1. When claims of a landlord for injury resulting from rejection
of the lease by the lessee's trustee in bankruptcy have been
unqualifiedly released by him as against the trustee, the bankrupt,
and the bankrupt estate, they may not be reasserted in a proceeding
under § 77B of the Bankruptcy Act to reorganize the
corporation. Pp.
299 U. S. 459,
299 U. S.
461.
2. An agreement between the landlord of a bankrupt corporation,
the bankrupt and its trustee in bankruptcy, which, under the local
law of landlord and tenant, effects a surrender and termination of
the leasehold, does not deprive the landlord of his provable claim
in proceedings under § 77B of the Bankruptcy Act for future
rent or indemnity.
City Bank Farmers Trust Co. v. Irving Trust
Co., ante, p.
299 U. S. 433. P.
299 U. S.
461.
3. Agreements executed by landlords of a bankrupt corporation
with the lessee and its trustee in bankruptcy which operated (as it
is here assumed) to surrender and terminate the leaseholds each
contained a clause purporting to release the trustee, the bankrupt
estate, and the bankrupt from all liability respecting the lease to
which it related, including all claims of the landlord in respect
of rent, but contained also a modifying clause declaring that
nothing in the release clause should be deemed a waiver by the
landlord of the right to prove against the bankrupt estate "any
provable claims"
Page 299 U. S. 457
to which the bankruptcy court might adjudge him entitled, etc.
Held, that the modifications applied in each case not only
to the releasing clause, but to the agreement as a whole, and
operated to preserve the right to prove claims for future rent, or
indemnity for loss of rent, which were not provable in bankruptcy
as the law then stood, but which became provable in a proceeding to
reorganize the corporation under § 77B of the Bankruptcy Act
subsequently enacted. P.
299 U. S.
462.
83 F.2d 202; 85
id.11, reversed.
Certiorari to review a judgment of the Circuit Court of Appeals
which affirmed the District Court in rejecting nine claims of
landlords for future rent, or indemnity, in a proceeding to
reorganize the lessee corporation under § 77B of the
Bankruptcy Act.
MR. JUSTICE ROBERTS delivered the opinion of the Court.
The provability of certain landlords' claims in proceedings
under § 77B of the bankruptcy Act is here drawn in question.
The petitioners were lessors of the debtor. Their leases were
rejected in a bankruptcy proceeding pending when the reorganization
section was adopted. All of the leases contained indemnity
covenants similar to that considered in
Kuchner v. Irving Trust
Co., ante, p.
299 U. S. 445. The
variant in the present case is the contention that, prior to
initiation of the 77B proceeding, the petitioners bargained away
any valid claims they had against the debtor and its assets.
Page 299 U. S. 458
In August, 1932, when United Cigar Stores Company was
adjudicated a voluntary bankrupt, there were in force about one
thousand leases under which it held real estate. In some cases, the
trustee desired to retain the demised premises under a new lease
for a shorter term, or at a lower rental, or both. In others, where
the company occupied and used but a part of the premises and sublet
the balance, the trustee desired the abrogation of the lease as to
that portion which United had sublet, and a new lease covering only
the portion used by United. In certain instances where the company
was lessee and sole occupant, or occupied a part and sublet a part,
or had sublet the entire premises, the trustee wished to be rid of
the leasehold.
In order to deal with these varying situations, the trustee
presented appropriate forms of agreement to landlords, many of whom
executed them. Ninety-four landlords who had reentered the demised
premises pursuant to such agreements during the pendency of the
original bankruptcy filed claims in the reorganization proceeding.
From the District Court's disallowance of the claims, all the
claimants joined in a single appeal to the Circuit Court of
Appeals. That court found that each of eighty-two claimants, in
connection with the transfer of possession of the premises or the
modification of the existing leases, gave a general unqualified
release to the trustee, individually and as trustee, to the
bankrupt, and to the bankrupt estate, of all claims under the
leases or in respect of rent. Three, so the court found, gave
releases containing reservations which were not broad enough to
preserve claims provable under § 77B.
