bankruptcy court.”

The only cause for disapproval which has thus far been recognized by the courts, so far as my investigation goes, is that the bankrupt has interfered in the appointment of the trustee, so as to bring about the appointment of his choice, and it has been stated to be the only cause for disapproval. In the case of In re Eastlack (D. C., N. J.) [708]*70816 Am. Bankr. Rep. 529, 145 Fed. 68, which reviews all the earlier authorities, Judge Banning says:

“These cases establish the rule that the election of a trustee by the creditors is not to be disapproved, unless there is good reason for 'believing that the election has been directed, managed, or controlled by the bankrupt or his attorney, or by some influence opposed to the creditors’ interests.”

Mr. Collier in his work (page 529) states this as the only ground of disapproval. In the case of In re Hanson (D. C., Minn.) 19 Am. Bankr. Rep. 235, 156 Fed. 717, Judge Rochren states the law in this connection affirmatively in these words:

“But it is well settled by all the authorities that the trustee represents the creditors, and not the bankrupt, in the administration of the estate, and that it is improper that the bankrupt shall actively interfere with the matter of his selection and appointment, and that if he does interfere, and the person aided by him is appointed by votes procured by such interference, the appointment should for that reason be disapproved.”

[1,2] Now, I do not gather, from'the referee’s statement of the reasons which led him to take the action complained of, that the bankrupt to any extent interfered in the election, or aided in the election or in the bringing about of the appointment, of Rodman. At any rate, such interference and aiding, if any there was, was not regarded by the referee as affecting the validity of the appointment, as he seems to have thought that the bankrupt had a right to interfere and aid!. I infer this from his statement that the trustee represents alike the creditors and the bankrupt. This, however, is not correct. The trustee does not represent the bankrupt. He represents the creditors, and them'alone. It is because of this that interference and aiding on the part of the bankrupt in the appointment affects its validity.

It would seem that the sole ground upon which the referee based his action was that Rodman was the special representative of some particular interest or individuals other than the bankrupt.

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Bluebook (online)
196 F. 705, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-kreuger-kyed-1911.