OPINION
This case presents a unique question regarding the extent of a bankruptcy court’s equitable power to subordinate a creditor’s claim against the bankruptcy estate.
The claimant in this bankruptcy proceeding is the Crocker National Bank (Bank), the trustee of the bankrupt’s spendthrift trust, claiming on behalf of the trust. The Bank’s claim derives from a number of promissory notes, held as assets of the trust, evidencing loans made to the bankrupt at various times either by his father or the Bank, and now due the trust.
The trust instrument sets up a plan for equal periodic distributions of the income and principal of the trust to the four beneficiaries. It also provides that if a beneficiary is indebted to the trust when a distribution is scheduled, his distributive portion must first be used to offset his indebtedness. All of the bankrupt’s shares of trust income and principal have heretofore been applied to discharge his obligations to the trust, and several distributions remain to be made.
However, in this proceeding the Bank seeks to have the remaining indebtedness immediately discharged (insofar as possible) by allowing the trust to share in the bankruptcy estate on a parity with the general creditors. The ultimate effect of such a recovery by the Bank for the trust will be, of course, that the bankrupt’s obligations to the trust will be diminished by reducing the shares going to general creditors, and the share of the trust which the bankrupt will ultimately receive will increase.
The trustee in bankruptcy objected to the claim, but the referee allowed it as provable, apparently concluding that the notes reflected bona fide débts rather than anticipatory distributions of the bankrupt’s share of the trust estate.
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However, the referee subordinated the Bank’s claim to those of the other creditors. The referee justified his exercise of his general equitable powers on the rationale that it was unfair that the spendthrift trust should insulate the bankrupt’s beneficial interest in the trust from the general creditors but that the trust should share with the creditors in the bankrupt’s other assets, thereafter distributing assets in an equivalent
On review, the district court reversed, holding that under the circumstances the Bankruptcy Act permits the Bank to share equally with the other unsecured general creditors, and that the referee lacked cognizable equitable grounds for subordinating the claim. We agree.
The trustee quite properly concedes that, despite the fact that the trust’s claim against the bankrupt is to some extent
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secured by his distributive share of the trust, the Bank’s claim was properly filed as an unsecured claim. The Bankruptcy Act defines a secured creditor as one “who has security for his debt upon the property of the bankrupt of a nature to be assignable under this title” (11 U.S.C. § 1(28)). The bankrupt’s interest in the trust is not assignable and not part of the bankruptcy estate; consequently the trust’s claim is not secured within the meaning of the Act, and the Bank may file its claim as unsecured. Ivanhoe Bldg. Assn. v. Orr,
The remaining question therefore is whether the referee could subordinate the Bank’s claim (undoubtedly thereby defeating it).
Subordination is an equitable power. We recognize the principle that a bankruptcy court is a court of equity, charged to apply equitable principles to reach equitable results when administering the Bankruptcy Act. In doing so, the bankruptcy “chancellor” may disregard form for substance and alter the result which would obtain under a formal application of general legal principles, in order to do equity. Pepper v. Litton,
Nevertheless, the bankruptcy court’s power to impose a result different from that prescribed by the statutory distribution scheme is not unlimited. The standard is that “[a claim’s] disallowance or subordination may be necessitated by certain cardinal principles of equit[able] jurisprudence.” Pepper v. Litton,
supra,
at 306,
“[W]e ought to think of equity as supplementary law, a sort of appendix added on to our code, or a sort of gloss written round our code, an appendix, a gloss, which used to be administered by courts specially designed for that purpose, but which is now administered by the High Court of Justice as part of the code. The language which equity held to law, if we may personify the two, was not ‘No, that is not so, you make a mistake, your rule is an absurd, an obsolete one’; but ‘Yes, ofcourse that is so, but it is not the whole truth.’ ”
Maitland, Equity; A Course of Lectures 18 (1936). Here, the referee in effect said, “No, the distribution scheme provided by the Act is a mistake, the rules of spendthrift trusts and the definition of a secured creditor are absurd and obsolete,” and reached a different result.
Whatever the validity of the referee’s judgment on the merits of the statutes, a trio of Supreme Court cases dealing with subordination in a closely analogous situation makes clear that he was without power to impose it. In the three mentioned cases the Court indicated that before a bankruptcy court may disallow or subordinate a claim, some basis must exist of the sort traditionally cognizable by equity as justifying its intervention, such as fraud, breach of fiduciary duties, mismanagement, overreaching; in fact, any breach of the multitude of “rules of fair play and good conscience” (Pepper v. Litton,
supra,
In the first two cases of the trilogy, Taylor v. Standard Gas & Electric Co.,
Thus, there must be conduct either in acquiring or asserting the claim which is itself inequitable in order to subordinate a claim. Nothing here suggests that inequitable conduct underlies the claims asserted by the Bank. Certainly there is no equitably cognizable overreaching in the Bank’s assertion of those claims in the bankruptcy proceeding; the Bank would probably breach its trust to the trust’s other beneficiaries if it failed to seek payment of the loans from the bankruptcy estate. (See n.4 supra.) The parties have not suggested that the trust was either established or administered improperly or with a purpose to prejudice the general creditors, or that the bankrupt’s debts to the trust are other than a reflection of good faith business loans. That being the case, the district court properly held that the referee lacked a basis for subordinating the Bank’s claim.
As the district court noted, the supposed unfairness here results entirely from the provisions of state law recognizing spendthrift trusts and from the provisions of the Bankruptcy Act giving such trusts effect in bankruptcy proceedings.
The trustee’s real complaint here is ultimately with the fact that California law allows property to be tied up in such a manner that the beneficiary may enjoy the benefits of that property without having his interest in that property alienated or burdened to discharge his responsibilities to his creditors. The effects of restraints against alienation have been criticized for centuries; nevertheless, they persist. See Scott, supra, at § 152. Apparently the California legislature saw some value in allowing spendthrift trusts, and the Congress saw some value in providing for enforcement of state rules of property law. A court is not free, in the name of equity, to override those judgments.
The only other possible basis for subordinating the Bank’s claim, the doctrine of marshaling of assets, is clearly foreclosed in the situation here presented under the doctrine of Meyer v. United States,
Affirmed.
Notes
. Naturally, the beneficiary’s portion of the trust not exempted under Cal.Civ.Code § 859 would vest by operation of law in the trustee.
See Scott, supra,
at 1151. See Matter of Irving Trust Co.,
. If there were never an intent that the loans be repaid, there would be no debt and hence the issue of subordination would not be raised. The situation is analogous to that involved in distinguishing between a “loan” and a capital contribution made to a controlled corporation. See A. Herzog & J. Zweibel, The Equitable Subordination of Claims in Bankruptcy, 15 Vand.L.Rev. 83, 93 (1961).
. The referee ruled that he had no power to impose a constructive trust for the benefit of the general creditors to recoup amounts paid the Bank out of the bankrupt’s subsequently acquired distributive shares. That ruling was not challenged.
. It is unclear from the record whether or not the distributive portion of the trust remaining as the bankrupt’s share is larger or smaller than his remaining indebtedness. Aside from the possibility that the trust is insecure on that basis, there is always the possibility of a decline in the value of the trust assets. And in the event of the bankrupt’s death, the trust provides for a gift over to his heirs which quite plausibly could defeat the trust’s recovery under the language of the trust instrument.
. Moreover, ordinarily a party will not be relegated, under the doctrine of marshaling, to one of two funds if recovery from that fund is uncertain. Victor Gruen Associates, Inc. v. Glass,
