In re the General Assignment for the Benefit of Creditors of Fisher Bookbinding Co.

119 Misc. 2d 763, 465 N.Y.S.2d 428, 1983 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3594
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 21, 1983
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 119 Misc. 2d 763 (In re the General Assignment for the Benefit of Creditors of Fisher Bookbinding Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the General Assignment for the Benefit of Creditors of Fisher Bookbinding Co., 119 Misc. 2d 763, 465 N.Y.S.2d 428, 1983 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3594 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1983).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Harold Hyman, J.

The assignee for the benefit of creditors has filed and moved to settle his final account, fixing his commissions, and for an allowance for fees to his counsel and to his accountant and for other related relief.

Because of certain oddities contained in the administration of the estate herein, the court directed a hearing regarding the public sale of the assets, as to commissions, and certain other expenses deducted therefor by the auctioneer. In addition there are other matters with which the court, in its duty to examine each account and approve or disapprove thereof, will address itself to.

Primarily, the court must address itself to the fact that from the inception of these proceedings the assignee was, [764]*764and is himself a duly licensed attorney of this State, one who has been mainly engaged in the speciality of insolvency proceedings and who is known in the field of such speciality as one with no small knowledge, but rather is known to have extensive expertise in said field. Furthermore, in retaining his own law firm (wherein he was at least a knowledgeable senior partner) it was done without application to the court contending that there was any need for an attorney, or that his partner or partners were more knowledgeable in said field than he, and therefore such retention was required (Levy’s Accounting, 1 Abb NC 177; Matter of Dean, 86 NY 398; Litchfield v White, 7 NY 438; Harris for Modern v Nachamie, Supreme Ct, Queens County, Aug. 11,1977, Hyman, J.; Matter of G. I. Distributors v Frier, Supreme Ct, Queens County, Aug. 4, 1978; Matter of Arthur Hettich, Inc. v Marcus, Supreme Ct, Queens County, Sept. 19, 1978, Hyman, J.). In the latter case this court stated: “ ‘he could very well have handled by himself without making the slightest ripple in the every day stream of his insolvency speciality’ and ‘Where the Assignee is himself an attorney, only where difficult questions arise in the administration of the estate which require greater expertise than that of the Assignee, a “specialist” attorney, one with more than ordinary knowledge in that specific field of law, may such an Assignee retain counsel and only then, upon due application and permission of the court’ (Matter of GI Distributors, Inc., [supra]; see also, SEC v Kenneth Bove, & Co., USDC, So. Dist, of NY 72-2887, dec. June 2, 1978, NYLJ, June 6, 1978, Pollack, J.).”

Under such circumstances it cannot be expected that the court has looked with great favor upon the application of the assignee to remunerate his own law firm as “his” counsel in these proceedings.

The foregoing, among other things, lends credence to the belief that the mistaken impression of certain assignees, their self-chosen attorneys, auctioneers and accountants, is that an assignment for the benefit of creditors does not really mean what it purports to be, that is, a proceeding “for the benefit of creditors.” The Legislature certainly never intended that such a proceeding be one for the [765]*765benefit of anyone other than “creditors”. The Legislature definitively intended it to be an expeditious method in administering an insolvent debtor’s estate economically and efficiently (Matter of Arutt v Multer, 42 AD2d 366, 368). From the papers submitted it would seem that the applicants herein do have such an erroneous impression, as well as erroneous impressions in other matters pertaining to the administration of this estate.

The court has noted that the assignment for the benefit of creditors herein was executed on February 23,1976, and filed in the Queens County Clerk’s office on February 24, 1976, over seven years ago, and the petition of the assignee’s law firm seeking fixation and allowances of its fees based its contention for retention, stating: “7. The Assignee, in accordance with then acceptable [since proscribed]| procedure then retained Angel & Frankel, P.C. as his attorneys to represent him in the Assignment proceeding.” (Emphasis added.) That position is both untenable and unacceptable. The law for many years prior to the date of this assignment in 1976, was and still is, that while an assignee for the benefit of creditors is entitled to reimbursement out of the assigned estate for all “necessary expenses” incurred by him in the execution of his trust, his right to encumber the estate by employing professional advice is limited to such as one of ordinary prudence and caution would undertake “in the management of his own affairs.” (Levy’s Accounting, 1 Abb NC 177, 182, supra; Matter of Dean, 86 NY 398, supra; Litchfield v White, 7 NY 438, supra.) That better expertise in the “specialty” of insolvency proceedings was necessary than that of the present assignee-attorney has not been shown. That none was required is self-evident by the simplicity of administering this estate indicated by the activities of the assignee-attorney herein, although it appears that all of assignee-attorney’s activities are not entirely acceptable.

On February 24, 1976, the assignee-attorney made application to the Honorable Leonard L. Finz for an order authorizing public auction sale of the assignor’s assets; he obtained the ex parte order on said date which directed the sale be advertised in the “L.I. Press.” As is permissible by statute, the assignee retained an auctioneer (who inciden[766]*766tally filed the assignment on said date and who advanced the filing fee — $25; auctioneer’s report dated May 11, 1976 — filed Aug. 20, 1976, as part of the assignee’s “Interim Schedules”). The court observed the statement contained in the attorney’s petition, which would lead one to believe that the court “authorized the Assignor to employ the firm of David Strauss & Co. Inc. to conduct an auction”, thereby inferring that the ordering court had some input in assignee’s selection of the auctioneer. That statement is just not credible, believable or acceptable, but is intolerable. The sole authority to select the auctioneer rested with the assignee (Debtor and Creditor Law, § 14). Except for the two advertisements in the Long Island Press, which totaled $45.60, no other newspaper had been mentioned, nor had the assignee subsequently required any other newspaper advertisements from the court at any time. While the Legislature has permitted the assignee to designate and employ an auctioneer (Debtor and Creditor Law, § 14; Matter of Arutt v Multer, 42 AD2d 366, supra), it does not follow that the assignee may, with impunity, permit the auctioneer to take matters into his own hands and disregard, modify or embellish any order made by the court. The statute specifically provides that: “It shall be the duty of the assignee to collect and reduce to money the property of the estate, under the direction of the court”. (Debtor and Creditor Law, § 14.) It does not allow for the assignee or his auctioneer to take matters into their own hands and do otherwise without express permission of the court. That it was done in this estate cannot be considered by the court to have been a mere oversight, in view of the fact that when the auctioneer remitted to the assignee (two and one-half months after the sale), he did so by “net amount”, after he first deducted all of his alleged charges and expenses, and as to which the assignee-attorney admittedly registered neither objection nor complaint.

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119 Misc. 2d 763, 465 N.Y.S.2d 428, 1983 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3594, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-general-assignment-for-the-benefit-of-creditors-of-fisher-nysupct-1983.