96 F. 529 | W.D.N.C. | 1899
On the 30th day of May, 1899, the referee acting in the above-entitled cause directed the trustee of the above-named bankrupts to set aside the bankrupts’ exemptions, and
The action of the appraisers in appraising and setting apart the exemptions of T. W. Grimes, in pursuance of an agreement entered into on the 4th day of July, 1899, between certain creditors of the bankrupt firm and the bankrupts, before the referee, and with his approval, to the effect that T. W. Grimes should receive his exemptions, to be set apart, from the stock of goods in the bauds of the trustee, and that E. E. Grimes, the other partner, should be paid the amount of his exemptions, to wit, $500 in cash from the proceeds realized from the sale of the balance of the stock of goods, and that said allotment should be final, and not subject to exceptions on the part of either of the bankrupts or their creditors, must be set aside. Such agreements cannot be recognized in a court of bankruptcy. The law as to the duties of trustees in setting apart the exemptions in bankruptcy is mandatory. Bankruptcy Act 1898, § 47, subsecs. 10, 11, prescribe that the trustees shall—
“(10) Keport to tho courts, in writing, the condition ol' ihe estates, and the amounts of money on hand, and such other details as may he required by the courts, within the first month after their appointment and every two months thereafter; * ⅞ * (11) set apart the bankrupt’s exemptions and report the items and estimated value thereof to the court as soon as practicable after their appointment.”
Exceptions ro such allotment may he filed by the bankrupt, or by any creditor, within 20 days afler the same lias been made and filed with the clerk or referee. This duty cannot be performed by any other party. It is wholly and entirely the duty of the trustee, and any agreement: on the part of the bankrupt or the creditors that the exemptions shall be allotted in any other manner than that prescribed by the bankruptcy law, or through other agencies than that of the
It appearing in this case that the assets of the bankrupts are considerably in excess of the exemptions allowed by law, it is ordered that the referee select three disinterested parties as appraisers, who shall, after being duly sworn by the referee, appraise the entire estate of the said bankrupts, and report their action to this court. On the filing of this inventory, the trustee shall proceed to set apart the exemptions of T. W. G-rimes and E. E. G-rimes, bankrupts.
It is insisted by counsel for creditors that the stock of goods owned by the bankrupts in this case, being a stock of drugs, is incapable of division, and that exemptions, therefore, cannot be made in kind, as it would leave a bare remnant of the stock, from the sale of which little could be realized. It is further insisted that a court of bankruptcy is a court of equity, and that it would be inequitable to permit the bankrupts to select their exemptions from the stock of goods, leaving a remnant of perhaps worthless and unsalable stock, thereby entirely defeating the claims of the creditors. It is urged by the credit-, ors that equity and justice require that this stock of goods be sold as a whole, and that the exemptions should be paid in cash to the bank
“This act shall not affect the allowance to bankrupts of the exemptions which are prescribed by the slate laws in force at the lime of the filing of the petition in the state wherein they have had their domicile for the six months or the greater portion thereof immediately preceding the filing of the petition.”
The exemptions in force at the time of the filing of the petition in bankruptcy by Grimes Bros., in the state of North Carolina, are prescribed by the constitution of 1876 (article 10. § 2):
“Every homestead, and the dwellings and buildings used therewith, not exceeding in value §1,000, to be selected by the owner, or in lieu thereof, at the option of The owner, any lot in a city, with the dwellings and buildings used thereon and occupied by a resident of the state, and not exceeding Sl.OUÜ in value, is exempt from process. ⅞ ⅜ ⅜ The personal property of any resilient of the state, to 'the value of §500, to be selected by him, is exempt, except as to taxes or obligations contracted for the purchase price.”
