Bortner v. Leib

126 A. 890, 146 Md. 530, 1924 Md. LEXIS 160
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 4, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 126 A. 890 (Bortner v. Leib) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bortner v. Leib, 126 A. 890, 146 Md. 530, 1924 Md. LEXIS 160 (Md. 1924).

Opinion

Parece, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The bill of complaint was filed on. August 30th, 1923, by James C. Leib, Clayton E. Rutledge, and Otha L. Gladding, against the J. C. Leib Company, Inc., a body corporate, and Rayman W. Bortner. The plaintiffs .alleged that the capital stock of -the corporation was held by the plaintiffs and the defendant, Rayman W. Bortner, and that the corporation vtfas insolvent with a large judgment against it outstanding; that it had not been actively in business since August, 1923, and that the defendant, Rayman W. Bortner, held certain stock of the Aspers Fruit Products Company in his own name, when it was in fact the property of the J. 0. Leib Company, Inc. There was a prayer for general relief, and the specific relief sought were a receivership to preserve and liquidate the .assets of the insolvent corporation; the.transfer by Rayman W. Bortner to the receiver of the stock of the Aspers Fruit Products Company, and an injunction to prevent his disposition of 'the stock in any form before the transfer was made; and, finally, the distribution of 'the assets of the corporation and its dissolution.

The allegation in the bill, that gave rise to .the controversy below, .and this appeal, is the charge that the J. C. Leib Company, Inc., had advanced the sum of ten thousand dollars to the Aspers Fruit Products Company, which had issued its preferred stock in the sum of eight thousand and six hundred dollars, in part payment of this loan, to the defendant, Ray-man W. Bortner, who held the stock in his own name when it w'as, in fact, the property of the J. C. Leib Company, Inc. The lower court appointed a receiver, with power and authority to take charge of the assets of the company, and to collect its outstanding accounts receivable; and enjoined Rayman W. Bortner from making any disposition whatso *533 ever of the sitares of preferred stock of the Aspers Ffnit Products Company then supposed to be held by him in his name in the amount of eight thousand dollars, until the further order of the court.

The answer of Rayman W. Bortner did not admit the allegations of the bill with respect to the company’s financial condition, and asserted that the three plaintiffs were largely in the debt of the company. With reference to the advance^ ment by the company to the Aspers. Fruit. Products. Company of the alleged sum of ten thousand dollars, the defendant, Rayman W. Bortner, admitted that advancements, had been made, but asserted that these had all been fully adjusted in 1921 between the four stockholders of the company, and that, while he was the holder of preferred stock in the Aspers Fruit Products Company, every share of this stock was his own private property, in which neither the plaintiffs nor the defendant company had the slightest interest. While the answer of the appellant was verified, and was filed on October 1st, 1923, yet the secured preferred stock of the Aspers Fruit Products Company was not held by the appellant, as this stock had stood in the name of his wife since May 5th, 1922, as his gift. A judgment pro confesso was obtained against the J. 0. Leib Company, Inc., and testimony was taken, and a decree was. passed .adjudicating the corporation to be insolvent, appointing a permanent receiver to wind up its affairs and declaring that the defendant, Rayman W. Bortner. should pay to the receiver the- sum of ten thousand dollars by reason of his. fraudulent conversion to his own use of warehouse eider certificates of that value belonging to the said the. J. C. Leib Company, Inc. It was. through the alleged wrongful conversion by the appellant of these certificates that he obtained the preferred stock in question.

The decree was dated on December 6th, 1923, and on January 8th, 1924, the defendant, Bortner, filed a petition setting forth that he had discovered certain evidence which was not in his possession at the1 time of the trial of the case, and asking that he be granted a rehearing. This petition was *534 answered by the plaintiffs* and the lower court, passed its order on January 25th, 1924, dismissing- the petition.

1. On January 29th, 1924, the defendant, Kayman W. Bortner, took separate appeals from the decree of December 6th, and the order of January 25th. Consequently there are .two appeals on this record. The appeal from the refusal of the lower court to grant a rehearing with leave to offer additional testimony, will not be considered by this Court, as a rehearing, after a decree, is a matter in the sound discretion of the lower court and will not be considered here when there is nothing on the record to indicate any injustice sustained by the petitioner or any abuse of its power by the court before which the cause was heard. Dorsey v. Hammond, 1 Bland, 463, 473, 474; Walsh v. Smyth, 3 Bland, 9, 27, 28; Tessier v. Wyse, 3 Bland, 28, 61; Meluy v. Cooper, 2 Bland, 200. Furthermore, the decree was enrolled, and no rehearing could have been granted. Miller’s Equity, sec. 286; Code, art. 16, sec. 188. This leaves for consideration the propriety of the decree appointing a permanent receiver and awarding a judgment of ten thousand dollars in personam against the appellant.

2. So far as the appointment of a permanent receiver is concerned, no point is made by the appellant that requires attention. It is admitted that a receiver should be appointed, and there is nothing before this Court to1 indicate reversible error in the selection of one of the attorneys for three of the principal stockholders, who, with the appellant, are the chief parties in interest. In this connection, however, it may be said that, as a general rule, it is better practice not to appoint as sole receiver an attorney who represents one of the antagonistic interests. As the naming of the receiver is so largely in thq discretion of the circuit courts; they should be careful to choose those who have practical knowledge, experience and sound judgment in the matter involved, and wW shall be impartial with respect to the parties affected and the conflicting interests involved. In the course of the receivership, the court is in control, and possesses ample power to remove its *535 original nominees, and appoint other or additional receivers as circumstances may, from time to time, require, in safeguarding the interests and rights of those concerned. High on Receivers, secs. 65-70, 820-829; In re Colvin, 3 Md. Ch. 300; Williamson v. Wilson, 1 Bland, 418. There is no reason to assume that these principles will not be enforced by the chancellor to the end of the proceedings in this cause.

3. The primary matter for the court on this appeal is to determine from a mass of testimony, largely made up of irreconcilable statements, what is the truth in respect to the inception, progress and conclusion of a transaction, whereby ten thousand dollars passed from the J. C. Leib Company, Inc., to the Aspers Fruit Products Company. Every essential fact is a subject of controversy. It is, however, agreed that for a number of years J. O. Leib carried on in Baltimore1, under the trade name of J. C.

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Bluebook (online)
126 A. 890, 146 Md. 530, 1924 Md. LEXIS 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bortner-v-leib-md-1924.