Campau v. Detroit Driving Club

107 N.W. 1063, 144 Mich. 80, 1906 Mich. LEXIS 1008
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMay 24, 1906
DocketDocket No. 257
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 107 N.W. 1063 (Campau v. Detroit Driving Club) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Campau v. Detroit Driving Club, 107 N.W. 1063, 144 Mich. 80, 1906 Mich. LEXIS 1008 (Mich. 1906).

Opinion

Ostrander, J.

The last decree of this court in this cause was made on July 1, 1904, upon appeals heard in [82]*82April, 1903, determined in February, 1904. An application for rehearing was denied June 18, 1904. Campau v. Detroit Driving Club, 135 Mich. 575. Pursuant to the decree then entered, the record was remanded, with directions to require the receiver to account, and, upon such accounting being made, to ascertain and determine the liens and priorities of the parties in and upon the income and earnings of the corpus of the real and personal property of the Detroit Driving Club, and the dispositions to be made of the fund. The receiver filed two accounts, one covering the period from his appointment,.December 7, 1899, to October 31, 1904, the other the period from November 1,1904, to January 31, 1905. They do not appear in the printed record, but were produced in typewritten form at the hearing. Objections to the account were filed, the receiver was examined before the referee and, pending the making of a report, by an order of the court below, the referee was directed to report the testimony taken and was discharged from further consideration of the case. The Hon. Morse Rohnert, one of the circuit judges for Wayne county, proceeded to pass upon the accounts and to determine the liens, and priorities of the parties, and on September 30, 1905, he made and filed a report which was later on, with certain changes, made the decree of the court. By the same order, the fifth petition of intervening creditors, filed July 31, 1905, was denied. From this decree, Daniel J. Campau, as receiver and as one of the complainants, and the interveners, have appealed. Interveners moved to dismiss the appeal of Daniel J. Campau, as one of the complainants, and his appeal as receiver. These motions were brought on and argued at the hearing. Since the hearing, there has been filed by the receiver a third account, for the period from February 1, 1905, to October 31, 1905. To this account the interveners filed objections and have moved this court to refer the account to a commissioner with the usual directions and to direct said commissioner, further, to take testimony and report the extent to which counsel for coni[83]*83plain ants and counsel for interveners have acted as counsel for the Detroit Driving Club; that independent counsel be appointed by this court to represent the receiver on ■such reference and in all future proceedings in which the receiver is interested. It appears, also, that in June, 1905, and after a decree had been entered for a sale of the property of the Detroit Driving Club in foreclosure proceedings, an order was made for certain repairs to be paid for out of the income and profits, from which order intervening petitioners appealed to this court. While considerable portions of the earlier history of this case are recited in the opinions of this court in Moran v. Wayne Circuit Judge, 125 Mich. 6; Campau v. Detroit Driving Club, 130 Mich. 417, 135 Mich. 575, it is 'still necessary to an understanding of questions now presented that some of the facts be, as briefly as possible, restated in connection with other facts not then before the court.

The Detroit Driving Club is a corporation organized in 1893 under Act 22, Pub. Acts 1883 (chapter 211, 2 Comp. Laws), with a capital stock of $150,000, in shares of the par value of $100. Complainants are officers of the club. Mr. Campau, before and at the time of the beginning of this litigation, was its president and chief executive officer. The other complainants were, respectively, its vice president and treasurer. Before and at the time the complainants filed their bill (a judgment creditor’s bill) in this cause, which was April 24, 1899, the prop'erty of’the club was incumbered by a first mortgage, given to the Union Trust Company, trustee, securing the holders of bonds of the club to the amount of $75,000, and by a second mortgage, given to and owned by Daniel J. Campau, securing notes or bonds of the club to the amount of about $60,000. Complainants were also plaintiffs in an execution levied upon the real and personal property of the club. A second execution, issued upon another judgment in their favor, had been returned unsatisfied by the sheriff and was the foundation for the bill in the present ■case. The ‘ interveners, Moran and Churchill, are as[84]*84signees of a judgment and of the execution levy made thereunder upon the real estate of the Detroit Driving Club. It is a part of the important history of the case that after the receiver had been appointed in this suit, the personal property upon which the first execution had been levied was, on March 29, 1900, sold by the sheriff to complainants for $1,089. The sheriff also sold upon said execution, April 3, 1900, all of the real estate to complainants for $18,692.47, and, later, returned the execution satisfied. Both of these sales were later, and on objection of the intervening creditors, set aside, and the receiver, who had relinquished possession, again assumed control of the property. By these sales, all of the property of the debtor, real and personal, excepting some accounts receivable, of doubtful value, was bid in by complainants. No proceedings have ever been taken to enforce the execution, levy made by the assignor of interveners.

The bill of complaint is in the usual form; sets out the judgment, issue, and return of execution unsatisfied, negatives collusion with the debtor or any other persons, avers that the bill is not exhibited to protect the property of the debtor against the claims of other creditors, and charges that complainants have reason to believe and do believe .that the debtor has equitable interests, things in action, or other property of the value of upwards of $10,000, which complainants had not been able to discover and reach by execution; that the said Detroit Driving Club has “a considerable amount of money and of legal and equitable debts, claims, and demands due to it from different persons (whose names are unknown to your orators), and that it has money and other personal property either in possession or held in trust for it, * * * the situation, value, and particulars of which are unknown to your orators.” The bill is signed and verified by Daniel J. Campau and was taken as confessed December 6, 1899, and on December 7, 1899, Daniel J. Campau, one of the complainants and president of defendant, was appointed receiver. The order appointing him required the driving [85]*85club to execute, and it did execute, to him, a general assignment on oath of all its property, debts, equitable interests, etc. The receiver has used, repaired, insured the same, given race meetings at the track, paid interest on the first mortgage, and paid faxes upon the property..

It is seen from this statement that Mr. Campan is, and from the time of his appointment has been, interested in the property of this insolvent corporation as second mortgagee of the property, as a judgment creditor with a levy, as a judgment creditor seeking equitable assets through a receivership, and as receiver. This omits mention of any interest as director and president of the judgment debtor. It now appears that nothing in the way of property of the debtor has been discovered or reached in these proceedings, and that the fund which has been created has come from a continuance of the business of the debtor, using the property of the debtor under protection of the court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
107 N.W. 1063, 144 Mich. 80, 1906 Mich. LEXIS 1008, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/campau-v-detroit-driving-club-mich-1906.