In the Matter of the ARBYCRAFT CO. Debtor. Appeal of Bornot DEHON, Creditor

288 F.2d 553, 1961 U.S. App. LEXIS 5000
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMarch 27, 1961
Docket13370_1
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 288 F.2d 553 (In the Matter of the ARBYCRAFT CO. Debtor. Appeal of Bornot DEHON, Creditor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third 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 the ARBYCRAFT CO. Debtor. Appeal of Bornot DEHON, Creditor, 288 F.2d 553, 1961 U.S. App. LEXIS 5000 (3d Cir. 1961).

Opinion

KALODNER, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from the reversal by the District Court of the Order of the Referee in Bankruptcy allowing as an administration expense of the Receivers a bill for repairs to a boiler on the premises leased to the debtor, and occupied by it at the time during the pendency of a Chapter XI, 11 U.S.C.A. § 701 et seq., proceeding.

The Referee, in his Opinion, based his disposition on his conclusion of law that the tenant was liable for the repairs under the terms of the lease and his finding that the “tenant” in his capacity as agent for the Receivers in the conduct of the business, had acquiesed in the making of the repairs.

The District Court reversed the Referee’s Order and disallowed the landlord’s claim. It premised its action on its view that the Referee had erred in concluding “as a matter of law that the tenant [debtor] was liable under the terms of the lease for the cost of the repairs”, and its further determination that the Referee had erred in his finding as to acquiescence. 1

The critical facts may be summarized as follows:

In November, 1959, the Arbycraft Co. ("debtor”) filed a petition for arrangement under Chapter XI of the Bankruptcy Act. Receivers were appointed and authorization granted to them to operate debtor’s business 2 and to employ any of its personnel in the course of such operation. Pursuant to the authorization stated the Receivers employed debt- or’s executive vice-president, Girard Esayian, to operate the business.

Debtor’s business was conducted in a building which it had leased in March, 1956. The lease 3 in effect at the time the events pertinent here transpired, contained the following clauses:

“8(b) Lessee covenants * * * that he will * * * repair all damage to plumbing and to the premises in general; keep the same in good order and repair as they are now, *555 reasonable wear and tear * * * excepted.”
“13(e) In the event of the failure of Lessee promptly to perform the covenants of Section 8(b) hereof, Lessor may go upon the demised premises and perform such covenants, the cost thereof * * * to be charged to the Lessee. * * * ”

On January 19, 1960, the boiler in use on the leased premises failed to function . and Esayian telephoned one Harry M. Rommel, who was the real estate agent of the landlord, Bornot Dehon, to acquaint him with the situation but Rommel was out of his office. Subsequently (the record does not disclose the date) Rommel returned Esayian’s call.

Thereafter, Esayian engaged the Triple A Welding Service to perform such work as might be necessary to get the boiler back in operation. While the Triple A men were at work employees of C. Rodney Morris and Son, Inc., appeared and advised Esayian they had been instructed by Rommel to work on the boiler.

With reference to the foregoing incident, Esayian testified as follows: (Hearing before the Referee, February ■ 25, 1960).

N.T. p. 17

“Q. While these men from Triple A were working, did another company come in and tell them to go away; dismissed them because the owner of the building had instructed them to do some work on this boiler? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. And did they then do work on this boiler? A. This other company took over, yes.
“Q. And what did they do? A. They replaced all of the tubes in the boiler. * * *”

N.T. pp. 18-19

“Q. And your Company, neither you nor anyone else from your Company, ordered Rodney Morris and Company to do that work? A. To my knowledge I never heard of Rodney Morris.
“Q. And as you testified, you didn’t ask the landlord to do that? A. That’s right.” (Emphasis supplied.)

C. Rodney Morris testified to the effect that the work done by his men on the boiler was in the category of “repairs”.

The February 25, 1960 hearing was held as the result of presentation to the Bankruptcy Referee, as costs of administration, a bill of $119.60 from the Triple A Welding Service for its services; and another for $1,133.00 by the Morris firm for its work. Counsel for the debtor objected to the payment of the Morris bill as an administration expense on the grounds that (1) the work done on the boiler was not “repairs” but a “replacement of the essential elements of the boiler [tubes],” and accordingly the debt- or (as lessee) was not liable under his lease, and (2) the landlord acted as a “volunteer” in engaging Morris to do the work on the boiler “and there is no provision in the lease * * * which gives the landlord the election to repair andl charge it to the tenant.”

Following the hearing, the Referee rendered his Opinion and Order in which he made the fact-findings that the work done on the boiler constituted “repairs” and that Esayian had acquiesced in their performance by Morris, and stated “I concluded as a matter of law that the tenant would be liable under the terms of the lease for this bill.” The Referee further found that the debtor’s estate was liable for the payment of the Morris bill as an expense of administration since Esayian, acting within the course of his employment, by the Receivers to manage debtor’s business, had acquiesced in the performance of the repairs by Morris.

It may be noted parenthetically that no evidence was offered by the Receivers or the debtor at the hearings with respect to the Morris bill. It must further be observed that, while the Referee and the District Court in their opinions referred to the Morris bill as the “claim” of the landlord, and the parties have continued to do so on this appeal, the record discloses that the landlord never paid the *556 Morris bill and that it was presented to the Receivers as a claim of Morris.

The District Court, in its Opinion, agreed with the Referee’s finding that the work on the boiler constituted “repairs” but reversed his allowance of the Morris bill for these reasons:

“We find no evidence here from which the Referee could have reasonably concluded that the tenant ‘acquiesced’ in the landlord’s contractors performing his obligation to repair the boiler in the sense that he agreed to be responsible for the cost of the work. Nowhere in the record is there testimony that the tenant ‘sent his workmen away’ [as found by the Referee]. * * * The only sense in which the debtor-lessee could be reasonably said to have ‘acquiesced’ here is that Mr. Esayian apparently did not protest when the landlord’s contractors told the Triple A men to leave.
“We think that as a matter of law the debtor-lessee’s failure to protest when his repairmen were dismissed by the landlord’s repairmen, or his failure to refuse to allow the landlord’s contractors to finish the repairs, should not render the lessee liable for the cost of replacing all the tubes in the boiler.

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288 F.2d 553, 1961 U.S. App. LEXIS 5000, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-matter-of-the-arbycraft-co-debtor-appeal-of-bornot-dehon-creditor-ca3-1961.