In re Walser

20 F.2d 136
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Missouri
DecidedMay 15, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 20 F.2d 136 (In re Walser) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Walser, 20 F.2d 136 (E.D. Mo. 1927).

Opinion

FARIS, District Judge.

Some of the matters here involved and presented seem to me to be anomalous, and about which I have found no authority on some of the questions presented. These anomalous matters are exemplified by the below facts and chronology:

On April 2, 1924, D. F. Walser was adjudged a bankrupt. On April 26, 1924, Herman Lufey was appointed trustee of the bankrupt estate, and on May 2,1924, he duly qualified, and now is such trustee. The bankrupt filed his schedules, and listed among his assets certain town lots, subject to a deed of trust to Dameron and Blue, which, with the debt secured thereby, was subsequently assigned to petitioner, First National Bank of Cape Girardeau, Mo. This deed of trust was made on December 24,1923, and duly recorded and secured payment of the sum of $8,133.33. The lots in question included the homestead of the bankrupt, which he claimed as exempt in his filed schedules.

Thereafter, and on June 13, 1924, upon the petition of the trustee, an order was made by the referee, requiring the First National Bank, petitioner herein, to show cause why said lots and homestead should not be sold free and clear of the lien of the deed of trust, and thereafter on July 19, 1924, petitioner filed its written consent to the making of such sale; that is, that the lots which included the homestead should be sold “free and clear of all liens and demands thereon, and that the proceeds arising from the sale of said real estate be held by the said trustee, subject to the claims, liens, and demands of the holders of certain alleged deeds of trust, and that the proceeds be held subject to said liens, demands, and deeds of trust, with the same force and effect as if op. the property itself,” subject to the final order of the court touching the validity, good faith, and extent of such liens.

Pursuant to such consent of the petitioner, the referee on August 13, 1924, made an order on the trustee to sell the mortgaged lots in question, “free of and from the lien of said mortgages described in the trustee’s petition, * * * the proceeds of and from the sale of said property to be held by the trustee subject to the lien of said mortgages, or other liens, to all intents and purposes as though the said property had not been sold, subject to the final order, judgment, and decree of this court, or by final order, judgment, and decree of a court of competent jurisdiction.”

On August 21,1924, the trustee filed with the referee a schedule of property claimed by the bankrupt as exempt, in which list and schedule the item, “Cash, in lien of home[137]*137stead, as claimed, $.1,500,” appeared. Thereafter, on October 9,1924, the referee entered this order, to wit: “The trustee’s report of exempted property coming on to be heard, and there being no objection to same, and the court having been fully advised in the premises, it is ordered that said report of the trustee, setting apart to the bankrupt the property described therein, be and it is hereby in all things approved, and that the property therein described be and the same is hereby set apart to the bankrupt, to be retained by him as his own property, under the provisions of the act of Congress relating to bankruptcy.”

On the next day, to wit, October 10, 1924, the trustee gave a check to the bankrupt in tho sum of $1,800, which included the homestead, of the value of $1,500, plus a personal exemption of $300. This cheek the bankrupt proceeded without undue delay to collect, and the proceeds whereof the bankrupt seems yet to have and hold. On the day after the delivery of this cheek to the bankrupt, the trustee, on, to wit, the 11th day of October, applied for an order to sell the mortgaged lots, including the homestead, at private sale, and on the same day the referee entered an order of private sale for such lots, free and clear of all liens and incumbrances. This order of sale, with reference to the proceeds and to their disposition, provided, inter alia, thus: “The trustee shall deposit the said sum with the First National Bank of Dexter, a designated and bonded depository of the court, and keep an accurate account thereof and file the same with this court, to the end that a reasonable opportunity may be afforded for adjusting, by compromise or litigation, the claims of the said lienors, who have heretofore filed herein their written consent for said property to be sold free and clear of liens.”

On October 21, 1924, the petitioner, First National Bank, filed its proof of secured claim in the sum of $8,133.33, bottomed, as already forecast, on the deed of trust on the lots in controversy, which included the homestead. This was within the time fixed by statute, and so no valid complaint can be based on delay. This deed of trust was executed less than four months before bankruptcy, and its invalidity in part was conceded; but the question arose as to whether it was a valid and subsisting lien on the homestead of the bankrupt. After much' and inexcusable delay, tho matter came on for hearing on the 18th day of November, 1925, and an order was made by the referee allowing the secured claim of petitioner as a good, subsisting, and valid lien against the homestead of the bankrupt in the sum of $1,-500, and as a general claim against the estate as to the residue of $6,133.33. It was further ordered that the bankrupt refund to the trustee, and that the trustee refund to the estate, and forthwith pay out of the estate to petitioner, the said sum of $1,500; said sum, so paid out of the funds of the estate to be repaid to the estate, as and when the trustee or the bankrupt should comply with the order to refund. The trustee has not complied up to now with either order, nor has the bankrupt refunded to the trustee.

No petition or petitions for a review of any of the above orders have ever been filed by any of the parties in interest, although the last one in point of time was made on the 18th day of November, 1925. On the 1st day of October, 1926, the First National Bank filed its petition in this court for an order upon the trustee requiring him to pay to it the sum of $1,500, being the sum of petitioner’s adjudged valid mortgage lien on the homestead. Thereafter, on October 11, 1926, the trustee filed herein his motion to vacate the order of the referee, made on the 18th day of November, 1925, allowing the claim of petitioner as a lien, and ordering the trustee to refund and to pay the sum of $1,500 to petitioner, as above recited. This motion to vacate is bottomed on the theory that the order of November 18,1925, revoked and vacated the order of October 9, 1924, by which the value of the homestead was adjudged. There is nothing said in the order of November 18, 1925, as to vacating or revoking the order of October 9, 1924, nor does such latter order purport in terms to vacate or revoke it.

It will be seen that neither of the matters here before the court is a petition for review of any matter, thing, or order made by the referee. Indeed, no petition for review has ever at any time been filed as to any order or orders made by the referee in this ease. Such a petition must at least be filed within a reasonable time after the entry of the order of which review is sought. The petition of tho First National Bank (and it is not a petition for review) was filed about 11 months after the last order mentioned therein was made by the referee, and the same is true of the motion of the trustee to vacate the order of November 18, 1925. If both or either of these proceedings should bo construed to constitute petitions for review, they could not be maintained, because they are out of time.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 F.2d 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-walser-moed-1927.