In re Meadows

199 F. 304, 1912 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1180
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. New York
DecidedOctober 3, 1912
DocketNo. 3,040
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 199 F. 304 (In re Meadows) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Meadows, 199 F. 304, 1912 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1180 (W.D.N.Y. 1912).

Opinion

IIAZKL, District Judge.

A creditor of the bankrupt firm has filed exceptions to the final account of the trustee in bankruptcy, objecting to the payment to the referee therein of the sum of $3,-799.70, and to the trustee of the sum of $2,007.94, commissions on moneys realized on a sale of certain securities held by various banks as pledges for loans and advances previously made to the bankrupts. Tt appears that immediately after the adjudication in bankruptcy a large number of hearings were had before the referee to ascertain and discover the property of the bankrupt firm, which, prior to the adjudication, had been engaged in the business of stockbrokers, and the financial affairs of which were in a highly tangled condition. Diligent efforts were made by the receiver appointed by this coxxrt, his attorney, and the referee in bankruptcy, to take in charge and to preserve the property and assets of the bankrupts.

The schedules disclosed that many valuable stocks and bonds owned by the firm were pledged in writing to various banks as collateral for loans, with the right in the banks to sell the securities whenever the demand notes for which they were pledged were overdue and unpaid. In addition, the Fidelity Trxxst Company, one of the pledgees, under an agreement with the firm, had a lien upon deposit accounts. In the course of the proceedings, without a surrender of such securities having first been made by the pledgees, the referee made an order directing the trustee to sell to the highest bidder the stocks and bonds in the custody of the Fidelity Trust Company free and clear of liens, and he made an oi'der to show cause why the stocks and bonds held as collateral security by the People's Bank, the Alarket Bank, and the Bank of Buffalo should [306]*306not also be sold free and clear of incumbrances, “the liens to be transferred to the proceeds.” In relation to the proposed sale the referee, with the acquiescence of the attorney for the trustee, and without objection from any of the banks, only one of which, however, the Fidelity Trust Company, appeared by attorney, proceeded as though the securities had been' surrendered by the pledgees to enable their sale in the bankruptcy court, and were in the actual possession of the trustee.

The diligence of the trustee in giving notice of the sale resulted in'many substantial bids for the various securities, which to brokers and financiers had a market value, and a bona fide bid of $371,-435.55 was accepted, and confirmed by the referee. Upon receipt of said amount the trustee paid the debts of the pledgees, received from each the pledged securities, and delivered the same to the purchaser. There had been a dispute between the trustee and the Fidelity Trust Company over a deposit account of $10,670 which the bank claimed the right to offset against any loss which might occur upon the sale of the collaterals; but, upon payment of the indebtedness and release of securities, the company also surrendered the said deposit to the trastee. The amount realized over and above the secured indebtednesses — that is, the equity of redemption in the various collaterals — amounted to approximately $3,802.87. The total assets of the bankrupt estate, including the released deposit, amounted to $48,000.

In this situation the referee allowed the attorney for the trustee, who is now the attorney for the objecting creditor herein, the sum of $2,000 on account of his services in the bankruptcy proceeding. He directed the payment to himself of 1 per centum, the commission specified in section 40 of the Bankruptcy Act as it read prior to the amendment of 1910, and allowed commissions to the trustee under section 48, treating the amount of the pledges as “moneys disbursed” by the trustee to creditors; and the question now is whether such payments to the pledgees come within the scope of the provisions relating to the compensation of referees and trustees.

[1] I need not stop to discuss the question of the power of the bankruptcy court to direct the sale of a bankrupt’s incumbered property, provided the lienholders permit it and due notice is given them; nor to consider the contention that the pledgees, upon payment of their indebtednesses by the trustee, impliedly surrendered or waived their rights of possession and sale under their agreement, and must therefore be regarded as having submitted such rights to the bankruptcy court. The question with which we are principally concerned is: What is intended by the term “disbursed to creditors,” as applied to the compensation of referees, and by the term “on all sums disbursed,” as applied to the compensation of trustees?

The provisions are comprehensive enough to entitle referees to commissions on moneys paid to secured and unsecured creditors (In re Sanford Furniture Mfg. Co. [D. C.] 126 Fed. 888), and to [307]*307allow to trustees commissions on all sums disbursed by them out of the assets of the bankrupt estate, which obviously includes moneys paid for fees and expenses in the administration thereof. When, however, a secured creditor has recourse to a state court to foreclose his lien, or when personal property or securities, without coming into the custody of the bankruptcy court, are sold by pledgees under a specific contract of sale, and there is no participation by the pledgees in the proceedings of the bankruptcy court, then clearly no commissions are computable on the amounts realized by secured creditors on their securities.

In the present case, as already pointed out, the pledgees had the right to sell the collateral at public or private sale without notice to the pledgors, and to apply the proceeds to the payment of liabilities. Indeed, the Fidelity Trust Company reserved to itself the right to buy the securities free from any right or equity of redemption in the pledgors. The arrangement with the banks created, not a mere lien, as the referee seemed to think, but a pledge, which carried with it complete control, and the right of sale upon default in the payment of notes for which collateral was given. A lien ordinarily confers no such power, and there is a clear distinction between selling property free from liens, where the title and possession are in the trustee, and selling stocks and bonds pledged to a third party under a written contract.

In this case it cannot be held that the securities were even constructively in the possession of the trustee. The rights of the pledgees W'ere not affected by the bankruptcy proceedings. As they did not avail themselves of the services of the referee and trustee to sell the securities held by them, they manifestly could not have been compelled to bear any portion of the expenses of the sale, and it is difficult to perceive the validity of the sale by the trustee of personal property which was not in his custody, or in the control of the bankruptcy court, 'save as to any existing equities of redemption. How could the trustee have immediately delivered the securities to the purchaser, if the pledgees had not voluntarily released them? The pledgees were adverse claimants, and could not have been summarily compelled to surrender their securities, or to submit their rights to the bankruptcy court. Certainly by the mere sale they were not compelled to deliver the collateral to the trustee. If the proceeds of the sale had been insufficient to pay the pledges, not only would the trustee have been unable to make delivery of the securities to the buyer, but the pledgees would doubtless themselves have sold under their contract.

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Related

In re Howard
207 F. 402 (N.D. New York, 1913)

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Bluebook (online)
199 F. 304, 1912 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-meadows-nywd-1912.