Massachusetts Bonding & Ins. v. Wilkinson

BRYAN, Circuit Judge.

This is a suit by, the trustee in bankruptcy of the Walker Grain Company against the Massachusetts Bonding & Insurance Company and J. L. Walker, as sureties upon a bond for $40,000, required as a supersedeas pending a petition to this court to superintend and revise an order of the District Court, approving and confirming the appointment by the referee of a receiver of the assets of the Walker Grain Company. The condition of the bond was that the grain company, in the event the relief sought should be denied, would deliver to the receiver or to the trustee in bankruptcy all the property and assets finally adjudged to belong to it. The order of the District Cpurt was sustained by this court. Walker Grain Co. v. Gregg Grain Co., 260 F. 1022, 171 C. C. A. 669.

At the close of the evidence, upon motions by each of the parties plaintiff and defendant, for an instructed verdict, the court found that the bankrupt had collected, subsequently to the date of the bond, the sum of $10,193.61, from which the court deducted the sum of $4,367.46, on account of salaries to Walker, clerks, and employees, and of necessary and reasonable expenses for the preservation of the bankrupt estate, and thereupon directed a verdict for $5,826.15, for which amount judgment was entered. In denying a motion for new trial, the court required the trustee to enter a re-mittitur of $1,000, because of an error in not allowing that additional amount on account of expenses incurred in the conduct of the bankrupt’s business. The order of the court provided that the entry of the re-mittitur should he without prejudice to the trustee’s rights. It is undisputed that the Walker Grain Company collected p,nd failed to turn over to the trustee the amount found by the court.

The questions presented are in substance the same as those in the ease of J. L. Walker v. W. W. Wilkinson, Trustee, 3 F.(2d) 872, this day decided, and, following the rulings there made, the plaintiff in error takes nothing, and the judgment is reversed on the cross-writ of error, with directions to the District Court to enter judgment for $10,-193.61 in favor of the trustee in bankruptcy.