The court held that the releases executed by these eighty-five
landlords were not procured by duress or misrepresentation, were
for a valid consideration, and extinguished all claims the
releasors might have had. As
Page 299 U. S. 459
respects the remaining nine claims, the court divided, a
majority holding the agreements the landlords executed, and what
was done pursuant to the agreements, amounted to a surrender under
state law, and therefore deprived the claimants of the right to
prove, and one judge holding that, whether or not surrenders had
occurred under state law, the form of the agreements reserved
claims against the debtor's assets in the reorganization
proceeding. [
Footnote 1]
All ninety-four claimants petitioned this Court for review by
certiorari. We granted the writ to the nine last mentioned.
In each of the cases under consideration, surrender and
repossession of the premises was pursuant to an agreement between
the claimant, as lessor, the respondent, as trustee, and the United
Company. After describing the lease, reciting the state of the
title thereunder, the bankruptcy proceeding, and the authority
granted the trustee by the court to reject the lease, the contract
contains these provisions: the trustee assigns to the lessor its
right, title, and interest in and to the lease and any subleases;
the bankrupt does the same, and also assigns its right to any rent
accrued and to accrue under subleases; the trustee agrees to pay to
the landlord any rents received from subtenants by it as receiver
or trustee, less certain costs; the landlord assumes all existing
and future obligations, terms, and conditions of and under the
lease and any sublease which would be performable by the bankrupt
or the trustee. By article Fifth, the landlord releases the trustee
(individually and as receiver and trustee), the bankrupt estate,
and the bankrupt from any and all liability of any nature with
respect to the lease and the subleases and with respect to the
premises, including all claims of the landlord in respect of rent
or use
Page 299 U. S. 460
or occupation. To each agreement a rider prepared by the trustee
was attached at the insistence of the landlord. In most of the
cases, the rider was substantially in the following form:
"Nothing in this Article 5 shall be deemed a waiver by the
Landlord of the right to prove against the Bankrupt Estate any
provable claims to which the Bankruptcy Court may adjudge the
Landlord is entitled, but this shall not be deemed to render any
claim a provable claim which is not otherwise such or to relieve
the Landlord from the necessity of proving and obtaining the
allowance of any such claim or preclude the Trustee from contesting
such proof or allowance."
In one, the form was:
"It is, however, expressly understood and agreed that the said
Landlord does not waive any right to prove against the Bankrupt
Estate any provable claims to which the Bankruptcy Court may
adjudge the Landlord is entitled, but this shall not be deemed to
render any claim a provable claim which is not otherwise such or
relieve the Landlord from the necessity of proving and obtaining
the allowance of any such claim or preclude the Trustee from
contesting such proof or allowance. All such provable claims shall
not be affected by this agreement."
The special master to whom the matter was referred conceded that
the riders were intended to preserve claims for future rent, but
thought them effective to save only claims the provability of which
resulted from a favorable court ruling and that claims rendered
provable by subsequent legislation were not within the reservation.
The District Court approved the master's report. A majority of the
Circuit Court of Appeals held the agreements constituted
surrenders, which, according to state law, terminated all rights of
the landlords against the tenant, and no claim is provable under
§ 77B unless it is a continuing and subsisting claim against
the debtor, recognized by
Page 299 U. S. 461
the substantive law of landlord and tenant, that is, by the
applicable state law. The riders were construed to be
qualifications of the Fifth article only, which was the general
release. As there was, in this view of the agreements, no right or
claim to be released, a reservation or restriction applicable only
to the release amounted to nothing. The dissenting judge agreed
that the contracts operated as surrenders, but held that the riders
were not limited in their operation to the release clause alone,
but were applicable to the entire contract and were intended and
effective to reserve claims which might be found to be provable,
despite surrender, either as the result of future judicial decision
or future legislative action.
1. We refused to grant certiorari in the case of the eighty-five
claimants each of whom, for a consideration, bargained away all
claims, present or prospective, against the bankrupt, the trustee
and the estate. We agree with the court below that, under well
settled principles, their releases preclude proof of claims for
future rent or for indemnity.
