According to the agreed statement of facts in this case, the appellee, Moritz Grossman, leased the store and basement at 1440 East Fayette Street, Baltimore, to Harry B. Bogash and Clara Bogash, his wife, for the term of five years beginning January 1st, 1928. On May 24th, 1932, the lessees gave a mortgage to the appellant, Merit Loan Service, Incorporated, of certain chattels on the demised premises to secure the payment of $300. One of the lessees, Harry B. Bogash, was a bankrupt on October 24th, 1932. "The Merit Loan Service received permission from the receiver in bankruptcy to proceed with the foreclosure in the Circuit Court No. 2, and under the arrangement that after payment of the expenses incident to the foreclosure and after the payment of the mortgage debt and interest any balance on hand as proceeds of the sale would be turned over to the receiver or *Page 480 trustee in bankruptcy." On November 29th, 1932, Abraham Davidson was appointed trustee to make sale of the mortgaged property, and proceeded to advertise the property for sale, which was reported as sold on December 12th, 1932, at $516.05, and the sale ratified on December 16th, 1932. Three days before the day set for the sale, December 9th, 1932, the landlord, Grossman, filed a petition setting forth the fact that there was due and owing from the lessees to December 1st, 1932, rent amounting to $835, and praying that Abraham Davidson, trustee, show cause why the rent claim should not be satisfied out of the proceeds of the sale before distribution to the appellant's mortgage debt. The appellant answered, and the question of priorities involved was submitted on the agreed statement. The decision being in favor of the rent claim, which consumed the entire proceeds of sale, the mortgagee appealed.
The question for decision is whether the rule in cases of receivers or trustees in favor of landlords, as stated inGaither v. Stockbridge,
No question of joint ownership by the husband and wife of the mortgaged property appears to have been raised before the chancellor, nor presented here, and we shall therefore treat Harry B. Bogash as sole owner of the mortgaged property. Code, art. 5, sec. 10.
There is no evidence in the record that the appellee had levied a distraint on the mortgaged property when Bogash was adjudicated a bankrupt. It was long ago, in 1856, settled in this state by a two-one decision in Buckey v. Snouffer,
The appellee relies for his contention on the rule as stated inGaither v. Stockbridge,
It is true a mortgage is not a lien "acquired by legal proceedings," but the rule that priority in distribution will be accorded to liens existing at the time of the bankruptcy, except to those acquired by judicial proceedings within four months "in accordance with applicable local law," would in principle apply to the instant case as well.
When a trustee or receiver in bankruptcy finds the estate incumbered with mortgages, any of three courses is open to him: (1) If the equity of redemption has any value to the general creditors, he can sell the mortgaged property subject to the lien of the mortgage; (2) he may, after notice to the *Page 483
mortgagee, sell the property free and clear of the mortgage; or (3) if satisfied that the equity of redemption has no value, he may, with the approval of the bankruptcy court, allow the mortgagee to proceed with his foreclosure in the state court. See cases collected and annotated to Isaacs v. Hobbs Tie TimberCo.,
A test as to whether the landlord's lost or neglected right to a lien for rent is restored by returning the foreclosure to the state court would be inferred from the interest the bankruptcy trustee has in the proceeds of sale of the mortgaged property. When one goes into bankruptcy, his trustee's duty never ends until the proceeds of his property are distributed to those legally entitled under the Bankruptcy Act. When a foreclosure is had in the state court, whether begun before the bankruptcy and concluded afterwards, or begun after the bankruptcy, with the consent of the trustee on an order of the bankruptcy court, the trustee is the holder of the equity of redemption for the benefit of the bankrupt's general creditors, and as such is entitled to any excess of the proceeds of sale after the mortgage debt is satisfied. Carling v. Seymour Lumber Co. (C.C.A.), 113 Fed. 483, 491, a petition for writ of certiorari being denied in
The agreed statement shows that "the Merit Loan Service received permission from the receiver in bankruptcy to proceed with the foreclosure in the Circuit Court No. 2," and, if there should be a surplus after payment of the mortgage debt, interest and costs, "any balance on hand as proceeds of the sale would be turned over to the receiver or trustee in bankruptcy." What happened was that the mortgagee's sale of chattels brought $516.05, which would, perhaps, have left the bankrupt's estate a small surplus, but instead the landlord came in with a rent claim of $835, which had shrunk to the distributive share of a general creditor by reason of *Page 484
his neglect or forbearance, and consumed the whole fund. According to the authorities cited and in our opinion, this cannot be done. As said in Buckey v. Snouffer,
Decree reversed, and case remanded, costs in this court to bepaid by the appellee.
