Bierma v. Ellis

236 N.W. 402, 212 Iowa 366
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 5, 1931
DocketNo. 40867.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 236 N.W. 402 (Bierma v. Ellis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bierma v. Ellis, 236 N.W. 402, 212 Iowa 366 (iowa 1931).

Opinion

Faville, C. J.

Prior to April 4, 1930, a private bank known as the Citizens Bank of Carlisle was conducting its business in the town of Carlisle, Iowa. The bank had' a capital of $25,000, and was a partnership composed of twenty-five individuals whose interest in said partnership was represented by so-called “shares” in various amounts. On or about the said 4th day of April, 1930, five of said partners filed a petition in equity in the district court of Warren County, wherein they were plaintiffs and the said bank and the remaining partners therein were made defendants. Said petition alleged that said bank was unable to meet its obligations and to continue in business and that it had become insolvent. Plaintiffs in said action prayed that a receiver be appointed to take charge of said bank and of all of its assets, to convert the same into money, and to wind up the affairs of said partnership, and after the application of the assets of the partnership to the payment of the debts of said partnership, to collect whatever deficiency might then be found to be due from the partners. A temporary receiver was appointed and after due notice a permanent general receiver was appointed in said cause. The order appointing the receiver provided that the said receiver should convert all of the assets of the said bank and partnership into cash, cause the liabilities to be fixed and determined, and ascertain the amount of any indebtedness remaining after the application of the proceeds from the sale of said assets and collect from the owners of said bank, pro rata or as they may be legally liable therefor, sufficient to pay any such deficiency. Subsequently the court entered an order fixing the time for filing claims of creditors of said partnership and directing notice to be given to creditors, which was done in accordance with said order, and thereafter, to wit, on or about the 6th day of June, 1930, the appellants herein filed proof of their claim with said receiver. Thereafter, to wit, on or about September 25, 1930, said receiver made an application to the court for an order directing him to bring suit against all the partners in said bank for the deficiency, being the difference between the assets and liabilities of said bank; and on or about September 27, 1930, the court entered an order directing “that *368 said receiver be and he is hereby authorized and directed to bring a suit in this court for the purpose of collecting from all the owners of said bank said deficiency.”

Thereafter, to wit, on or about the 18th day of October, 1930, the appellant brought this separate action against the partners in said bank, alleging that they had been depositors in said bank and praying judgment against the partners and each of them from the amount due on said deposits. In pursuance of an order of court granting him permission so to do, the receiver appeared in said action and filed his petition of intervention setting up the fact of the existence of said partnership, and of the action brought for its dissolution; setting up the order for appointment of said receiver and alleging that he had commenced action against all of the partners in said bank to collect the amount necessary to settle the indebtedness of said bank in full. The receiver alleged that the depositors and creditors of said bank are more than nine hundred in number and that to allow each individual creditor and depositor to sue the members of said partnership in a separate suit would hinder and delay the receiver in carrying out his duties in accordance with the order of the court and would cause a multiplicity of suits, and would interfere with the pending action of the receiver against the partners in said bank. Certain facts were stipulated and were considered as though pleaded. The receiver prayed that an order be entered restraining the appellants herein from prosecuting their said suit until the original action in which the receiver had been appointed had been disposed of. The appellants filed a pleading to the receiver’s petition of intervention, which is designated both as a motion to strike said petition and as a demurrer thereto. The said motion or demurrer is predicated upon a number of different grounds, which, however, may be summarized as a challenge to the right of the receiver to intervene in said action or to in any manner affect the appellants’ right to prosecute their said action to judgment. The court overruled said motion to strike, or demurrer. The appellants elected to stand on said ruling, and judgment dismissing their petition was entered.

The question is whether or not the court erred in overruling the appellants’ motion, or demurrer to the petition of intervention of the receiver. It is to be noticed that the receiver *369 in Ms petition of intervention did not plead in bar, but only in abatement, and asked that the court restrain the appellants herein from prosecuting their suit until the original cause in which the receiver had been appointed had been finally disposed of.

I. A few general observations may be helpful at this point. The court unquestionably had the power to appoint a receiver in the original action in equity, brought for the dissolution of the partnership. Code, 12713. The statutory powers of a receiver are set forth in Code Section 12716, which is as follows:

"Subject to the control of the court or judge, a receiver has power to bring and defend actions, to take and keep possession of property, to collect debts, to receive the rents and profits of real property, and, generally, to do such acts in respect to the property committed to him as may be authorized by law or ordered by the court.”

It is the generally recognized rule that a receiver of partnership property has no right ipso facto to proceed against the individual partners or their individual property. Hiles v. Dunn, 48 Atl., 315 (N. J.); Wallace v. Milligan, 110 Ind. 498, 11 N. E. 599. His duties are primarily to administer the property and assets of the partnership and he is not a curator of the property of the individual partners.

But a different situation confronts us at this point. Does a court of equity, in an action brought for the dissolution of an insolvent partnership, have the power to clothe the receiver with authority to bring suit to collect from the partners the funds necessary to pay the debts of the partnership; or, to put it another way, can a court of equity, in appointing a receiver for such a partnership, empower the receiver to do other acts and things beyond the scope of dealing with the assets that directly belong to the partnership?

The powers conferred upon the receiver by virtue of the terms of the statute are not necessarily a limitation upon the powers that could be conferred upon a general receiver by the court of equity making the appointment.

Under the facts and circumstances of this case the court, in entering the decree for the dissolution of the partnership and *370 placing all of its assets in the hands of a general receiver, did not exceed its powers in also clothing the receiver, by specific direction of the court, with the authority to institute suit against all of the members of the partnership for the collection from said partners of sufficient amounts to 'pay all the debts -and obligations of the said partnership. It is to be noted that the appellants are not attacking the proceedings under which the receiver was appointed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
236 N.W. 402, 212 Iowa 366, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bierma-v-ellis-iowa-1931.