Vogel v. Mohawk Electric Sales Co.

126 F.2d 759, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 4251
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMarch 17, 1942
Docket180
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 126 F.2d 759 (Vogel v. Mohawk Electric Sales Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vogel v. Mohawk Electric Sales Co., 126 F.2d 759, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 4251 (2d Cir. 1942).

Opinion

L. HAND, Circuit Judge.

This case arises upon an appeal, taken by leave of this court, from an order of the bankruptcy court which affirmed the order of a referee. The appellant is the trustee in bankruptcy, and moved before the referee to expunge a claim for $309.34 filed by the appellee, a creditor of the debt- or, insofar as it asserted priority over the debts existing at petition filed. The referee denied the motion and granted the priority, and the trustee appealed to the district court. The motion before the referee was apparently directed only against the priority of the claim, though the record is not altogether clear; in any event since we hold that it has priority, a for-tiori we hold that it is provable.

The facts were as follows. The debtor was a corporation doing business in New York, against which an involuntary petition for adjudication was filed on March 25, 1939, and which on March 30th filed a petition for an “arrangement” under Chapter XI, 11 U.S.C.A. § 701 et seq. The court from time to time authorized the continuation of the business until June 15th, on which day it confirmed an amended “arrangement” by which the debtor promised to pay all administration expenses and priority claims and thirty per cent of the claims of creditors in installments within eighteen months. In the event of default upon any installment a creditors’ committee, named in the plan, might apply “for immediate liquidation.” The debtor was to deliver all its shares endorsed in blank to this committee, who should hold them till the last installment was paid, and who were to be elected and to serve as directors in place of the former directors then in office. The only officer was to be a president; he was to have no authority to dispose of the assets in bulk without consent of the committee, and any money borrowed was to be “Subordinate to the rights of present creditors.” The court was to retain jurisdiction over the debtor and its assets until payment of the last installment. All this was carried out; the committee, appointed by the vote of the creditors, took charge of the business and continued it in the debtor’s name; and while doing so, bought necessary supplies in the debtor’s name from the creditor at bar. The debtor failed to meet the installments, the committee demanded liquidation, an adjudication was entered on January 10, 1940, and a trustee appointed, who made this motion. The question is whether the debt so incurred has any priority over the unpaid balance of the old debts.

Section 377(1) provides, in a case where the “arrangement” supervenes upon a pending bankruptcy proceeding, and the court has retained jurisdiction over the proceeding after confirmation — as it may if the plan so provides (§ 368) — -that upon the debtor’s default in carrying out its terms the court “shall * * * enter an order dismissing the proceeding under this chapter and adjudging the debtor a bankrupt * * * and directing that the bankruptcy be proceeded with pursuant to the provisions of this act.” That was done here; the proceeding was dismissed and the debtor was adjudicated. Section 64, sub. b provides that debts contracted after a discharge or the confirmation of an “arrangement” shall have priority in the ensuing bankruptcy proceeding over the old debts “in the event of a revocation of the discharge or setting aside of the confirmation.” This section — although then somewhat obscurely worded and numbered § 64, sub. c — was in the original act of 1898 and remained unchanged until the Chandler Act was passed in 1938. Until then there was no ground for reopening a composition except fraud (In re Isidor Klein, Inc., 2 Cir., 22 F.2d. 906); nor did the bankrupt’s default in meeting his engagements made in the composition revive *761 the old debts. In re Mirkus, 2 Cir., 289 F. 732, 31 A.L.R. 435; In re Kornbluth, 2 Cir., 65 F.2d 400; Jacobs v. Fensterstock, 236 N.Y. 39, 139 N.E. 772. The common law treated the composition merely as an accord and satisfaction (In re Nachman Co., 2 Cir., 6 F.2d 427), and it remained doubtful what the law was upon the point under the Act of 1867 as amended in 1874. Ransom v. Geer, C.C., 12 F. 607; Deford v. Hewlett, 49 Md. 51. When § 386 took the place of § 13, nothing of substance was changed except that the court was given an option as to its course after the confirmation was set aside. Without more the confirmation would have remained a discharge in all cases (§ 371) although the debtor defaulted upon his promises, just as it had before 1938. And that is still true in cases where the court does not “retain jurisdiction” over the proceeding by virtue of a provision in the plan (§ 368). But, as we have seen, it is no longer true if the court does “retain jurisdiction,” for then the “arrangement proceeding” must be “dismissed” and that of course revives the old debts.

Thus, the question before us is whether when an “arrangement proceeding” is “dismissed” under § 377 (1) because of the bankrupt’s default, § 64, sub. b, applies, as it concededly does when only the order of confirmation is “set aside” for fraud under § 386. Except for the change in language — the substitution of “dismissing the proceeding” in § 377(1), for “[setting] aside the confirmation” in § 386— there could be no doubt. The reasons which could move Congress to provide an ad interim protection for new debts incurred during the period of trying out the bankrupt’s power to survive, apply equally whether he defaults or whether he has been fraudulent in the composition proceeding. True, it may be argued that the new creditors have less reason to anticipate his fraud than his default, but there are weighty enough equities in their favor in the second case also; for the underlying theory must be that he shall have a chance to establish himself again, and that he cannot have unless he can do business upon equal terms with his competitors; it is idle to ask him to fight his way with one arm tied. Yet if any new creditors who sell to him must accept the possibility that if he fails to perform the “arrangement” they must share with the old creditors (not to the extent of the payments fixed in the composition which presumably have been so far scaled down as to be supportable, but to that of the whole sum of the old debts), they are extremely likely not to deal with him at all. Unless he can assure them as to the amount of his actual liabilities without a contingent addition of the old debts, he will start with a handicap in a race which he has already once lost. As for the words, “dismissing the proceeding,” they are apt enough. The order of confirmation is the consummation of the “arrangement proceeding” which cannot be “dismissed” unless that order is “set aside” along with everything else.

From the foregoing discussion it appears that the omission from the “arrangement” of the provision authorized by subdivision 6 of § 357 was immaterial; it does not touch any priorities between the old debts and new ones incurred after confirmation. On the contrary, it is meant merely to authorize granting priority to debts incurred after petition filed and before the order of confirmation, and presumably it falls if the whole proceeding is “dismissed” under § 377. (In that event we may assume, arguendo, though we do not decide, that the word, “adjudication,” in § 63, sub.

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Bluebook (online)
126 F.2d 759, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 4251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vogel-v-mohawk-electric-sales-co-ca2-1942.