Bancroft v. Allen

174 So. 749, 128 Fla. 14, 1937 Fla. LEXIS 1211
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedMarch 8, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 174 So. 749 (Bancroft v. Allen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bancroft v. Allen, 174 So. 749, 128 Fla. 14, 1937 Fla. LEXIS 1211 (Fla. 1937).

Opinion

Ellis, C. J.

This is an appeal from an order o'f the Circuit Court for Dade County in the case of Will Allen, complainant, v. The City Trust Company, Guardian Trust Company, Guardian Company, Administrator Company, Morgan S. McCormick, A. W. Gustus, R. C. Fenters, Amos Travis and Ralph H. Buss, defendants, denying and striking from the files an application of C. H. Bancroft, as receiver of the City National Bank in Miami, and Tom New *16 man, to intervene pro interesse suo in the case pending in the Circuit Court ■ for Dade County, and entitled as set forth above.

The petition for leave to intervene contains the prayer “That, after the allowance of this petition for leave to intervene, it be construed as their bill of intervention for relief in this case, without the necessity of filing a further bill of intervention or other pleadings; that Henry H. Taylor, as Receiver of the City Trust Company, Will Allen, and all other interested parties be required to plead to this intervention within such reasonable,time as the court may fix, and that thereafter testimony be taken witnout delay.”

■ An amendment to the petition for intervention was later filed alleging other grounds as a basis for intervention involving the accuracy of the reports of Henry H. Taylor as receiver of the City Trust Company and alleging extravagance in the administration of the affairs of the City Trust Company; attacking the validity of certain orders made by the Chancellor approving certain reports of the receiver and allowances for attorneys’ fees, on the grounds of the Chancellor’s disqualification; that the orders made in the case were beyond the scope of the prayers contained in the bill in the cause hereinbefore stated in that the sole purpose of that suit was the appointment of a receiver to -take charge of the assets of the City Trust Company while the question of the liability to Will Allen and other bondholders similarly situated was being litigated in a certain case pending in the Circuit Court for Dade County in which Will Allen was complainant and the City National Bank in Miami and City Trust Company, et al., were defendants, and known as cause No. 25963.

The petition further attacked the regularity and validity of the establishment of a debt of $75,000.00 against Taylor *17 as receiver of the City Trust Company in which the petitioner C. H. Bancroft, as receiver of the City National Bank in Miami, claims a direct interest and as to which it is prayed that an order allowing the payment of the $75,000.00 be set aside upon the grounds of collusion between the receiver and the attorneys employed to represent him. The said amendment adopted all the prayers set forth in the original petition.

On January 11, 1937, the Honorable Jefferson B. Browne, as Circuit Judge of the Eleventh Judicial Circuit, entered an order in which he denied the petition for intervention and ordered the same stricken from the files.

The learned judge, however, definitely stated in his order that he would consider the petition on its merits thereby-deeming it to be properly before him, yet 'in the latter part of his order he stated that the petition not having been properly filed it should be dismissed and stricken from the files. There appears in the order from which the appeal is taken the following clause:

“Tlie petition for intervention contains defamatory charges against reputable members of the Bar of this Court, which charges, upon careful consideration of the argument of the counsel and examination of the record, I have no hesitation in pronouncing unwarranted. The charges against the Receiver and the several attorneys named in the petition are so serious that I feel that these officers are entitled to have the Court pass upon them. I, therefore, find that there is nothing in the record to warrant the charges against Henry H. Taylor, as an attorney of this Court, or as Receiver of the City Trust Company, Lilburn R. Railey, his attorney, William H.' Burwell and Marion E. Sibley, and I fully exonerate them from the imputations in the petition.”

*18 The order also contains the following clause:

“The ground for intervention most strongly urged in the petition and amendment and in argument of counsel is that the intervenors should have an opportunity to contest the compromise settlement entered into before Judge Paul D. Barns and approved by Judge H. F. Atkinson in what is known as the Will Allen suit. The denial of the petition to intervene will not deprive petitioners of any of their rights, as they may move in the proper forum to reopen the compromise settlement, and ask to be given an opportunity to be heard in opposition thereto.”

The learned Judge, therefore, after having considered the petition on its merits and' exonerated the receiver of the City Trust Company and the attorneys employed by him at different times in the administration of his receivership and determining that the petitioners would not be deprived of any of their rights to move in the proper forum to reopen the compromise settlement in which the petitioners alleged that they have an interest, denied the petition and ordered it to be stricken from the files. From that order an appeal was taken and a writ obtained from this Court in aid of its jurisdiction, under the provisions of Section 5 of Article V of the Constitution, in which it was ordered that Henry H. Taylor, as receiver and as trustee of the City Trust Company, and Will Allen were required to show cause before the Supreme Court at 10:00 o’clock A. M. Tuesday, January 26, 1937, why the said Henry H. Taylor as receiver and as trustee of The City Trust Company, and as an officer of the Circuit Court, should not be restrained and enjoined from surrendering the $75,000.00 receivership certificate of The City Trust Company held by him for George Elkins, as trustee, to anyone and why he should not be directed to hold the same in his custody-in the same *19 manner as issued until the further order of this Court; and in the meantime that Taylor, as receiver and as trustee of The City Trust Company, and Will Allen, be also restrained and enjoined from surrendering the $75,000.00 receivership certificate to anyone and they were directed to hold the receivership certificate in the same manner as issued until the further order of the Supreme Court.

To that order to show cause Allen, individually, and'Taylor, as receiver, filed their returns in which the former asked that the constitutional writ be denied and the latter, Taylor, prayed for a denial of the writ and the expunging of certain matters from the petition, which he alleged to be “scandalous and impertinent charges against” him.

In response to these returns the appellants moved to strike the returns of Allen and Taylor and the case was orally argued upon the merits before the Supreme Court on February 2, 1937.

Much attention was given both in the return to the rule to show cause and in the oral argument to what counsel were pleased to say were impertinent and defamatory charges against the receiver, Taylor, and counsel employed by him.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
174 So. 749, 128 Fla. 14, 1937 Fla. LEXIS 1211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bancroft-v-allen-fla-1937.