236 F. 804 | W.D. Wash. | 1916
The claim of the trustee in bankruptcy is presented for commissions in administering upon the above estate. The assets of the estate consist chiefly of timber lands and a sawmill. This is mortgaged in the sum of $100,000. At a meeting of the creditors the assets were ordered to be sold subject to the mortgage. At the sale the mortgagee became the purchaser of the equity held by the trustee for $7,000. A claim was presented for commissions upon $107,000. The creditors and the trustee appear to have agreed that
If the mortgagee had invoked the aid of the bankruptcy court by presenting his claim and setting in motion the machinery of the court for the purpose of liquidating such indebtedness and having the bankruptcy court’s adjudication with relation to the issue tendered thereby, it would present a different matter. In the instant case sale was made, not with respect to the full value of the property; nor was the property offered with respect to its full value, but rather the value the bankrupt had which passed to the trustee. When property is sold subject to liens, the lienholder, not having presented his claim and invoked the administration of the full value of the, property, cannot afterwards resort to the bankrupt estate, but is relegated to the property as se
In view of the provisions of the act and the proceedings in this estate, the order of the referee should be reversed. This conclusion, I think, is fully sustained by the Circuit Court of Appeals (In re Breakwater, supra), and appears to me to be clearly the intent of Congress.