In re Estate of Raley
In re Estate of Raley
Opinion of the Court
Appeal by the assignee of the insolvent from an order settling his first quarterly account, and directing: a dividend to the creditors.
1. Error is predicated of the action of the court below in disallowing a number of the items of the account. Among those-disallowed were three charged by the assignee as having been paid out for attorneys fees—two hundred dollars to Jackson Hatch, twenty-five dollars to W. C. Kennedy, and fifty dollars to-the Ratio Collection Agency. As to these items it appears that prior to going into insolvency Raley made an arrangement with Marcuse and Barbieri in the nature of an assignment for creditors, by which they were to take his property and out of the proceeds pay his debts. Under this arrangement certain outstanding accounts of Raley’s came into the hands of Marcuse and Barbieri for collection, and in making such collection the latter incurred and paid out the above items for attorney’s services. Thereafter, when Raley went into insolvency, Marcuse and Barbieri surrendered the money collected on these accounts, together with the accounts uncollected then in their hands, to the assignee, less the amount so expended by them for attorney’s fees. In Ms account the assignee adopted the method of charging himself with the full face value of the accounts that had been assigned by Raley to Marcuse and Barbieri, and against this credited Mmself with the items thus expended by them. In settling the account the court not only struck out and disallowed these payments as not having been incurred or made by the assignee, but charged him with their sum as so much money remaining in Ms hands. This method of settling
Other items disallowed were one of seventy-six dollars and fifty cents for salary and expenses of a man employed to go about collecting outstanding accounts; and forty-one dollars and twenty-five cents for traveling expenses of the assignee (who lived in San Francisco) in going to and from San Jose, where the estate was in process of settlement, upon business of the estate. The evidence in the record with reference to these items is very meager and unsatisfactory, but what there is tends, without conflict, to show that the expenditures were incurred in good faith in and about the business of the estate. In view of the fact that the order must be reversed, it is sufficient to say generally with reference to, these items that the Insolvent Act allows to the assignee “all necessary expenses in the care, management, and settlement of the estate.” (Insolvent Act of 1895, sec. 32.) Upon another hearing it will be incumbent upon the assignee to support his right to be reimbursed for these expenditures by a showing such as will bring them within the purview of this provision of the act.
As to the item of loss on sale of melons, we cannot say, under the evidence presented, that it was improperly rejected.
2. We think it was error for the court, in making the order settling the account and declaring a dividend to the creditors, to refuse to make an allowance to the assignee of his commissions upon the amount of money accounted for. Section 32 of
3. It was clearly within the power of the court to require the assignee to more specifically itemize his account; and the action of the court in referring the account to a referee for hearing and report was as much within its discretion in this proceeding as in any other of like character. (Code Civ. Proc., secs. 638, 639.)
For the reasons above pointed out the order is reversed and cause remanded.
Garoutte, J., and Harrison, J., concurred.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.