Opinion
March 19, 1908.
David B. Hill, for the appellant.
John B. Stanchfield and Frederick Collin, for the respondent.
Alfred Roelker, Jr., and Ellicott D. Curtis, for the stockholders intervening in opposition to the order appealed from.
In November, 1907, on the application of the Attorney-General, the respondent, Bruyn Hasbrouck of New Paltz, Ulster county, N Y, was appointed temporary receiver of the defendant, an insolvent banking corporation in the borough of Brooklyn and city of New York. In the following month such receivership was made permanent, and at the request of the depositors of the bank, Charles M. Higgins, its largest individual depositor, was made coreceiver with Mr. Hasbrouck. Mr. Higgins agreed to act as such receiver without compensation, except as the depositors with the approval of the court should determine. Immediately following the qualification of the permanent receivers a controversy arose between them as to the selection of counsel. Mr. Hasbrouck, during his temporary receivership, had employed as counsel an attorney of Buffalo, who resigned as a deputy in the office of the Attorney-General, on whose application Mr. Hasbrouck was appointed receiver. The latter insisted on the retention of the same attorney as counsel. Mr. Higgins insisted on the employment of a local attorney of Brooklyn who had been actively interested in behalf of the depositors of the bank and in procuring the appointment of Mr. Higgins as receiver. Neither receiver attempted to agree with the other on counsel acceptable to both. The respondent, although offering to submit the matter to the court for its advice, as under the circumstances he was constrained to do, nevertheless uniformly insisted on the employment of the Buffalo attorney.
Chapter 349 of the Laws of 1906 amends chapter 378 of the Laws of 1883 by inserting a new section known as section 2a, which provides as follows: "If the receiver of a corporation employs counsel he shall within three months after he has qualified as receiver enter into a written contract fixing the compensation of such counsel at not exceeding a certain amount or a certain percentage of the sums received and disbursed by him, which contract must be approved by the Supreme Court, on at least eight days' notice to the Attorney-General. A payment by such receiver to his counsel on account of services shall only be made, pursuant to an order of the court, on notice to the Attorney-General and subject to review on the final accounting. A contract with counsel shall not be made for a longer period than eighteen months, but may be renewed from time to time for periods of not more than one year, if approved by the Supreme Court on at least eight days' notice to the Attorney-General."
Acting under the above statutory provisions Mr. Hasbrouck against the objection of his coreceiver, entered into a contract employing said Buffalo attorney as counsel for both receivers and providing for the compensation of said counsel. The court at Special Term granted an order approving such contract with certain modifications and from such order the receiver Higgins appeals to this court.
The statement is made and not denied that at the time of the appointment of the temporary receiver this counsel was a Deputy Attorney-General, and it is also claimed that he resigned as such for the purpose of becoming counsel for said receiver herein. We think an employment under such circumstances is against public policy. The Attorney-General is charged with important and responsible duties in reference to corporation receiverships. The receiver may be appointed on his application, and such application in some cases may be ex parte. The Attorney-General is, therefore, vested with certain discretion in regard to such applications. He has general oversight and is intimately connected with the administration of the estates of insolvent corporations. By the provisions of the statute above quoted, no employment of counsel can be approved by the court or payment made to counsel without notice to the Attorney-General, clearly indicating that the latter has an affirmative duty to perform in protecting insolvent corporations against excessive or improvident charges for legal expenses. The great office of the Attorney-General should not be subjected to the criticism that it is influenced by sinister or unworthy considerations. The mere possibility that the duties and responsibilities of the office may be sacrificed constrains us to withhold our approval of an employment by receiver of counsel intimately connected with that office. We think such an employment is clearly inconsistent with the relations which the law creates between the Attorney-General's office and insolvent corporations. The contract the court is asked to approve is contrary to the spirit and policy of the law and cannot, therefore, be sanctioned.
For another reason we think the order should not have been granted. The best interests of the trust confided to the receivers required their entire co-operation, including the selection of counsel who would have the confidence of both of them, to the end that there might be unity of action rather than friction. It is not of very much consequence whether or not the objections of Mr. Higgins to the counsel selected by Mr. Hasbrouck are well founded. A trust like this cannot properly be administered unless those charged with its administration as receivers and counsel are in entire accord. There should not have been the slightest difficulty in the selection of some counsel who could co-operate with both receivers. The argument that the counsel selected by Mr. Hasbrouck, because of his experience and knowledge of the affairs of the bank during the temporary receivership, was peculiarly fitted to act as counsel is without force. There are numerous other attorneys well equipped and qualified to render to the receivers all necessary assistance.
A receivership vests in the court the assets of the insolvent estate. A receiver is but an officer and agent of the court, subject to its control and direction in all matters pertaining to the trust. The primary object to be accomplished is the conservation of the rights of the creditors and others whose interests are or may be impaired because of the financial calamity which has overtaken the corporation. These rights and interests are paramount to those of the receivers and their counsel. If the latter cannot subordinate their personal views to such paramount rights the court will see to it that the receivership is changed in order to accomplish such a result. Where receivers become hostile a court could and should intervene to remove them and appoint others. ( Shirk v. Brookfield, 77 App. Div. 295, 301.) The court below should have required these receivers to agree upon their counsel, and failing in that should have changed the personnel of the receivership. We do not think that Mr. Higgins was justified in insisting on the exclusive right to name counsel, but there is to be said in his behalf that he represented the sentiment of practically all of the depositors of the bank whose interests appeal very strongly to the court.
The order should be reversed and the motion denied.
All concurred.
Order reversed and motion denied.