In re Cummins

196 F. 224 | S.D.N.Y. | 1912

A1AYFR, District Judge.

The trustee opposes the confirmation of the report of the special master, which, in effect, upholds the transfer of an automobile (agreed to be worth $600) to an attorney for professional services. At the same time the trustee moves that the expenses of the proceeding be paid by the attorney. The special master has reported at length, and I shall refer only to one question involved.

The claimant, Frank R. Crocker, was- retained by the bankrupt as his attorney on January 14, 1911, and for some weeks examined into the complicated financial affairs of the bankrupt, evidently hoping to disentangle them, but finally concluding that bankruptcy was inevitable. On February 21, 1911, while in Nashville (where the bankrupt bad certain property and interests), the bankrupt, being then without ready funds, transferred an automobile to Air. Crocker, stating that he would be glad to have Air. Crocker take it and sell it, and apply the proceeds on account of disbursements and fees for services rendered and which might thereafter be rendered. A'lr. Crocker testified that his services and disbursements down to the date of the transfer amounted to $600, and he does not make any claim for services rendered from that date until April 11, 1911, when the petition in bankruptcy was filed.

Mr. Crocker relies upoiy section 60d of the Bankruptcy Raw, while the trustee urges that the transfer was preferential, and is not saved by the section above mentioned because the payment, was for services already rendered and not to be rendered. Section 60d is as follows:

“If a debtor shall, directly or indirectly, in contemplation of the filing of a petition by or against him, x>ay money or transfer property to an attorney and counselor at law, solicitor in equity, or proctor in admiralty for services to be rendered, the transaction shall be re-examined by the court oil the petition of the trustee or any creditor and shall only be held valid to tlie extent of a reasonable amount to be determined by the court, and the excess may bo recovered by the trustee for the benefit of the estate.”

The contention of the trustee is in effect that, if a debtor in contemplation of the filing of a petition by or against him retains an attorney to advise and act for him, the attorney must then and there get his fee, else he will become a general creditor. In other words, a lawyer is to be deprived of the safeguard of the statute because he has the decency not to insist on an immediate retainer in money or property, and is willing to wait until he can decide what his fee *226ought to be in the light of service actually rendered. There is no reason why statutes, under familiar canons, cannot be construed sensibly.

The Congress has given the court full power to re-examine such a transaction with a view of ascertaining its good faith, and then determining whether the fee is reasonable. What is meant, by the statute, is that a debtor, under the circumstances therein described, may fully pay an attorney reasonable compensation for services to be rendered, and it is immaterial whether the payment is made at or after the professional engagement is entered into. Upon the re-examination provided for by the statute, it should not be difficult to determine either the bona fides or the reasonableness of the charge. In this case, the attorney acted in strict accord with his professional obligations, and, indeed, his fee was noticeably moderate.

He will not be penalized by an order to pay the expenses of a proceeding in which he was called upon to defend a proper and well-earned fee.

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