In re Levinson

19 F.2d 253, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1138
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Washington
DecidedMay 3, 1927
DocketNo. 6258
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 19 F.2d 253 (In re Levinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District 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 Levinson, 19 F.2d 253, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1138 (W.D. Wash. 1927).

Opinion

NETERER, District Judge.

A voluntary petition in bankruptcy was filed and adjudication made June 27, 1919. The scheduled liabilities were $90,000; assets, $200. William A. Green, an attorney for a creditor whose claim amounted to approximately $29,-000, was elected trustee. He employed McClure & McClure as his attorneys, and later C. L. Henry was likewise selected as attorney.

Action was instituted to recover hidden assets. Litigation was had in the state superior and Supreme Courts, and in the United States District Court, the Circuit Court of Appeals, and the Supreme Court of the United States. Examination and litigation was likewise had in Minneapolis, Minn., and Los Angeles, Cal. The total net estate recovered was $165,608.49; claims allowed are $96,701.22. The major portion of this litigation was carried on by McClure 6 McClure, and practically all of the funds recovered by litigation were recovered, or right established, during the time McClure & McClure were attorneys.

In April, 1925, the firm of McClure & McClure withdrew as attorneys for the trustee. C. L. Henry continued and is still acting as such attorney. C. L. Henry, it also appears, is the law partner of the trustee; but there is no community of interest in the bankruptcy matter as to division of fees.

[254]*254Upon petitions under oath (General Order IY) of the attorneys for allowance of fees, a time was appointed for hearing to determine the amount of attorney’s fees to be paid, and notice given to the creditors of the time and place of hearing and amount of claims made. McClure & McClure filed a claim for $42,500, C. L. Henry filed a claim for $19,000, and Max Hardman a claim for $5,000.

Pending litigation a judgment was entered in favor of the trustee against the Manhattan Investment Company and Joseph Levinson and wife, of which company the bankrupt was president, and he and his wife owned all of the capital stock, and appeal was prosecuted by the Manhattan Investment Company to the state Supreme Court, and to supersede the judgment a bond in the sum of $5,000 was filed by the National Surety Company, which company was in turn indemnified by Walter B. Allen. See Greene v. Levinson, 123 Wash. 370, 212 P. 569. Such proceedings were had on the supersedeas bond that a judgment was entered against the National Surety Company in favor of the trustee, and said judgment was appealed to the Supreme Court, and affirmed August 20, 1926. See Greene v. National Surety Co., 140 Wash. 230, 248 P. 803. On September 22, 1926, the trustee, •obligee on said bond, satisfied the judgment in his favor against the Manhattan Investment Company in full on the record of the court in which rendered, and on October 15 following the remittitur £rom the Supreme Court of the state affirming the judgment on said bond was filed, and on November 8 following the National Surety Company, ignorant of the fact of the satisfaction of the basic judgment, and after the trustee had “threatened to levy execution against this surety, paid the amount of such judgment, $5,648.44.”

Allen, the indemnitor of the surety company, moved the referee to direct the repayment of the said sum to the surety company/ the benefit of which would flow to him. After full hearing before the referee, all parties being present and participating, including the creditors, objection being made to the claims for attorney’s fees as demanded, by the trustee and by creditors, and the motion of Allen resisted by the trustee, the referee found the reasonable value of attorney’s services: McClure & McClure, $30,000; Mr. Henry, $12,500; and denied the claim of Max Hardman, on the ground that he had .in writing disclaimed any ccmipensation for the • services which he would render, being interested as attorney for some large claimant; and denied the motion of Allen to require repayment of the amount of the judgment against the surety company.

Petitions in review are filed by McClure & McClure, by Henry, by Hardman, by the trustee, by some of„the creditors, and by Walter B. Allen, who is likewise a. creditor in the sum of $486. Allen also moved the referee to require Henry to repay to the trustee the amount which he had received heretofore on account of attorney’s fees, and that he be allowed no further sum, on the ground that Henry is a law partner of the trustee, and likewise represents some of the large creditors, who had agreed to compensate him to an agreed per cent, of the amount recovered on their claims.

On hearing before this court, Allen was granted permission to file a petition by the National Surety Company, or an assignment of the judgment to himself as indemnitor, and on the day following the hearing a formal petition was filed by the National Surety Company and Walter B. Allen, praying an order directing the trustee to return the amount paid on the said judgment to the said National Surety Company.

The referee found: “The undisputed testimony touching this transaction is to the effect that Mr. Allen personally indemnified the surety company against loss in order to induce it to furnish the bond on which the judgment in question was based, and that the trustee knew of that fact. It also appeared • * * that, after * * * the bankrupt * * * had been denied his discharge, negotiations were had between the bankrupt and the creditors, or at least some of them, * * * that resulted in an agreement by which the bankrupt was to be released from any future liability to the creditors; * * * that, after said settlement or agreement had been made, the trustee collected the judgment from the National Surety Company. * * * ”

The referee also found: “Mr. Green testified that it was understood that said judgment was not to be affected by the settlement. * * *■” The referee denied the motion, because the judgment had become an asset of the bankrupt estate, and that neither the trustee nor the creditors could dispose of such asset without the approval or order of the court, and that it was a judgment in favor of the trustee against a stranger to the bankruptcy proceeding.

The judgment was an asset to the bank[255]*255ruptcy estate in only a limited sense. The judgment against the Manhattan Investment Company was the principal debt. The judgment against the National Surety Company was a collateral undertaking to secure the principal debt. The condition of the super-sedeas bond is “that the appellant will satisfy and perform the judgment or order appealed from in case it shall be affirmed, and any judgment or ordejr which the Supreme Court may render or make, or order to be rendered or made by the superior court. * * * ” See section 1722, Rem. Comp. Stat. of Washington.

The Manhattan Investment Company was judgment debtor and principal on the bond, and the National Surety Company surety only for $5,000. The essence of the obligation was that the surety shall be obligated on behalf of the principal debtor, and is no longer obligated when the principal is released. The surety was bound to “satisfy and perform” the judgment, and on such satisfaction by it was entitled to subrogation to all the rights and remedies of the holder of the judgment for its collection. The Court of Appeals in Wehle v. Spellman et al., 75 N. Y. 585, at page 586, 587, said:

“The sureties on the undertaking were bound to pay only the lawful holder of the judgment, and on such payment were entitled to subrogation to all the rights and remedies of the holder of the judgment for its collection.”

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Bluebook (online)
19 F.2d 253, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-levinson-wawd-1927.