In re HUMESTON.
PEIRSON et al.
v.
PARIS.
Circuit Court of Appeals, Second Circuit.
*188 Merle Lewis Sheffer, of Rochester, N. Y., for appellants.
Walter A. Swan, of Rochester, N. Y., for appellee.
Before L. HAND, SWAN, and AUGUSTUS N. HAND, Circuit Judges.
L. HAND, Circuit Judge.
Humeston, the bankrupt, who had given the petitioners a mortgage on land owned by him and his wife as tenants by the entirety, was adjudicated on November 1, 1933, and Paris was appointed his trustee. Paris sold all the personalty at once and entered upon the land, leased it and collected the rents, the mortgagees doing nothing to assert their claims. It was twice sold for taxes due before November 1, 1933, and other taxes accrued upon it during the trustee's occupation which he did not pay. Finally on April 1, 1935, Paris cancelled the fire insurance which he had taken out on the house, and decided to abandon the property because there was no possible equity, and to close the estate. He prepared and filed his account as of April 30, 1935, and on May 9th, gave notice to creditors of a final meeting on May twenty-first, at which they were to consider whether to pass the account, to abandon the property and to declare a dividend. The mortgagees appeared at the meeting and filed the petition now at bar, claiming the rents collected in spite of the fact that they had not attempted to foreclose, or to get the rents sequestered in their favor, and that the mortgage did not even assign the rents. The referee dismissed this petition, and although apparently no creditor objected, refused to allow the trustee to abandon the property, and ordered him to sell it subject to all liens. The appeals are from these two orders.
We held in Re Brose,
As to the supposed abandonment, the trustee never even proposed to abandon the property without the consent of the creditors at the final meeting; and although we are told that no creditor objected, the referee refused to consent. His order was necessary, for the court has the final word. In re Conemaugh Coal Mining Corporation (D.C.)
However, they were entitled to some relief. Such taxes as fell due during the period of the trustee's occupation were part of the expenses of that occupation and should be borne by the estate. Michigan v. Michigan Trust Co.,
We cannot see by what warrant the mortgagees challenge the sale of the equity. It is true that they are general creditors as well as lienors, but as creditors they can have no interest in preventing a sale; and as mortgagees it cannot affect their remedies in any way whatever.
Order denying the motion for payment of rents modified as above; appeal dismissed from order directing sale.