2. We have held in
City Bank Farmers Trust Co. v. Irving
Trust Co., ante, p.
299 U. S. 433,
that surrender by the trustee, acceptance by the landlord, reentry,
and the exercise of dominion over the demised premises by the
latter after rejection of the lease, do not deprive him of a
provable claim in proceedings under § 77B for injury due to
rejection of his lease or upon the covenant of indemnity found in
the lease. It follows that, except for the release, which was a
part of each of the agreements, the petitioners would have provable
claims.
3. We do not agree, therefore, that, if the earlier paragraphs
of the agreements worked a surrender (which we do not decide),
nothing was left upon which the final release clause could operate.
An absolute release would have been a bar to claims for future rent
or for indemnity.
Page 299 U. S. 462
4. As we have seen, each of the releases was qualified by a
rider which reserved "the right to prove against the Bankrupt
estate any provable claims to which the Bankruptcy Court may
adjudge the landlord is entitled." A majority of the court below
thought that these riders applied only to the release clause. The
dissenting judge thought that they purported to reserve all claims
provable as a result of judicial decision or amendment of the
statute which might otherwise be lost by the execution and
performance of the agreements, and that they were effective for
that purpose notwithstanding the earlier paragraphs of the
agreement amounted to a surrender under state law. We think this is
the correct view of the meaning and effect of the reservations. The
language in which they are couched is broad enough to include
claims under § 77B. They reserve the right to prove against
the bankrupt estate any provable claims to which the bankruptcy
court may adjudge the landlord is entitled. The bankrupt estate, to
which the reservations refer, consists of the property which
formerly belonged to the bankrupt and, upon adjudication, came into
the custody of the bankruptcy court. It still remains there. Claims
for future rent are specifically made provable by §
77B(b)(10). The court having charge of the reorganization
proceeding is a bankruptcy court. Section 77A provides:
"In addition to the jurisdiction exercised in voluntary and
involuntary proceedings to adjudge persons bankrupt, courts of
bankruptcy shall exercise original jurisdiction in proceedings for
the relief of debtors, as provided in Section 77B of this Act."
Proceedings in reorganization under § 77B are "proceedings
in bankruptcy." [
Footnote 2]
They may be initiated in a pending bankruptcy proceeding by the
express terms of subsection (p). The petitioners are creditors, and
their claims are provable by the express terms of the section; the
estate against which the petitioners
Page 299 U. S. 463
reserved all provable claims is the same estate which was within
the jurisdiction of the bankruptcy court at the time the agreements
were executed.
The special master found, and it seems to be conceded, that the
reservations were intended to preserve claims for future rent or
for indemnity for loss of future rent. But the master held, and the
majority of the Circuit Court of Appeals agreed, that their scope
was restricted to claims provable as a result of judicial decision,
and did not extend to claims made provable by legislation. The
language used does not so limit them. The most that can be said is
that there was serious question whether such claims could be proved
under the law as it stood when the agreements were executed. For
whatever they were worth, the petitioners desired the reservations
so that they might possibly make good claims for injury done and
loss incurred by the abrogation of their leases. If amendatory
legislation was adopted, the bankruptcy court might, pursuant
thereto, adjudge them entitled to allowance of a claim. We think
the operation of the saving clause cannot be limited by the fact
that the claims are described as those to which the bankruptcy
court may adjudge the petitioners entitled. That court's
adjudication would necessarily follow and apply any amendment of
the Act. We hold, therefore, that the reservation was broad enough
to preserve the right to prove whatever claims were provable and
allowable either by judicial decision or supplementary legislation.
It follows that the petitioners' claims are provable.
The decree below must be reversed, and the cause remanded to the
District Court for further proceedings in conformity to this
opinion.
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS and MR. JUSTICE STONE took no part in the
consideration or decision of this case.
[
Footnote 1]
In re United Cigar Stores of America, 83 F.2d 202, on
rehearing 85 F.2d 11.
[
Footnote 2]
Meyer v. Kenmore Hotel Co., 297 U.
S. 160,
297 U. S.
165.