Silver State Savings and Loan Association v. James Chalmers Young, Trustee of the Estate of Carver House, Inc., Bankrupt

252 F.2d 236, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 4885
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 28, 1958
Docket15526_1
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 252 F.2d 236 (Silver State Savings and Loan Association v. James Chalmers Young, Trustee of the Estate of Carver House, Inc., Bankrupt) 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
Silver State Savings and Loan Association v. James Chalmers Young, Trustee of the Estate of Carver House, Inc., Bankrupt, 252 F.2d 236, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 4885 (9th Cir. 1958).

Opinion

HAMLEY, Circuit Judge.

This corporate reorganization proceeding was terminated by an order adjudicating the debtor a bankrupt. It is provided in the order that allowances made to the trustee in reorganization and his attorney “constitute a first lien upon all *237 the property of the Debtor. 1 State Savings and Loan Association, the principal secured creditor, appeals. Appellant contends that the court should not have given these allowances lien priority over its first and second mortgages. Silver

The debtor, Carver House, Inc., filed a voluntary petition under chapter X of the Bankruptcy Act, on April 18, 1956. The petition was granted ex parte on that day, and Edward J. Price was appointed trustee in reorganization. On that day, Price retained Charles W. Deaner as attorney for the estate. No order authorizing such employment was entered until November 20,1956.

An exhibit attached to the petition lists as the only assets of the estate a partially-completed hotel in Las Vegas, Nevada, valued at $438,351.26, and land on which the hotel was situated, valued at $45,000. In a trustee’s report filed about seven months later, however, the then value of the hotel property was set at approximately $120,000, it being indicated that it would require $150,000 to complete the structure.

The listed liabilities and capital at the time the petition was filed aggregate $483,351.26. Included in these were Silver State’s first and second mortgages on the property, given to secure loans totaling $225,000. Accounts payable in the amount of $50,669.11 were partially secured by liens for work performed and material furnished in building the hotel.

The matter of objections to the retention of Price as trustee came on for hearing on July 12, 1956. The court was then told that, because of injuries sustained in an automobile accident, Price would be unable to continue serving as trustee. An order was thereupon entered removing Price as trustee. 1 On July 13, 1956, James Chalmers Young was appointed trustee in reorganization. The record does not indicate the date on which Young qualified as trustee. Young continued Deaner as attorney for the estate. 2

In the order approving the petition, it was made the duty of the trustee to file, on or before July 16, 1956, a petition requesting the judge to fix a time within which the trustee should prepare and file a plan, or a report of his reasons why a plan could not be effected, and a subsequent time for a hearing on such plan or report. On July 12, 1956, an order was entered extending the time for filing such a petition to September 17, 1956. This was made necessary by the change in trustee.

No such petition was filed either before or after September 17, 1956. This deficiency was revealed at a hearing which was held on October 4, 1956, presumably for the purpose of considering such a petition. The court therefore decided to proceed on the basis of the trustee’s oral request made at that hearing. November 7, 1956, was fixed as the time within which the trustee should file a plan, or reasons why a plan could not be effected.

November 20, 1956, was fixed as the time for a hearing on such plan or report. The order setting these dates also provided that, at the hearing on November 20, 1956, the question of adjudicating the debtor a bankrupt would also be considered. It was further provided that petitions for fees and allowances would be considered at the November 20, 1956, hearing.

At the October 4, 1956, hearing, it came to light that the trustee had not sought and obtained an order prescribing the manner and time within which proofs of claims of creditors, and of the interests of stockholders, may be filed and allowed. 3 The court requested that *238 the trustee take immediate steps to remedy this omission. Pursuant to this direction, an order was prepared and entered on October 16, 1956, giving creditors and stockholders until November 20, 1956, to file their claims.

On behalf of Silver State, an oral motion was made at the October 4, 1956, hearing, that the debtor be adjudicated a bankrupt. Calling attention to the fact that no notice had been given that the question of bankruptcy would be considered at the October 4, 1956, hearing, the court denied this motion. 4

On November 1, 1956, Silver State filed a written motion to vacate the order of April 18,1956, approving the petition, noting it for hearing on November 5, 1956. 5 On November 8, 1956, the trustee filed a report of his reasons why a plan of reorganization could not be effected.

At the hearing held on November 20, 1956, Silver State’s motion to vacate, and the trustee’s report of reasons why a plan could not be effected, were considered. The matter of allowances could not be considered, however, since the attorney for the trustee had overlooked filing petitions for allowances. 6 This made it necessary to continue the matter of allowances to a future date. Because of this, the court indicated that, while the debtor would be adjudicated a bankrupt, the adjudication would not be formalized until the petitions for allowances were considered. The hearing on allowances was set for December 4, 1956. Silver State’s motion to vacate the order approving the petition was denied.

The trustee’s petition for compensation in the sum of $1,000, and reimbursement in the sum of forty dollars, was filed on November 23, 1956. Deaner’s petition for an allowance in the sum of $800, for services rendered as attorney for the estate, and reimbursement in the sum of forty dollars, was filed on November 27, 1956.

At the hearing held on December 4, 1956, no objection was made to the amount of allowances claimed by the trustee. The court allowed the trustee the full amount claimed. Because the order authorizing Deaner’s employment as attorney for the estate had not been entered until November 20, 1956, the court determined that he could be compensated only for services rendered on and after that date. 7 Deaner was therefore allowed $250 of the $800 claimed, plus forty dollars reimbursement for expenses incurred.

The attorney for Silver State vigorously objected, at the December 4, 1956, hearing, to the announced purpose of the court to make allowances a prior lien upon the estate. 8 The position taken by Silver State in this regard was the same as that which was taken by it in First Western Savings & Loan Ass’n v. Anderson, 9 Cir., 252 F.2d 544, also decided today.

Renewal of this objection here presents the only question before us on this appeal.

In the First Western case, referred to above, it was held that where free assets involved in an unsuccessful reorganization proceeding are insufficient

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Bluebook (online)
252 F.2d 236, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 4885, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/silver-state-savings-and-loan-association-v-james-chalmers-young-trustee-ca9-1958.