The Code of North Carolina (page 199, § 507) prescribes:
“Whenever the personal property of any resident of this state shall be levied upon by virtue of any execution or oilier final process issued for the collection of any debt, and the owner or any agent, or attorney In his behalf, shall demand that ilie same, or any part thereof, shall be exempt from sail' under such execution, the sheriff or other officer making such levy shall summon throe appraisers, as heretofore provided, who having been first duly sworn, shall appraise and lay off to the Judgment debtor such art ides of personal properly as he, or another in his behalf, may select, and to which ho may bo entitled under this chapter and the constitution of the state, in no case to exceed in value five hundred dollars, which article's shall bo exempt from said levy, and return thereof shall he made by ilie appraisers, as upon the. laying off of a homestead exemption.”
In Frost v. Naylor, 68 N. C. 326, Justice Read says:
“A chose in action can he selected by the debtor as a part of Ills personal property exemptions. The phrase ‘such other property,’ used in the constitution, must be understood to mean such like property as had been expressly named. But; the language of our constitution is different. It does not; mean any property, but exempts ‘personal property of the value of five hundred dollars, to be selected by the debtor.’ The allotment may be made from time to time, and as often as the debtor may be pressed with executions; the policy being to enable the debtor not only to have the exemptions allotted to him once, but to keep them about him ail the time, for the comfort and support of himself and family. Such is the policy of our constitutional provision, and it allows the debtor to select what he thinks most useful.”
See, also, Oakley v. Van Noppen, 96 N. C. 247, 2 S. E. 663; Campbell v. White, 95 N. C. 491.
The trustee can have no discretion in setting apart the exemptions to a bankrupt. The bankruptcy act of 1898 is mandatory. The bankrupt is entitled to make his own selection, under (lie homestead laws of North Carolina; and in the case at ba,r he has demanded, and is entitled, to have his exemptions set apart from the stock of goods now in the possession and custody of the trustee. This stock is said to consist almost entirely of drugs, and is incapable of division. But it is nevertheless personal property, consisting, as it does, of soda-water fountains, counters, prescription cases, and all the appointments of a drug store; and, if the debtor demands certain articles
In tbe matter of tbe claim of L. W. Schouler against tbe trustee of G-rimes Bros., bankrupts, it appears that Grimes Bros, held a lease on tbe premises in which they carried on their business from Schouler, and which expired December 31,1898. On the 25th day of December, 1898, the firm of Grimes Bros, had executed a deed of assignment, under the laws of North Carolina, to one Nading, as assignee. At the date of this assignment the firm owed Schouler $175, for rent of the said premises preceding the adjudication in bankruptcy. The assignee, Nad-ing, who was, on the adjudication of the bankrupts, named by the creditors as trustee, has so far neglected or declined to pay rental for the said premises which has accrued since the adjudication of Grimes Bros., bankrupts, though he has been continually in possession of the said storehouse of Schouler’s, and using the same as a warehouse for the storage of the stock of goods of the bankrupt firm. Counsel for Schouler insists that an order should be made by this court requiring Nading, trustee, to deliver to Schouler $121.70 out of the exemptions of T. W. Grimes, in pursuance of an agreement of T. W. Grimes, with claimant Schouler, prior to the institution of involuntary proceedings in bankruptcy by creditors against Grimes Bros., and their adjudication in bankruptcy. This order the court declines to make. The title to exempt property does not pass to the trustee; it is vested in the bankrupt. Bankruptcy Act 1898, § 70, a. He may sell it or mortgage it. But, while this is true, property of the second class cannot be considered exempt property until it is selected and set apart. Woolfolk v. Murray, 44 Ga. 137, 138. It must necessarily pass to the trustee, who has temporary dominion over it until the exemptions are made. Hi’s title may be termed a defeasible title. When the exemptions are formally set apart by the trustee, and affirmed by the court, the title of the bankrupts then becomes superior to that of the trustee, and absolute. After the exempt property has been designated and set apart to the bankrupts by the trustee, it has been adminis tered, and has passed out of the possession and control of the bankruptcy court. The trustee has no further concern with it, nor has the court any jurisdiction to defend such property from adverse claims or liens that may or may not be distinguished by the bankruptcy proceedings. ■ It will not entertain a proceeding to enforce a lien upon such property. Jeffries v. Bartlett, 20 Fed. 496; In re Preston, 6 N. B. R. 545, Fed. Cas. No. 11,394; In re Hunt, 5 N. B. R. 493, Fed. Cas. No. 6,883; In re Camp, 91 Fed. 745. Such a lien may be enforceable in a state court without regard to any pending proceedings in bankruptcy. But the claim of Schouler for rental of the premises used and occupied by Nading, trustee, since the adjudication in bankruptcy, stands upon a different footing. This claim must be paid by the trustee.
