Thе question is whether in a Chapter 13 bankruptcy proceeding 1 the United States can be ordered to pay to the trustee part of the wages of one of its employees. The referee answered the question in the affirmаtive and, on a petition for review, the district court agreed. This appeal followed. No jurisdictional question is raised by the parties. If an allowance of the appeal is required by § 24 of the Bankruptcy Act, 11 U.S.C. § 47, we allow the appeal because of the important question presented.
The case is before us on a skeleton record. We are not provided with the debtor’s petition, the plan which he proposed, the actiоn of the creditors thereon, or the order of confirmation. In the circumstances, we assume that they are rеgular and in conformity with the Act. It is conceded that at the time of the confirmation of the plan the debtor was аn employee of the State of Colorado and thereafter became an employee of the mint of the United States at Denver.
On the motion of the trustee the referee ordered that:
“ * * * until the further order of the Court said employer [the United States] shall hereafter, as the wages or earnings of the debtor become due and payable, and on each pay day, and out of said wages or earnings, pay $30.00 semi-monthly to said Trustee; and the payment thereof by said employer to the Trustee shаll fully acquit and discharge said employer to the-extent of such payments as against the claims or demands of thе debtor; * *
The question presented is one of first impression for federal appellate courts. The United Statеs relies on its immunity to suit without consent and the trustee denies the applicability of that doctrine.
The referee’s order was entered under § 658(2), 11 U.S.C. § 1058(2), which provides:
“During the period of extension, the court—
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(2) may issue such orders as may be requisite to effectuate the provisions оf the plan, including orders di *106 rected to any employer of the debtor. An order directed to such employer may be enforced in the manner provided for the enforcement of judgments.”
The trustee says that the referencе to “any employer” in its uncompromising generality includes the United States and supports his position by reference to Baltimore National Bank v. State Tax Commissioner of Maryland,
In United States v. Mel’s Lockers, Inc., 10 Cir.,
The trustee’s argumеnt that the order does not violate the principle of sovereign immunity is unconvincing. Although compliance with the order may require only another hole in a punch card and the issuance of two checks rather than one, the controlling factor is the fact of impact on the government bather than the extent of the impact. The rеferee has ordered the government to pay to the trustee money in the hands of its disbursing agent. This runs contrary to Buchаnan v. Alexander,
If the intent of Chapter 13 is to permit the voluntary assignment of unearned wages by the submission arid confirmation of a plan, and if such an arrangement is not subject to the restrictions of the Anti-Assignment Act, 2 the fact remains that no avenue is open for the referee to enforce his order against the United States because it is immune from execution and garnishment. 3 An order which may not be enforced is an exercise in futility.
Segal v. Rochelle,
This conclusion does not deprive federal employees of the benefits of Chapter 13. 5 The compulsion required to *107 affect the payment to the trustee of a part of the wages as earned can be exercised against the debtor by an appropriate order to endorse and turn over the pay checks. Such an order will protect the trustee and the creditors and will not infringe on the immunity of the United States.
Reversed.
Notes
. See 11 U.S.C. §§ 1001-1086.
. 31 U.S.O. § 203. In Goodman v. Niblack, 102 U.S. (12 Otto) 556, 561,
. Buchanan v. Alexander,
. See City National Bank & Trust Company v. Oliver, 10 Cir.,
. In Perry v. Commerce Loan Co.,
