In re Smith

22 F. Cas. 403, 15 Nat. Bank. Reg. 97
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Texas
DecidedMay 30, 1876
StatusPublished

This text of 22 F. Cas. 403 (In re Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Smith, 22 F. Cas. 403, 15 Nat. Bank. Reg. 97 (W.D. Tex. 1876).

Opinion

By

S. T. NEWTON, Register:

I have examined the statutes with reference to the question presented by the foregoing application, and can find no authority or precedent which will authorize a register of the court to order the assignee of a bankrupt estate to pay a claim of any character which had not been proven up and filed in-court, or presented prior to, or on the day appointed for the declaration of the dividend. [404]*404and after the same had been declared and filed In the office of the clerk of the court. I must therefore decline to make the order prayed for in this case, without any prejudice to the equitable rights of the parties for compensation.

I do hereby certify that there are no other funds in the estate of said bankrupt, except the money on which the dividend is now declared, out of which to pay the claim of applicants, and that this is the final dividend, unless the suit now pending and undecided in the United States circuit court at Tyler, for which this fee was contracted, shall bring sufficient funds for another dividend.

The foregoing certificate is made at the instance of applicants, and at their request. My order in refusing to allow said claim is respectfully certified to the honorable judge of said court for review.

The register also sent the following certificate to the court, to wit:

I, S. T. Newton, register of said court in bankruptcy, do hereby certify that the following proceedings were had before me in said matter, and the following question arose: Has a register of the court the power to vacate, or re-open a dividend which has been duly declared in pursuance to notice of meetings called and held under the provisions of the twenty-seventh or twenty-eighth sections of the act [14 Stat 529, 530], for the purpose of paying a claim, which was not proved up and filed, or presented prior to of on the day appointed for the dividend meeting? ■'

This question arose upon the following state of facts: On the 2d day of January, A. D. 1876, upon the' application of T. R. Bonner, assignee, a general meeting of the creditors of said bankrupts was ordered, in accordance with the provisions of the twenty-eighth section of the act, at Tyler, in said district, on the 1st day of March inst., and notice given as required by law. On the 1st inst., pursuant to said order, the meeting was held, and a dividend was declared on all claims proved and filed against said estate; and proper orders were made for paying the same, which were filed in the office of the clerk of the court. Subsequent thereto, to wit, on the 7th inst., Messrs. Robertson and Herndon, attorneys, presented and filed their application, praying an order of court requiring the said assignee to pay them the sum of two hundred and twenty-five dollars, for professional services, out of the funds in the hands of the assignee, upon the dividend which had been declared at said meeting. Their claim being for the amount of a promissory note, executed by B. K. Smith, bankrupt, in 1872, prior to commencement of proceedings against him in bankruptcy, to said attorneys for professional services in prosecuting a suit pending in the United States district court at Tyler, to which said suit the said assignee was subsequently made a party by order of the court.. I refused the order as prayed for, as shown by my order indorsed on their application, and my reasons •therefor.

Opinion of Register:

My order on the application brings under review by the court, to some extent, the limitation of the powers and duties conferred upon the registers of the court by the law. By section 4998, Rev. St., the register is invested with power of holding meetings under sections 5092 and 5093, and making computations of dividend and all orders of distribution. By section 5096 of the act it is required that the estate of the bankrupt shall be divided among.such of the creditors as have proved their debts, in proportion to the respective amount of the debts; and by section 5097 it is declared that no dividend shall be disturbed by reason of debts being subsequently proven up; but the creditors proving such debts shall be entitled to a dividend equal to that received by the other creditors before any payment is made to the latter. In the case of In re Hoyt [Case No. 6,806], it is decided that there is no warrant in the statute for paying dividends to creditors who have not proved their claims, and that all the sections on the subject refer to creditors who have proved their claims. From the foregoing sections cited, I am of the opinion, and it seems to be clear, that they contemplate that creditors only who have proved their debts and filed them in court are entitled to share in the dividend declared on them, and that the register of the court could not order the payment of any claim which was not so proven up before the dividend was made. I do not question that the claim presented by said attorneys has merit, and that the services have been performed; but ,1 hold that I have no power to vacate the dividend and order payment; that the application should have been presented first to the court, which in the exercise of its equitable powers could make such order as was proper. Respectfully submitted;

DUVAL, District Judge.

In declining to make the order prayed for in the foregoing application, I think Mr. Register Newton is correct. His decision is therefore approved and confirmed.

After this decision was rendered the petitioners filed a petition of review, addressed to the judges of the circuit court for the Western district of Texas. In this they set forth the facts alleged in the original petition and the subsequent proceedings thereon. They also charged that there was an error in the statement of facts in that the note was treated as a claim against the estate, when in fact it served only the purpose of showing the amount due by the as-signee as a part of the expenses; they also averred that they did not file the claim because they supposed the assignee had in-[405]*405eluded it in his account, and prayed for appropriate relief. This was duly served on the assignee. Subsequently the petitioners filed another petition, addressed to the register. In this they alleged that the assignee agreed to pay the fee; that the note was merely a memorandum of the amount agreed to be paid, and asked that the same be paid. With this petition they filed the following account, to wit:

Estate of B. K. Smith, in bankruptcy, to Robertson’s & Herndon, Dr.
1876. March 6. To prof essional services as attorneys, rendered in the case of B. K. Smith v. J. H. Parsons, agent of W. H. Reynolds, in which suit T. R. Bonner became a party complainant. Suit pending in United States circuit court, in chancery, at Tyler, Texas, and said services rendered at the instance and request of said as-signee . $225 00
With interest at eight per cent, since May 1, 1873.

This petition was then referred to the register, who gave the following decision, to wit:

The claim herein presented was submitted to me in a former application, and after a careful examination of the law, I declined to make the order as then prayed for, and assigned my reasons therefor.

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22 F. Cas. 403, 15 Nat. Bank. Reg. 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-smith-txwd-1876.