Oppenheimer v. Oldham

178 F.2d 386, 1949 U.S. App. LEXIS 3417
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedDecember 7, 1949
Docket12668_1
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 178 F.2d 386 (Oppenheimer v. Oldham) 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
Oppenheimer v. Oldham, 178 F.2d 386, 1949 U.S. App. LEXIS 3417 (5th Cir. 1949).

Opinion

DOOLEY, District Judge.

J. Sidney Jones was adjudged a bankrupt September 13, 1948 on a voluntary petition filed September 10, 1948, and R. W. Haynie has been the trustee in said bankruptcy estate. The said J. Sidney Jones and wife executed and delivered a vendor’s lien note dated July 14, 1948, in the principal sum of $5,000, bearing interest at the rate of 5% per annum, payable to F. G. Oppenheimer, Trustee, for purchase money on 25.36 acres of land located near San Antonio, Texas, and as further security the makers thereof also executed and delivered a cumulative deed of trust lien against the same land. The first knowledge appellant had of the bankruptcy proceedings came by a letter of September 20, 1948 from the trustee, quoted in the margin. 1 The appellant sent the information requested by the trustee. The trustee then wrote appellant another letter of September 27, 1948, also quoted in the margin. 2 The appellant, after receipt of the information and advice from the trustee in the last mentioned letter, filed his claim on said note as a secured creditor in said *388 bankruptcy case on October 18, 1948, but said claim did not include any motion or request to foreclose the lien security by a sale of the aforesaid land for the purpose of collecting appellant’s debt through the bankruptcy court.

An application to sell said real estate at private sale, to the highest cash bidder, and free of all liens, was filed by the trustee on September 29, 1948, and after due notice thereof to creditors of the estate, such sale was authorized by an order of the referee made October 14, 1948. The trustee sold said land on November 1, 1948 for the sum of $6,325 and the sale was duly confirmed by the court.

A notice dated October 14, 1948 was issued by the referee to call a meeting of creditors on November 1, 1948 for the purpose of considering the classification, priority and amounts of all secured claims in said bankruptcy estate, and a copy thereof was mailed to appellant, as well as his counsel, and also to other secured creditors. The appellant did not attend said meeting either in person or by a representative. By order dated November 1, 1948 the referee approved the appellant’s claim for the amount of $5,000 principal, and $10.42 interest to July 31, 1948, as a valid first lien against said land, and the trustee was directed to pay said amount to appellant from the proceeds of the land less the sum of 5% to be deducted from the amount of said secured claim and applied on court costs and expenses of administration.

The appellant, on December 3, 1948, mailed to the referee a motion for leave to file a petition for review, and also a petition for review, which were received by the referee on December 6, 1948, but not immediately filed, as the referee first notified appellant’s counsel that the law required a $10 filing fee, and upon receipt thereof, the referee filed said motion and petition as of December 6, 1948. The gist of appellant’s petition for review is as follows: “That the Referee in bankruptcy was in error in the entry of said order for the reason that the petitioner is entitled to the payment in full of the indebtedness described in said claim with interest to the date of payment and without any deductions for Court costs or the expenses of administration, and in this connection the petitioner would show that it was not at his request nor for his benefit that the sale of the property securing his indebtedness was made and that the bankrupt estate suffered no expenses in connection with the sale or with the care and maintenance of the property sold which should be properly chargeable to the petitioner.”

The petition for review was heard December 31, 1948, and the Court below affirmed the action of the referee.

It has always been the rule in bankruptcy administration that the accrual of simple interest on unsecured claims runs only to the date of bankruptcy, and as held by most courts the same has been true of deficiently secured claims, but recently the Supreme Court, as part of a general summary of the usages respecting interest on claims in bankruptcy, has said: “Simple interest on secured claims accruing after the petition was filed was denied unless the security was worth more than the sum of principal and interest due.” Vanston Bondholders Protective Committee v. Green, 329 U.S. 156, 164, 67 S.Ct. 237, 240, 91 L.Ed. 162. The practice of admitting interest on amply secured claims after the date of bankruptcy as reflected in above quotation is consistent in principle with other Supreme Court cases, 3 and that rule has been follow *389 ed in this Circuit, 4 and in other Circuits. 5 Since the value of the encumbered land in question, measured by the actual proceeds thereof, was more than sufficient for the purpose, the appellant was entitled to receive the full amount of his principal debt, together with interest accrued thereon to the date of payment.

The above holding is not in conflict with the decision of the Supreme Court in City of New York v. Saper, Trustee in Bankruptcy, 336 U.S. 328, 69 S.Ct. 554, 559. That decision dealt with the propriety of interest on tax claims after bankruptcy, and turns mainly on changes in the statute law wrought principally by the Chandler Act, 11 U.S.C.A. § 1 et seq. The Court points out that before the enactment of that act the lower courts had been allowing interest on tax claims until payment, “either as a matter of practical convenience or because Sec. 64, sub. a gave those claims absolute priority and dispensed with proof.” The law formerly put tax liabilities in a sovereign class above the status of mere claims in bankruptcy. In fact the filing of a claim was unnecessary, but nevertheless taxes were payable as imperative obligations commanding absolute priority. The act of 1926 6 reinforced by the Chandler Act 7 reversed that highly favored position of tax liabilities, which instead were shifted to the rank of simple claims in bankruptcy, and the Court concluded that the continued allowance of interest on tax claims after bankruptcy would be inconsistent with such changes made in the framework of the bankruptcy law.

Those considerations have no bearing on contractual debts presented as secured claims in bankruptcy. It has always been a fundamental principle of the bankruptcy law that the property rights and interests designated as liens and pledges, when valid in bankruptcy, shall not be impaired in the administration of a bankrupt estate. The Chandler Act manifests no intent to deviate from that principle. It is true that in the revision of Sec. 67, sub.

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Bluebook (online)
178 F.2d 386, 1949 U.S. App. LEXIS 3417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oppenheimer-v-oldham-ca5-1949.