174 F. 217 | 3rd Cir. | 1909
This is an appeal by the trustee in bankruptcy from an order of the District Court confirming a report
The Farmers’ National Bank of Kittanning, Pa., and the other ap-pellees; owned four notes, signed by Beale, containing warrants of attorney and stipulations for payment of attorney’s fees for services in the premises and collecting the same. Two of the'notes were payable on demand after date, and the other two were not due when, on February 17, 1908, without demand for payment, judgments were enT tered thereon against Beale in the common pleas court of Armstrong-county'for the debt, interest, and attorney’s fees provided for in said notes. On February 22, 1908, and before the time notes were due, Beale was adjudged bankrupt. Thereafter the appellees presented claims for the amounts of their several debts, aggregating some $18,000, together with $900 attorney’s commissions. The trustee objected to the allowance of the attorney’s commission, which objection was overruled. The referee’s action thereon having been approved,, and his report confirmed, this appeal was taken.
It will be observed that objection is not taken to the allowance by the referee of the money represented by the notes, but is confined wholly to the appellees ‘proving the attorney’s fees on such notes in addition 'thereto. - The claim thus made on the note must meet the requirements of being “a. fixed liability as evidenced by * * * an instrument in writing absolutely owing at the time of the filing of the’petition against Him.” Turning, therefore, to the question whether there existed a fixed, liability on Beale to pay these commissions when the petition was filed against him, we are of opinion he was not, in view of- the, Pennsylvania decisions, which hold that such commissions on,notes and mortgages are not fixed'liabilities to the payee of a note, but,,are in the- nature of penalties for his idemnification for expense of collection. The record in this case shows that the appellees based their claims on the notes they held and copies of which they filed as part of'their claims. While the proof of claim refers to the fact that judgments were entered on these notes a few days before bankruptcy, yet no exemplifications- of said judgments accompanied the proof or are now before us in the record. Looking, then, at the facts as disclosed by the récord,' we treat these as claims made on notes, which course is in accord with what was said in Boynton v. Ball, 121 U. S. 466, 7 Sup. Ct. 983, 30. L. Ed. 985:
, - “Notwithstanding the change in its form from that of a simple contract debt, ’or unliquidated claim, or whatever its character may have been, by merger into a judgment of a court of record, it still remains the same debt on which action was brought in the state court and the existence of which was provable in bankruptcy.”
Without discussing the authorities at length, it suffices to say the Supreme Court in Daly v. Maitland, 88 Pa. 384, 32 Am. Rep. 457, in which Robinson v. Loomis, 51 Pa. 78, was reversed, held:
“The court, from practical knowledge of professional work, are able to say in every particular case what ought to be the compensation or rate of commissions for collecting a debt by suit. Whatever is stipulated beyond a reasonable*219 Tate should be relieved againsi upon equitable principles. Certainly no certain commission can be determined upon to be applied to al'l cases."
This view was followed in Imler v. Imler, 91 Pa. 374, Where it was said:
“The obvious intention iu this and like stipulations in instruments for the payment of money is that ilie creditor shall be indemnified for his reasonable expense of counsel fees in collecting the money; that is to say, wherfe'it.be-comes necessary to employ counsel to collect the money, the debtor shall be subjected to the expense thereof not exceeding the agreed limit, it was never intended, nor can we permit such a clause to be used, to compel a debtor to pay attorney’s commissions where the latter does not dispute the claim' and pays at maturity. In such cases there is no necessity for the intervention of an attorney. Where, however, an attorney has been employed in good faith by reason of the neglect or refusal of the defendant to pay, the fact that the money has been paid to the attorney without execution does not: relieve the defendant from his agreement to pay reasonable attorney’s commissions, • for the reason that the creditor’s liability to the attorney has attached.”
Applying these principles to the case before us, we are of opinion the case must be reversed. Idle claimants offered no proof of any collection service rendered before the date of th.e bankruptcy which entitled them to indemnification, and the referee, therefore, had proof of no such fixed liability in reference to these commissions as warranted their participation in the bankrupt’s estate.