In re Munsie

32 F.2d 304, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1178
CourtDistrict Court, D. Connecticut
DecidedJanuary 10, 1929
DocketNo. 9239
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 32 F.2d 304 (In re Munsie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Munsie, 32 F.2d 304, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1178 (D. Conn. 1929).

Opinion

BURROWS, District Judge.

This is a petition to review the finding and order of a referee in bankruptcy upon an application of the bankrupt to liquidate the claim of a creditor. The creditor, Dora Gottlieb, feeling aggrieved, filed this petition for review, which was granted. The facts set up in the certificate upon petition' for review, upon which said order was based, are as follows;

(1) When the bankrupt filed his petition on February 10, 1928, he had outstanding against him as his sole liability a claim based [305]*305upon a lease with Mrs. Dora Gottlieb for the premises 10-12 South Main street, South Norwalk, Conn., entered into on October 27, 1921, for tbe term of five years from February 1, 1925, for a yearly rental for the first two years of $6,000, payable in monthly installments of $500 in advance, and $7,500 for the last three years, payable monthly at $625, together with rental payments to be made of tbe store prior to occupancy, and water taxes, alterations, and repairs to be made.

(2) Munsie entered into possession, made alterations and repairs at a cost of several thousands of dollars, but as business was poor, and as be claimed to have lost about $20,000 in the venture, he sold out under an arrangement that provided him with sufficient funds to pay oil all his debts, including rent to October 1, 1926.

(3) The premises were vacant from October 1, 1926, until April 1, 1927, when the landlord relet for the balance of the term of the lease at a rental of $275 per month less than that due from Munsie.

(4) At the first meeting of creditors on March 2, 1928, Mrs. Gottlieb filed her claim in the amount of $6,857.75, giving due allowance for rent collected under the new lease, and including interest to date of filing.

(5) The bankrupt’s only asset is a life insurance policy with a cash surrender value of about $300, which, upon demand, was turned over to the trustee.

(6) Since the filing of the petition, Mrs. Gottlieb has garnisheed Munsie’s wages in New York City; Judge Thomas, of this district, has issued a restraining order; Mrs. Gottlieb has moved that this order be vacated, and Munsie has petitioned for the liquidation of this claim.

(7) In this petition the bankrupt seeks to include in the Gottlieb claim the rent which has accrued since bankruptcy and which will accrue in the future, and this the landlord objects to.

(8) Mrs. Gottlieb claims that the rent, to become due under the lease is contingent, and that therefore it cannot be liquidated under section 63a (1) or (4) of the Bankruptcy Act; but in this connection it must be considered that the bankrupt admits the liability, and Mrs. Gottlieb has sued upon at least one installment due since bankruptcy.

(9) The tenant, Munsie, was out of the leased premises, and the landlord, Mrs. Gott-lieb, was in possession, ■ and a new lease entered into with the Smart Shop, Inc., et al., several months before bankruptcy.

(10) The petitioner at the hearings claimed that what was due creditors on account of the abandonment of the premises and the reletting was not rent as such, but rather damages for the breach of the renting contract.

The referee ruled and held that said claim could be liquidated. As indicated in paragraph 8 of the certificate upon petition for review, the creditor’s claim is that the rent to become due under the lease is contingent, and that therefore it cannot be liquidated under section 63a (1) or 63a (4) of the Bankruptcy Act (11 USCA § 103(a)(1) (4). If the' lease in question were absolutely terminated at the time of the filing of the petition in bankruptcy, it is not contingent, but a fixed liability, and absolutely owing and provable under section 63a (1).

The rule to determine whether or not the claim is contingent or fixed is laid down in Re Mullings Clothing Co. (C. C. A.) 238 F. 58, which was an action for broach of contract occasioned by the steps taken to wind up and dissolve a corporation, wherein the court said:

“The Bankruptcy Act of August 19, 1841 [5 Stat. 440] * * * provided for the allowance of contingent claims. The present Act, however, makes no provision for the proof of such claims, and it is well understood that they are not provable. We have no doubt that while in this case the lessor’s claim was unliquidated at the time the petition in bankruptcy was filed, it was not contingent. * * * A contingent claim is one as to which it remains uncertain, at the time of the filing of the petition in bankruptcy, whether or not the bankrupt mil ever become liable to pay it. If it is certain that %e is liable to pay it, although it may be uncertain how much he will have to pay, the claim is unliquidated, but it is not contingent. * * * If one party to an executory contract renounces it without cause, or disables himself from performing it, the other party may consider the contract as broken and bring an action immediately to recover the damages. The liability in such cases is therefore not contingent, but absolutely fixed.”

Under the facts of this case, it is certain that the tenant was liable to pay under the terms of the lease, hut it was uncertain, at the time he surrendered the premises and they were repossessed by the landlord, how much he would have to pay. Under the above rule there is no question in my mind from the facts that the tenant surrendered these premises, and “a surrender by a particular tenant has the effect of extinguishing his estate, and if he is a tenant under a lease it terminates all future liability under tbe covenants, the [306]*306most ordinary application of this principle occurring in the case of a covenant to pay rent, which ceases to be effective after a surrender.” 2 Tiffany on Real Property (2d Ed.) 1588.

In Miller v. Benton, 55 Conn. 529, 545, 13 A. 678, it was held that ordinarily the •surrender of leased premises by the lessee and the acceptance of them by the lessor would constitute a mutual rescinding of the contract of lease, and it would cease to exist for every purpose. Whatever the action of the creditor may have been subsequent to the petition in bankruptcy, I can come to no other conclusion than that it was her intention to accept this surrender by her acts in taking possession of the premises and in executing a new lease to the Smart Shop, Inc., months before the petition in bankruptcy.

As was held in the case of Miller Co. v. Grussi, 90 Conn. 555, 559, 98 A. 90, 92: “ * * * An agreement to surrender a lease, or to abandon it, or any act which would be equivalent to such agreement, and an acceptance of the surrender or abandonment by agreement, or acts equivalent thereto, will amount to a surrender or abandonment in law.”

In order to maintain an action for rent on a lease, it is clear that the lease must still be valid. If the lease between the creditor and the bankrupt is valid, we have two valid leases on the same premises terminating at the same time. The very fact that the landlord leased these premises to the Smart Shop, Inc., for a monthly rental of $275 less than that stipulated in the lease with the bankrupt indicates that the landlord, prior to entering into the lease with the Smart Shop, Inc., considered the lease with the bankrupt as absolutely terminated.

The creditor cannot now call her claim one for rent, when she cannot place the bankrupt or the trustee in possession of the premises as of the former estate of the bankrupt, but must bring her claim for damages for any loss which she has sustained.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
32 F.2d 304, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-munsie-ctd-1929.