INDEMNITY INS. CO. OF NORTH AMERICA v. REISLEY
No. 137
Circuit Court of Appeals, Second Circuit
Dec. 3, 1945
Rehearing Denied Jan. 22, 1946
153 F.2d 296
Emanuel Bloch, of New York City (Edgar E. Harrison, of New York City, of counsel), for trustee.
Before L. HAND, SWAN, and FRANK, Circuit Judges.
FRANK, Circuit Judge.
1. The insurance company‘s appeal: The order of April 14, 1942, was based upon an interpretation of
2. The trustee‘s appeal. The order of April 14, 1942, directing payment to the insurance company was open to reconsideration at any time before the estate was closed, for
However (particularly as the trustee on oral argument here assented) we remand for determination of whether the insurance company changed its position since it received payment of the $5,263.40.3
Affirmed on the insurance company‘s appeal; reversed and remanded on the trustee‘s appeal.
On Petition for Rehearing.
As the order of April 14, 1942, was based upon a reclamation petition, we erred in our original opinion when we said that
The insurance company argues that the trustee‘s appeal is from the denial of a petition for a reconsideration of an earlier order and is therefore not appealable. We do not agree. This being a bankruptcy proceeding, the Referee, as the Court of Bankruptcy3 had discretion to re-examine and vacate the former order. The issue before the Court below was whether the Referee had abused his discretion;4 and that question comes before us on this appeal. We think the discretion was clearly abused.5
The petition for review was timely. For where an application is made for reconsideration, the time for review begins to run from the date of denial of such relief, provided the Referee reconsidered the merits of the original order.6 We think that the Referee did thus reconsider the merits for he based his denial of relief on res judicata (i.e., the rejection of a previous petition for reconsideration) which was a defense on the merits.7 In such circumstances, the petition to review must relate to the original order, not to the denial order; literally the petition here asked review of the Referee‘s denial order, but we consider it as, in effect, the same as a petition to review the original order.8
Accordingly we adhere to our earlier ruling and deny the petition for rehearing.
