[1] In January, 1909, the bankrupt was stricken with paralysis, which resulted fatally in the month of June of that year. On April 7, 1909, an involuntary petition in bankruptcy was filed against him. He was ill at the time, and all the matters of business were being conducted by his wife, who subsequently also obtained lelters of administration, and as such administratrix has been paid $500, the proceeds of a policy of insurance which by its terms insured the deceased against permanent disability from paralysis and several other diseases. The insurance money in question had to be collected by suit, and the services of an attorney were required by the administratrix.
The trustee in bankruptcy has petitioned this court to compel the administratrix and her attorney to turn over one-half of the money received from this insurance, upon the ground that at the time of the adjudication in bankruptcy this policy came within the provisions of section 70a, par. 5, of the bankruptcy statute (Act July 1, 1898, c. 541, 30 Stat. 565 [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 3452]).
Objection is made that the disability occurring in January did not necessarily appear to be permanent until the death of the insured, and that the company also had one year from the date of claim within which to pay the claim if it saw fit. But neither of these objections would seem to affect this situation. The insurance was evidently paid, and the allega! ions of the complaint in the action brought by the administratrix are based upon the claim that permanent disability was occasioned by the illness in January, 1909.
If that be so, the defenses of the insurance company or the time within which it could contest the claim would not have anything to do with the accrual of the right on the part of the insured to be paid the amount of the insurance, and this plainly happened prior to the adjudication in bankruptcy. We therefore have the situation of a sum of money dtie to the bankrupt prior to adjudication, but which he had not yet collected, and which has since been received by the administratrix, who stands in his shoes as representing his estate.
Various suggestions have been made as to the intentions of the parties, inasmuch as this policy was not included in the schedules; but it is apparent that the bankrupt was so ill that neither he nor the administratrix are open to the charge of having concealed these assets, especially in view of the fact that the attorney for the administratrix has preserved the fund, and that they now dispute the right of the estate to claim this fund in such a way as to indicate that no willful concealment of admitted assets was intended. But on the general question it must be held that the claim was property of the bankrupt, the right to collect which he could have assigned prior to his death, and which therefore passed to the trustee in bankruptcy. The administratrix and her attorney make no claim which is adverse with
[2] Whatever expense has been involved in collecting the money from the insurance company and in negotiating a settlement of the suit, including the attorney’s fees for so doing, should be paid out of the fund. No exemption from execution, nor any expenditure of any ■of this money in directions, which are equivalent to an exemption from execution under the Code, has been shown, and an order may be entered directing the administratrix and her attorney to pay over such amount as may be found upon the settlement of the order to be due. The court sees no reason why this order should not include the whole $1,000, even if but $500 is held in the hands of the attorney. The determination of right to the fund covers it all.