248 F. 134 | D. Mass. | 1915
As to the rent:
As to the damage to the building:
As to the compensation of the receivers:
Receivers are bound to use the utmost care not to contract bills which they will be unable to pay from the property in their hands. The
In this case, yielding to the unanimous vote of the creditors, the receivers, against their better judgment, continued the business at a loss. There was also a large shrinkage below the inventory on the final sale of the assets, which was unexpected by tire receivers, or by the'creditors of the Aldrich-Clisbee Company, and which more tiran accounts for the slight deficiency in the funds on hand to meet the receiver’s bills. As between the receivers and the creditors who assented to and urged the course taken, the former would probably be entitled to reasonable compensation. But as between receivers and persons who dealt with them as officers of the court, if under any circumstances compensation would ever be awarded to the former at the expense of the latter, this is not a case of that extraordinary and exceptional character. The operating losses, incurred by the receivers after they knew that the business was losing money, amount to more than the> deficiency of assets to meet the receivers’ bills. The receivers’ request for compensation must therefore be disallowed.
After payment of taxes for 1914, as above directed, all valid claims against the receivers are to share equally in the distribution of the assets. A decree for distribution in accordance with this memorandum may be presented.