148 F. 907 | D.N.J. | 1906
This proceeding brings before the court three questions: First, who shall pay to Joseph Allgair the amount due to him for the cost of improvements upon the lands of the bankrupt; second, who shall pay the costs incurred in the proceedings for ascertaining the amount due to Joseph Allgair; and, third, who shall pay the taxes assessed against the bankrupt’s real estate for the years 1902, 1903, and 1904.
On July 7, 1905, the Sayre & Fisher Company filed its petition,' praying that the private sale of the bankrupt’s real estate made by the bankrupt’s trustees to Joseph Allgair on June 15, 1905, for $55,000. be set aside, and offering, if an order to that effect should be made, to deposit security that it would at a public sale offer $60,000 therefor. On July 8th the Sayre & Fisher Company filed a supplemental petition, stating that, if the private sale should be set aside, it, “in addition to its bid of $60,000 for the said property and plant, will repay to the said purchaser of the said property, if the Sayre & Fisher Company shall be the successful bidder for the same, the moneys actually expended by him in improvements placed upon said plant since he became
Immediately after the making of the above order Joseph Allgair took an appeal therefrom to the Circuit Court of Appeals, and on July 31, 1905, he appeared in this court, and offered to place the property in the possession of the bankrupt’s trustees, on terms not necessary now to be stated, to be held by the trustees pending the appeal, which offer was accepted. There were at that time two mortgage incum-brances upon the bankrupt’s property, the first for $24,000, with accrued interest, and the second, which had been foreclosed in the New Jersey Court of Chancery and merged into a final decree, for something over $15,000. Sale under the execution issued upon this decree had long been stayed by this court. Feeling that the stay ought not to be continued during the pendency of the appeal above mentioned, an order vacating the stay was signed on August 14, 1905. As the making of this order rendered it possible ‘for the complainant in the foreclosure case to sell the property under the execution issued in that case, and thereby defeat the purpose of the order of July 24, 1905, which was to secure a sale of the property for a larger sum than $55,-000, another order, dated back to July 31, 1905, the terms of which were agreed to by the Sayre & Fisher Company, was made, containing the following provisions:
-‘And it is further ordered that the Sayre & Fisher Company shall enter into an agreement to and with said trustees in bankruptcy herein, said corporation having been duly authorized by resolution of its board of directors, therein and thereby agreeing and undertaking to bid for said property the sum of at least sixty thousand dollars and, in addition thereto, such sum of money as this court shall determine that the said Joseph Allgair is lawfully and equitably entitled to have refunded to him, if any, for disbursements made by him on account of or by reason of his purchase, and for moneys actually expended by him in making permanent improvements to the said property,*909 since lie obtained the possession thereof under and by virtue of the sale of said property to him by said trustees, and also, in addition thereto, tlie interest upon two mortgages, one now or lately held by the National Bank of New Jersey of New Brunswick, in the sum of twenty-four thousand dollars, and the other now or lately held by the Empire State Trust Company in tlie amount secured to that company by the final decree of the Court, of Chancery in foreclosure proceedings, wherein said company was complainant and the bankrupt herein and others were defendants, which interest is to be calculated from the day of tlie date of tlie sale to said Joseph Allgair, to wit, the 15th day of June, 1905, up to the day when tlie deed shall be delivered to the purchaser oil a sale of said plant under any writ of execution heretofore issued or that may hereafter he issued upon said final decree, provided such sale shall take place prior to a resale of the said property and estate by the trustees in bankruptcy herein, and prior to the final determination by a superior court of the petition of review heretofore filed as aforesaid by said Joseph Allgair. Said hid shall he subject to the lien of a first mortgage dated October 37, 1901, for the sum of $24,000, now or lately held by the National Bank of New Jersey, the principal sum of which with accrued interest shall be credited upon said hid and the balance of said bid shall be paid in cash. And it is further ordered that said ^ayre & Ifislier Company shall in and by their agreement so to be made with the said trustees as aforesaid undertake and agree in like manner to bid for said property the sum of at least $(>0,000, and such additional sums, if any, to be determined by this court as aforesaid, together witli the interest on said two mortgages respectively, for the aforesaid property if and when tlie same shall he sold at a valid sale under and by virtue of a valid final decree or judgment of any court of competent jurisdiction under any proceedings liad and taken in any such court by any lienor other than tlie Empire State Trust Company, having a valid and subsisting lien on the aforesaid property and estate, provided sncli last-mentioned sale shall take place prior to a resale of the said properly and estate by the trustees in bankruptcy herein. And it is further ordered that if, before said Allgair's said petition of review shall have been finally determined by the said superior court, a sale of said bankrupt's estate shall be had or made under any execution issued upon Hie aforesaid final decree of the Court of Chancery of New Jersey, or if a sale* thereof be had or made by virtue of ft suit instituted by any other lienor as last aforesaid, and if at any such sale the said Sayre & Fisher Company or any other party should bo the purchaser thereof upon a bid of .$60,000, including tbe additional sums as aforesaid, determined by this court as aforesaid, and tlie interest on said first mortgage and oil said decree as aforesaid, then and in such case and upon said additional sum so paid coming into the hands of the said trustees herein, tlie said trustees shall, in the event of the superior court vacating the petition of review had and taken by the said Joseph Allgair and affirming the order of tlie judge of this court heretofore made on theSlih day of July, 3905, pay to the said Joseph Allgair such sum as shall have been reeeived upon said bid from tlie purchaser thereof for the improvements and other moneys expended by tlie said Joseph Allgair'upon the said plant, allowance having been made for waste, as determined by a judge of this court as hereinbefore provided. Tlie moneys which the said trustees shall have received from such successful bidder as and for the interest upon the first mortgage upon said property, and as and for tlie interest upon the de-‘ cree of foreclosure of the mortgage now or lately held by the Empire State1 Trust Company, they shall pay to the respective mortgagees or the assigns of such mortgagees, iho amount of interest, due each of them upon the said mortgages, so far as the said moneys paid to them as interest will permit them to do.”
