91 F.2d 71 | 9th Cir. | 1937
Dan Boone, one of the appellees, had commenced certain proceedings for the benefit of creditors under the direction of the receiver of Tooey Corporation, owned by the bankrupt, and had incurred other expenses for the benefit of creditors in an effort to subject certain property of the corporation and the bankrupt to the claims of the creditors.
The appellants, Mazie McLeod and Edwin J. Miller were creditors of the bankrupt and their claims had been approved by the referee.
In order to secure reimbursement for the moneys advanced and labor performed on behalf of creditors, the appellee Dan Boone obtained from certain creditors, including the appellants, an agreement that his claim for services amounting to $3,856.79 should be paid pro rata by them from their claims. This agreement was signed by appellant Miller for E. H. Martin, his assignor, and Mazie McLeod.
An application was made to the court for an order of subrogation pro tanto under Bankruptcy General Order 21, subd. 3 (11 U.S.C.A. following section 53). The appellants appeared in response to the notice of application for such subrogation and objected to the application upon numerous grounds, among others, that there was no consideration for the agreement and upon the ground that the claim for $3,856.79 was a duplication in part of claims already allowed. The objections of the appellants to
A petition to review this order was filed with the District Judge and the order was affirmed and appeal taken to this court which was dismissed because the appeal had been allowed by the District Judge instead of by this court. 83 F.(2d) 457. After dismissal of the appeal, appellants filed a petition in the bankruptcy court seeking a review of the decision theretofore made upon the application of Dan Boone for subrogation pro tanto of their claims. In this petition they again claimed that the sum of $3,856.79 contained items which had theretofore been allowed and paid to Dan Boone, aggregating $1,434.20. In the petition it was alleged that these items had theretofore been allowed by order of the referee of April 9, 1935. They alleged that these allowances were made “by mistake and inadvertence of the referee”; that these orders “should be reopened for further hearing and evidence and the objections thereto on file heard anew.” They alleged that, if the claim were opened up and they were permitted to offer further evidence thereon, they would “offer evidence of the mistake of the said referee both as to law and fact.” The referee denied the application, petition to review was taken to the District Court, and the petition was denied.
The appellants make four assignments of errors, as follows:
“1. The District Court and the referee erred in holding that as long as a bankruptcy proceeding is pending and unsettled that it has no jurisdiction to set aside any order that it has made in the proceeding and to rehear the same.
“2. The court and the referee erred in holding that the matter presented by the petition is res ad judicata and cannot be reopened by the Court in which the proceeding is pending.
“3. The Court erred in upholding the referee’s order dismissing the petition for want of jurisdiction and as res adjudicata.
“4. The Court erred in refusing to grant the relief prayed for in the petition.”
In the brief, appellants specify two errors :
“1. The Court erred in holding it had no jurisdiction to reconsider the matters set forth in the petition.
“2. The Court erred in holding the matters in the petition set forth are res adjudicata, and beyond the power of the court to reconsider, and erred in holding that it does not have full power to set aside and re-open and review any of its orders as long as the estate is not closed.”
The appellees concede the power of the bankruptcy court to reconsider the order of subrogation at any time during the pendency of the bankruptcy proceeding,
It should here be stated that appellants, by the device of claiming in their petition that there was a duplication of claims allowed,
There remains' to consider appellants’ .contention that the District Court denied the petition upon the ground that it had no jurisdiction to disturb the order already entered. Omitting the recitals therein, the order of the District Court upon the petition for review of the referee’s order is as follows :
“After oral argument by counsel for petitioners,' it appears to the court that the matters included in said petitions have heretofore been adjudicated at length before the former referee of this court, Rupert B. Turnbull, and have further been given consideration by this court on a petition for review and finally and completely adjudicated by the Circuit Court of Appeals of the United States, in and for the Ninth Circuit in that cause entitled In re Tooey (McLeod et al. v. Boone et al.) No. 8104, heretofore decided by said court, reported in 83 F.(2d) 457, in every instance against the contention of petitioners,
“Now, therefore, it is hereby ordered that the petition of Edwin J. Miller and Mazie McLeod for an order re-opening the claims of Dan Boone, and for an order on the trustee to show cause why he should not pay over money in his hands to petitioners, Edwin J. Miller and Mazie McLeod, are hereby denied.”
The District Court was asked to reconsider an order under circumstances that would have made the granting of the petition an abuse of discretion. Under these circumstances, a proper answer to such an application is that, having been once determined, the matter is res judicata. This was a proper exercise of jurisdiction.-
Order affirmed.
We take judicial notice of the record on the former appeal in this proceeding. 83 F.(2d) 457. On the power of the court to take judicial notice of its own records, see Alexander v. Hillman, 296 U.S. 222, 56 S.Ct. 204, 80 L.Ed. 192; McDonough v. Owl Drug Co., 75 F.(2d) 45 (C.C.A. 9); Suren v. Oceanic S. S. Co., 85 F.(2d) 324 (C.C.A. 9).
Appellees, on page 6 of their brief, state: “The general power of courts of bankruptcy to reconsider their decrees and orders for cause is undisputed. Appellants’ entire brief is devoted to an exposition of authorities to .this effect. Appellees recognize the existence of this power in its fullest extent and there need be no dispute on this point.”
In regard to appellants’ contention that they seek to re-open claims in bankruptcy, as we have noted, in the prior proceeding they claimed that there was a duplication of claims. A petition for the re-opening of a claim allowed rests in the sound discretion of the District Court and cause for the granting of such a petition must be shown. Bankruptcy Act, § 57k, 11 U.S.C.A. § 98(k); In re El Dorado Ice & Coal Co. (C.C.A.) 290 F. 180. Where, as here, the question of duplication of claims was litigated in the prior proceeding, a mere allegation that the duplications were by the mistake and inadvertence of the referee does not constitute a good cause that would justify the District Court in re-opening the claims.
On the first appeal we held that the order granting subrogation was not an order allowing a claim (In re Tooey, 83 F.(2d) 457) hence, the power of the court to rehear the matter cannot be predicated upon section 57k of the Bankruptcy Act