147 F.2d 375 | 2d Cir. | 1945
The issue in this case concerns the validity of a claimed state statutory lien upon assets of the bankrupt, Strikalite Ltd., Inc., in favor of the Industrial Commissioner of the State of New York to secure the award of compensation to an employee of the bankrupt. Raymond A. Gilmartin, the employee, was injured on November 3, 1941, and thereafter was granted an award of $3,805.67 against the bankrupt pursuant to § 14-a of the New York Workmen’s Compensation Law, Cotisol.Laws, c. 67, the award being duly filed with the State Department of Labor on January 20, 1943. On February 23, 1943, pursuant to § 26 of the Workmen’s Compensation Law, the Industrial Commissioner obtained a judgment in the Supreme Court of Queens County against the employer. But the latter had filed a petition for an arrangement in the District Court on February 18, 1943, and it was adjudicated a bankrupt on February 25, 1943. Consequently the Industrial Commissioner on March 8, 1943, duly filed a verified claim asserting a statutory lien for the amount of the award upon the assets of the bankrupt. There were no prior recorded liens, and the assets in the hands of the trustee were sufficient to cover administration expenses and wages in addition to the lien claimed by the Commissioner. The referee directed that any surplus after the payment of wages, administration expenses, and any prior recorded liens he applied to the satisfaction of the Commissioner’s lien; his order was affirmed on the trustee’s petition for review, and the trustee now appeals.
We should use the state decisions to define the interest created by state law, and then it becomes a question under the Bankruptcy Act whether fairly considered the interest thus defined is a lien or merely a preferred claim. Strom v. Peikes, supra; 4 Moore’s Collier on Bankruptcy, 14th Ed. 1942, 111, 171, 172. Here the trustee’s contention must fail, in any event, since § 34 of the Workmen’s Compensation Law, when read with § 20, provides for the filing of an award with the State Department of Labor, thereby prescribing a procedure substantially identical with that contained in statutes requiring the perfection of a lien. This award was filed with the Department of Labor both before bankruptcy and within the period provided by state law. Consequently it comes within the terms, as it seems well within the policy, of § 67, sub., b, of the Bankruptcy Act, 11 U.S.C.A. § 107, sub. b, to constitute a valid statutory lien, enforceable against the trustee.
Affirmed.