Sehouler has not been guilty of any laches in the matter; for it appears that he has repeatedly demanded the possession of the premises, and has made every effort in his power to obtain'the same. He could not have forcibly ejected Hading or dumped the stock of drugs into the street. The bankrupts’ property has been thus preserved; but the bankrupts insist that their exemptions must first be set apart to them, and, if there be anything left, Schouler’s claim for rental since their adjudication, and the legal and necessary expenses incurred in closing up the estate, can be paid out of the remainder of the estate of the bankrupts. This contention cannot be maintained either on legal or equitable grounds. The rental for the storage of the goods of the bankrupt firm is paid and parcel of the legitimate costs incurred in this ease, and is a lien upon the estate of the bankrupts, or any assets that may be in the hands of the trustee, or that nmv hereafter come into his hands. In re Collier, 93 Fed. 194; Norman v. Craft, 99 N. C. 211; Latta v. Bell, 122 N. C. 639, 30 S. E. 15. “For the time the trustee is compelled to occupy the premises he should of course pay rent, and it should be treated as a part of the expenses of administering the proceeds of the estate.” In re Jefferson, 1 Nat. Bankr. News, No. 12, p. 288, 93 Fed. 948. A trustee in bankruptcy who would permit an estate in Ms custody to be wasted or damaged when he is in possession of property of the bankrupt, sufficient to realize funds therefrom to prevent such waste or damage, would be grossly negligent, and would be subject to removal from his trust.
The able counsel for the bankrupts doubtless overlooked section 510 of the Code of North Carolina. This reads:
“The costs and expense's of appraising and laying off the homestead or personal properly exemptions, when the same is made under execution, shall be charged and included in the .officer’s bill of fees upon such execution or ether final process, and whim made upon the petition of the owner they shall be paid by such owner, and the latter costs shall be a lien on said homestead.”
In the case at bar it will be observed that the bankrupts demanded their extmptions set apart to them in kind. In this case it was the duly of flu; trustee, if he had no available funds on hand, to sell so much of the stock of goods in his custody as might have been necessary to defray storage account, etc. The costs of storage of the stock
The action of the referee in the above-entitled case, in confirming the report of the appraisers, is set aside, and it is ordered and adjudged that the referee appoint three disinterested parties, who, after being duly sworn by him, shall appraise the entire estate of the bankrupts, T. W. and E. E. Grimes, trading as Grimes Bros. On the filing of this inventory, the trustee of the said bankrupts shall immediately proceed to set apart the exemptions of the said Grimes Bros., allotting to each member of the firm, out of the partnership assets, such articles of personal property, or articles from the stock of goods in his hands, as may be selected by the said T. W. and E. E. Grimes, to the amount and value of f 500 each; which said report shall be filed in court, and be subject to such exceptions as may be entered by creditors within 20 days’ notice after the filing of such report. It is further ordered that the trustee, B. W. Hading, shall pay to L. W. Schouler the sum of $-, the amount due for rent of storehouse used for the storage of the stock of goods of Grimes Bros, from the -day of January, 1898, the date of the adjudication of the bankruptcy of the said firm; and, if the said Hading shall have no available funds to pay said claim, he shall immediately sell so much of the said stock of goods as may be necessary to pay the amount of said storage to said Schouler, filing with the court an itemized statement of the articles sold, and the amount realized therefrom, and the full amount paid L. W. Schouler, with his receipt therefor. After the allotment of the exemptions allowed by law, it is further ordered that the trustee sell the residue of the said stock for cash to the highest bidder, at Winston, H. 0., after giving 10 days’ notice of time and place of sale, and file his report with the clerk of this court.