This case already has been before us once. The decision is reported in 256 Mass. 496, where facts are narrated at some length. After rescript pursuant to that judgment, hearings were had resulting in (A) the entry of an interlocutory decree on August 4, 1927, directing the receiver (a) to deliver to the trustee in bankruptcy of Wellman all property in his hands in which Wellman had an interest on September 8, 1922 (the date when Wellman was adjudicated bankrupt), retaining “only enough to pay his charges and expenses as receiver” and (b) forthwith to file his final account as receiver; and (B) the entry on October 10,1927, of an order, on petitions of the receiver and of his counsel, allowing them compensation in specified amounts. The
The principal questions here, as they were below, are whether allowances for compensation for receiver’s services and expenses and fees for his counsel should be determined and ordered paid up to the actual time of the closing of his accounts in the Superior Court, or whether such allowances should be determined and paid only up to the time of the petition and adjudication in bankruptcy.
The matters presented for decision in 256 Mass. 496, arose on the petition to intervene of the trustee in bankruptcy of Wellman. That petition was entitled, “Petition for order to receiver.” Its prayers were that the receiver be ordered to turn over to the trustee in bankruptcy all property in his hands in which the bankrupt had an interest on the date of the adjudication, “reserving only enough to pay his expenses as receiver to the said date,” and that the receiver be “ordered to file forthwith, his account as of the aforesaid date.” In the opinion touching that matter the court said, “The ‘petition for order to receiver’ should have been allowed, as prayed for.” 256 Mass, at pages 501, 502. The main point discussed in that opinion was whether the property should be turned over to the trustee in bankruptcy or should be retained for settlement in the receivership proceedings. The date as of which the property should be turned over to the trustee in bankruptcy, if it ought to be turned over, and the date as of which the receivership accounts should be adjusted, were essential incidents of the decision that it ought to be turned over. The determination of that date, while not discussed in the earlier opinion, is necessarily involved in the sentence above quoted from that opinion. That opinion means that the accounts of the receiver must be adjusted as of September 8, 1922, and that the receiver’s services, expenses, fees of counsel, disbursements and other obligations must be fixed and paid as of that date.
It has been urged, however, that this precise question has not hitherto been argued. If the question be considered anew on its merits and apart from the earlier opinion, no occasion
It is stated in one of the reports that “It was argued before me that action should be delayed upon the trustee’s petition until final decision upon a writ of error now pending in an action by which the receiver has collected assets in his hands, and certain creditors have by motion filed claims which they ask to have allowed and that funds be retained in the hands of the clerk of the court equal to the amount of such claims until decision on said writ of error, but nothing appears which would justify the court in adopting either of these contentions, both of which would seem to commit this court to further dealing with matters which ought now to be dealt with exclusively by the bankruptcy court.” No further facts have been found and no evidence is reported. The contention that this was error cannot be supported. The settlement of the estate of Wellman is within the jurisdiction of the bankruptcy court and title to that estate is in his trustee in bankruptcy. If property is turned over to him which does not belong to the estate, the bankruptcy court has ample jurisdiction to deal with it. There is nothing on this record to warrant the conclusion that there was error in this particular.
The result is that the interlocutory decree of August 4, 1927, is to be modified by inserting between the words “Receiver” and “and”, being the twenty-fourth and twenty-third words from the end of the declaratory part of the decree, the words “up to September 8, 1922,” so that the receiver will be ordered to reserve “only enough to pay his charges and expenses as receiver until September 8, 1922,” and as thus modified is affirmed. The order of October 10, 1927, is reversed and the compensation there under consideration is to be determined and allowed until September 8, 1922.
Ordered accordingly.
