In July, 1928, the United States obtained a judgment for $303.01, in an action for *665 breach of contract, against a corporation which five months later was adjudicated a bankrupt upon its voluntary petition. The defendant Kaplan was appointed trustee in bankruptcy and entered upon the administration of the estate. More than six months after the adjudication he distributed the assets to general creditors without paying the debt owing1 to the United States, although its judgment was listed in the bankrupt’s schedules as a claim entitled to priority and the assets of the estate were more than sufficient to pay it. No claim was filed by the United States in the bankruptcy proceedings and no “bar order” was obtained against it. After the estate of the bankrupt was closed, the present suit was brought to hold the defendant personally liable for the amount of the judgment and interest thereon, under Rev. St. § 3467 (31 USCA § 392). The District Court held that no cause of action was stated.
Section 3466 of the Revised Statutes (31 USCA § 191) provides that, whenever a person indebted to the United States is insolvent, the debts due to the United States shall be first satisfied; and section 3467 (31 USCA § 192) imposes personal liability upon a trustee who distributes the debtor’s property to other creditors before satisfying the debts due the United States. These sections were held to be in pari materia with the provisions of the Bankruptcy Act of 1867 (14 Stat. 517) according priority to debts and taxes due the United States, and to render personally liable an assignee in bankruptcy who with knowledge of the debt disregarded its priority, even though the United States had not proved its claim in the bankruptcy proceedings. Lewis v. United States,
Section 3467 of the Revised Statutes is in pari materia with section 3466. United States v. Butterworth Judson Corp.,
In the counter argument, the defendant relies upon United States v. Wood,
There is nothing incongruous in surcharging the trustee for a debt which is discharged as against the bankrupt who incurred the obligation. It is a purpose of the Bankruptcy Act to accord debtors who have properly invoked its provisions a discharge from debts that are provable and not excepted from discharge by Bankr. Act § 17 (11 USCA § 35), and the trustee’s wrong in failing to recognize the priority accorded a debt due the United States can in no wTay be imputed to the bankrupt. The defendant, on the other hand, had notice of the existence of the debt of the United States, and held the bankrupt’s property as a trustee for the United States in so far as it was necessary to satisfy that debt. In our opinion for breach of his duty as trustee, he is rendered liable. Compare Lewis v. United States,
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings.
