In the Matter of Jack Kardow Plumbing Company, Bankrupt. American Standard, Inc. v. Harry A. Nass, Jr., Trustee in Bankruptcy

451 F.2d 123
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedNovember 22, 1971
Docket29132
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 451 F.2d 123 (In the Matter of Jack Kardow Plumbing Company, Bankrupt. American Standard, Inc. v. Harry A. Nass, Jr., Trustee in Bankruptcy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In the Matter of Jack Kardow Plumbing Company, Bankrupt. American Standard, Inc. v. Harry A. Nass, Jr., Trustee in Bankruptcy, 451 F.2d 123 (5th Cir. 1971).

Opinion

WILKEY, Circuit Judge:

This case comes to us with an extremely complex and confusing record. As will become clearer later, many of the difficulties in this case are due to the somewhat unorthodox way in which the Referee characterized the bankrupt, and the effect that this had on all of the bankruptcy proceedings.

The Jack Kardow Plumbing Company (the company) was a plumbing business operated by the individual Jack Kardow in San Antonio, Texas. By late 1966 the company was in financial trouble, and on 12 December 1966 an involuntary petition in bankruptcy was filed in the United States District Court for the Western District of Texas against the company by three creditors. The petition alleged that the company was a partnership, consisting of Jack Kardow and one Warfield *126 Smith. Service of process was had on Kardow, as representative of the company, but not on Smith, who disputed and denied the existence of a partnership, 1 and no effort was ever made to make either Smith or Kardow individually a party to the proceedings. On 17 or 18 January 1967 the Jack Kardow Plumbing Company was adjudged a bankrupt by default. 2 At the time the company was adjudged a bankrupt, no attempt was made to determine whether or not it was a partnership. By this time the Referee had concluded that the subject matter of the petition might apply to two classes of “persons” which could become bankrupts under the Bankruptcy Act, namely, the company as a partnership, or the company as a sole proprietorship owned by Jack Kardow. The Referee concluded that under either possibility he would have jurisdiction, since service of process had been obtained on the company’s representative, Jack Kardow. 3 At this point the Referee was apparently treating the company as a “trade style,” 4 an entity unknown to the Bankruptcy Act, which provides only that corporations, partnerships, and individuals may become bankrupt. 5 Considerably later, on 7 October 1969, the Referee clarified his original order of adjudication (17 or 18 January 1967) to show that the company was really Jack Kardow, the individual, doing business as Jack Kardow Plumbing Company, 6 and it is in that character that the proceedings are now before us.

On 9 June 1967 American Standard, Inc. (Amstan), filed in the estate of the bankrupt proof of secured claim in the amount of $5,634.27. 7 In its petition Amstan maintained that it did not “in any way consent to the Summary Jurisdiction of the Bankruptcy Court to determine the existence or nonexistence of a preference,” or to take any action relating thereto. 8 Nevertheless, invoking this summary jurisdiction, on 29 February 1968 the trustee of the bankrupt objected under § 57, sub. g of the Bankruptcy Act 9 to the allowance of the Am-stan secured claim, alleging that Amstan received voidable preferential transfers of the bankrupt’s property in the amount of $34,659.63, and demanding the recovery of this sum from Amstan. The transfers in question were made on 26 August 1966 and 4 October 1966, and were assignments of the company’s accounts receivable to Amstan. By 29 February 1968 Amstan had apparently collected $34,659.63 on the accounts.

*127 After some pre-trial maneuvering 10 the preference issue came to trial before the Referee on 22 and 23 January 1969. At the trial on the preference issue Am-stan alleged and sought to prove that at the time of the two assignments the company was a solvent partnership composed of Jack Kardow and Warfield Smith, and attacked the jurisdiction of the bankruptcy court over anything but a partnership on the allegations of the involuntary petition. Furthermore, Amstan maintained that the bankruptcy court had no jurisdiction of the preference issue under § 57, sub. g because Amstan had only filed proof of a secured claim in the bankruptcy estate. Amstan maintained that this filing should place it in the same position with respect to its unrelated preference as a creditor who remains entirely passive and against whom the trustee is required to proceed in a plenary suit. Alternatively, Amstan argued that if the trustee was to be allowed to recover the preferences, it was entitled under § 60, sub. e of the Bankruptcy Act 11 to a setoff for credit extended after the alleged preferential transfers.

On 6 March 1969 the Referee issued findings of fact and conclusions of law resolving all these issues against Am-stan, and ordered Amstan to surrender to the trustee the $34,659.63 collected on the assignments. Amstan then filed a petition in the District Court for review of the Referee’s findings, and in response to this petition on 26 March 1969 the Referee filed a certificate which elaborated somewhat his view that all the evidence gathered in the administration of the estate subsequent to the default adjudication in bankruptcy pointed to the conclusion that the bankrupt was not a partnership, but the sole proprietorship of Jack Kardow 12 Oral argument was heard on 18 September 1969 before the District Judge, and apparently in response to a request by him, on 7 October 1969 the Referee filed a supplement to his certificate of 26 March 1969. In this supplemental certificate the Referee explained at length why he purposely omitted reference to the status of the bankrupt when the default adjudication was originally entered, 13 and he asserted that his deferring the determination of the status of the bankrupt “had no prejudicial effects upon and resulted in no injury to any of the parties at interest of Jack Kardow Plumbing Company.” 14 The Referee went on to assert that Amstan, as a creditor, could not be considered a party at interest, and did not have the right to contest the bankruptcy court’s adjudication of its jurisdiction over the bankrupt (whatever its status) under § 18, sub. b of the Bankruptcy Act. 15 In *128 this supplemental certificate the Referee also enumerated the factors that had led him to conclude that the company was not a partnership. 16

In this 7 October 1969 certificate the Referee also revealed another puzzling aspect of this case, namely, that at sometime after the involuntary petition was filed against the company, Jack Kardow, acting as an individual, filed a voluntary bankruptcy petition. 17 The Referee commented in the supplemental certificate that Kardow’s subsequent proceeding had no relationship to the prior involuntary proceeding presently under review.

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Bluebook (online)
451 F.2d 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-matter-of-jack-kardow-plumbing-company-bankrupt-american-standard-ca5-1971.