In re Epstein

109 F. 878 | W.D. Ark. | 1901

TRIEBER, District Judge

(after stating the facts as above). The services rendered by the trustee were highly beneficial to the estate, and, if there is any authority whatever for the court to make an extra allowance to him, it should be done. The compensation provided for by the act of congress will be about $50 a month for his services, — services which would he cheap at $250 a month. Section 48a of the bankrupt act provides that:

• “Trustees shall receive as full compensation for their services, payable after they are rendered, a fee of $5.00, deposited with the clerk at the time0 ¡lie petition is filed, in each case, except when a fee is not required from voluntary bankrupt, and from estates which they have administered, such commissions on sums to be paid as dividends and commissions as may be allowed by the courts, not to exceed three per centum on the first $5,000.00 or less, two per centum on the second $5,000.00 or part thereof, and one per centum on such sums in excess of $10,000.00.”

The general orders in bankruptcy promulgated by Sup. Ct. Rule 35, par. 3 (18 Sup. Ct. ix.), provide:

“Compensation allowed to trustees by the act shall be in full compensation for the services performed by them, but shall not include expenses necessarily incurred in the performance of their duties and allowed upon the settlement of their accounts.”

II. will thus be seen that the bankruptcy act limits the maximum allowance to he made to a trustee, and the supreme court, by its rules, only provides for expenses necessarily incurred in the performance of their duties. Nothing can be found in the act itself which peináis any other compensation to the trustee. No doubt, a great injustice is being done to the trustee in this case, and it is hardly reasonable to suppose that persons competent to manage a large trust would be willing to undertake it for such meager compensation as is allowed by the law. The creditors, for whose benefit this section was no doubt enacted, will be the sufferers; hut the courts are powerless to alter or amend the laws. A great many decisions may he found in which the courts have seen proper to *880legislate in order to remedy what they thought were defects or hardships in the statutory laws, yet this court does not feel justified to do so, in the face of the constitution of the United States, .which vests the lawmaking power exclusively in congress. If the creditors of bankrupt estates.desire to secure .the services of good trustees, they must appeal to congress to amend the law, and either authorize the courts to allow such compensation as receivers in chancery are allowed for their services in the discretion of the court, or otherwise authorize the creditors at their first meeting, and before the trustee is elected by them, to fix the compensation he is to receive, subject to the approval of the court. In the absence of a provision in the law granting such authority to the courts, they are powerless to exercise any discretion beyond the maximum fees given to the trustee by section 48a of the bankruptcy act.

Counsel have called the attention of the court to the decision of a referee in Be Plummer, 3 Am. Bankr. B. 320, in which the trustee was allowed for just such services as were performed by the trustee in this case a reasonable extra compensation in analogy to the case of a receiver; but, with due deference to-the learned referee, he seems to have overlooked entirely the provisions of the constitution which divide this government into three separate departments, and define the powers and duties of each. The learned author of Collier on Bankruptcy ([3d Ed.] p. 294), in reviewing this decision of the referee, says:

“It seems that the opinion of the learned referee in the Plummer Oase is based on principles of abstract equity. It is a little doubtful, however, in the light of section 48a of the bankruptcy law, providing that the filing fee and the commissions shall be the only compensation of the trustee, whether 'it will stand.”

The trustee in this case has saved at least $10,000 to the estate; he has given his valuable time and ability to the management of his trust; and, if there were any warrant of law for the allowance of extra compensation to him, the court would cheerfully grant it. But, in view of the specific provisions of the bankruptcy act, the court does not feel that there is any authority of law for such an allowance, and his petition must-be disallowed; and it is so ordered.

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