On September 5, 1905, the Sayre & Fisher Company entered into a written agreement with the trustees of the bankrupt,, substantially in the form prescribed by the order of July 33, 3905, which agreement was accepted by the trustees. : ’ , s
The appeal taken hv Joseph Allgair has now been disposed of, and the order of July 21, 1905, affirmed. While .the appeal was pending,
A second question is, Who shall pay the costs of the proceedings for ascertaining the amount due to Joseph Allgair? The order of July 31st provided, as did the order of July ‘24th setting aside the sale to Allgair, that he should have repaid to him his expenses for improvements, and the Circuit Court of Appeals (see Allgair v. Fisher & Co., 143 Fed. 964) declared that this provision was not in any respect erroneous. In my judgment, therefore, the purpose of that order should not be impaired by imposing upon Allgair any part of the costs of the proceedings for ascertaining the amount of those expenses, except that lie should pay for the copy of the testimony furnished to his counsel. The Sayre & Fisher Company was successful on its petition to have the sale to Allgair set aside. It agreed to bid for the property on a resale the sum of at least $60,000, plus the amount that should be awarded to Allgair. It did so. In fact, it bid for the property a sum much in excess of what it was bound to do by its agreement entered into with the court when the order of July 31st was made. As the proceedings for determining the amount due to Allgair were had before the resale at which the Sayre & Fisher Company became the purchasers of the property, that company was interested in the question as to what the adjudication in favor of Allgair should be. It was therefore properly represented by counsel in those proceedings, and ought not to be charged with any of the costs of the proceedings, except for the cost of a cop3r of the testimony furnished to its counsel. In those proceedings Medora Fisher and other creditors, who had joined in the prayer that the private sale to Allgair should be set aside, were also represented by counsel. They should not be charged with any part of the costs of the proceedings, except the cost of the copy of the testimony furnished to their counsel. The residue of the costs should be paid by the bankrupt’s trustees, who, as the representatives of the bankrupt’s creditors, have so greatly profited by the resale.
The third question is, Who shall pay the taxes for the years 1902, 1903, and 1904? If the sale had been made under the terms of the order of July 24th, it is not disputed that they would have been paid by the bankrupt’s trustees; for that order required the sale to be made “free and discharged of and from all incumbrances.” But it was not made under that order nor under any other order of this court. It was made under an execution issued out of the Court of Chancery of New Jersey in the foreclosure proceedings instituted by the Empire State Trust Company. The purchase price, in the event of a sale under such execution, it was known would be paid to the sheriff of
“Debts Not Affected by a Discharge. — A discharge in bankruptcy shall release a bankrupt from all of his provable debts except such as (1) are due as a tax levied by the United States, the state, county, district or municipality in which he resides,” etcl
Section 64, 30 Stat. 563 [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 3447], is as follows i.
“Debts Which Have Priority. — The court shall order the trustee to pay all taxes legally due and owing by the bankrupt to the United States, state, county, district or municipality in advance of the payment of dividends to creditors,” etc.'
' 'Arid section' 1, 20 Stat: 544' [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 3419], declares that the word “debt” shall include any debt, demand, or claim provable ■in bankruptcy.' Of course, a tax is provable in bankruptcy. It thus ■appéars- that.taxes legally due and owing by the bankrupt must be paid 'before -distribution- to creditors, and the injunction of section 64 is that.the'court “shall order” the trustee to pay them.' It seems to be the duty of the- court to require such payment, even though no claim foir the same shall have, been presented in the manner or within the -time prescribed by the bankruptcy act for the filing of claims. It is true that section 64 does not, in express words, refer to taxes assessed or --becoming due after the institution o-f bankruptcy proceedings. But it- is settled law that the bankrupt’s estate is taxable while it is in the hands of the bankrupt’s trustees. In Swarts v. Hammer, 120 Fed. 256; 56 C. C. A. 92, the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit held that a -federal court will always order and direct the payment of taxés; duly, assessed on property in the possession of its officers, and tre'at tile same as a preferred -claim against the estate or fund which
A fourth question has also been presented. Shortly after the purchase of the property by the Sayre & Fisher Company its certified check for $60,000 was delivered up to it, and another certified check for $5,000 was deposited by it with George T. Cranmer as security for any sums that this court should, in deciding the questions above mentioned, conclude were chargeable against it. As by the decision above stated it is charged only with the cost of a copy of the testimony furnished to its counsel, the check for $5,000 should be returned to the Sayre & Fisher Company upon the payment of the amount due for the copy of the testimony delivered to its counsel, and upon the expiration of tbe time limited for the bankrupt’s trustees to take an appeal from the order made hereon, or, if an appeal be taken by said trustees, then upon the determination of that appeal, and the payment to Allgair of all moneys that the appellate court may require the Sayre & Fisher Company to pay.
It may also be returned at any time within the period limited for taking an appeal, provided the bankrupt’s trustees shall deliver to George T. Cranmer a written statement that they do not intend to prosecute any appeal, and provided that the Sayre & Fisher Company shall first pay the cost of the copy of the testimony delivered to its counsel.