Miller v. Woolley

141 F.2d 837, 1944 U.S. App. LEXIS 3804
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedMarch 20, 1944
Docket10460
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 141 F.2d 837 (Miller v. Woolley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Woolley, 141 F.2d 837, 1944 U.S. App. LEXIS 3804 (9th Cir. 1944).

Opinion

WILBUR, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from an order of the United States District Court reversing an order of the referee in bankruptcy which required the appellee to pay to the trustee in bankruptcy the sum of $5,950 1 2 which had been paid to appellee by John Barrymore as a part of the fee in a divorce case instituted by John Barrymore while a proceeding for an arrangement between Barrymore and his creditors, under chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Act, was in progress. Concurrently with the filing of his petition for arrangement, under 11 U.S.C.A. § 722, on June 5, 1940, the debtor, John Barrymore, filed a petition stating that he was earning $5,000 per week in his profession as an actor; that it had been his practice to expend approximately $1,000 per week for his “household and necessary expenses” and asked the court to “fix his drawing account from his earnings” and alleged that a reasonable drawing account pending a further order of court “as and for his living expenses herein and for his services herein should be and is the sum of $1,000 per week.” The petition prayed that an order be made “fixing his drawing account for his household expenses and necessities at the sum of $1,000 per week, subject to the further order of this court.” The order of the referee made on the same date ordered “that the drawing account of said debtor be and the same is hereby fixed in the sum of $1,000 per week, subject to the further order of this court.”

During the pendency of the proceedings there were numerous meetings of the creditors before the referee. During these proceedings the disposition of the $1,000 per week paid the debtor was discussed.

On September 20, 1940 the debtor entered into a written contract wherein he agreed to pay to appellee Roland Rich Woolley the sum of $10,000 as a fee in a divorce suit to be instituted on his behalf by Mr. Woolley. On September 30th appellee Woolley and Hiram E. Casey were substituted as attorneys for the debtor in the arrangement proceeding. It should be observed that at the time the allowance of $1,000 per week was made by the court and at the time the contract for employment of appellee as an attorney in the divorce action was made the debtor was represented in the arrangement proceedings by other lawyers. So far as the representations are concerned which were made by the debtor to the referee in procuring the allowance in June 1940, the appellee Woolley had no connection therewith nor responsibility therefor. Under the agreement made by Mr. Woolley with the debtor the allowance of $1,000 per week repaid to the debtor by the receiver in the arrangement proceedings was turned over to appellee Woolley when received and disbursed by him on behalf of the debtor to pay expenses, each disbursement being approved by the debt- or. Appellee had retained on account of his services to the debtor in the divorce case the sum of $5,950. The retention of these amounts was approved by the debtor.

The theory upon which the referee ordered appellee Woolley to pay over to the trustee in bankruptcy* the sum of $5,950 was that the weekly allowance to the debt- or would not have been continued at so high a figure if the appellee had not concealed the fact that he was being paid attorney fees from the allowance. The trial court, upon review, considered and held that the money paid to the debtor as an allowance belonged to him and that the debtor’s estate in the arrangement proceedings had no concern with the disposition the debtor made of the allowance.

Before proceeding further it should be stated that the law concerning arrangements (ch. 11, Bankruptcy Act) makes no provision for the payment of moneys to a debtor by way of allowances for living expenses. The power of the bankruptcy court in arrangement proceedings over the future earnings of the debtor is entirely dependent upon the arrangement proposed by the debtor in his petition for confirmation of the arrangement. The basic question then is, what was the arrangement proposed by the debtor and to what extent did the debtor yield jurisdiction over his future earnings. To determine this matter will involve some consideration of the proceedings before the bankruptcy court which we will state as briefly as may be.

*839 The debtor owed the United States government $25,000 income tax for his fiscal year 1938, together with interest and penalties due to the default in payment. He owed over $5,000 for income taxes to the state of California. He owed large amounts of delinquent taxes to the county of Los Angeles. He also owed some preferred debts to laborers and others to general creditors. His assets were heavily encumbered with little prospect of any recovery therefrom for the benefit of general creditors. The only substantial source for payment of these obligations was money derived by the debtor from his current earnings which he estimated in his petition to be over $250,000 per annum. These earnings, as soon as realized, were subject to the lien of the United States government for the income taxes of 1938, amounting to about $30,000, and also gave rise to additional income taxes for the current year of 1940 for about the same amount as estimated, 3 and to California state income taxes, amounting to about one-fifth of the federal income taxes.

In his petition for the arrangement the debtor enumerated his property and his obligations and offered an arrangement to pay into court each week the sum of $1,500 to be devoted to the payment of his general creditors, such payments to be continued until the creditors were paid in full. He also offered to pay all outstanding taxes. The claims for these taxes were preferred claims and were secured by tax liens upon all the property of the debtor. The debtor did not state how nor in what manner he would pay these taxes, but it is fairly to be inferred from his attitude at the time he secured his allowance of $1,000 per week from the court that he intended to pay into the court all his earnings, alleged to be $5,000 per week, and to have returned to him the sum of $1,000 per week. It is reasonable to say that his proposal as made in his petition for the arrangement contemplated the payment to the receiver of his estate of all his wages on condition that he be repaid the sum of $1,000 per week.

As to the amounts which were to be paid for taxes, the federal and state governments were interested in the proceedings although the court had no authority over these preferred claims except to see that their priorities were preserved. 4 The general creditors were interested in the discharge of these overriding liens. The unsecured claims had no right to payment from current or future earnings of the debtor. 5 It is fair to say that the arrangement tendered by the debtor, as qualified by the accompanying petition for an allowance of $1,000 per week from his future earnings was one in effect to pay over to the receiver all his earnings except $1,000 per week, although his proposed “arrangement”, was to pay only $1,500 per week, *840 from which he requested his allowance of $1,000 per week.

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Bluebook (online)
141 F.2d 837, 1944 U.S. App. LEXIS 3804, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-woolley-ca9-1944.