Campbell v. Nichols

261 P. 408, 145 Wash. 614, 1927 Wash. LEXIS 958
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 28, 1927
DocketNo. 20711. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 261 P. 408 (Campbell v. Nichols) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Campbell v. Nichols, 261 P. 408, 145 Wash. 614, 1927 Wash. LEXIS 958 (Wash. 1927).

Opinion

Tolman, J.

Here are two appeals from an order of the trial court approving the final account of the receiver, allowing compensation due him and his attorneys, and closing the receivership, each appeal *616 being independent of the other. The receiver was appointed December 28, 1920. He immediately qualified and entered upon the discharge of his duties, continuing until the entry of the order appealed from, on January 27, 1927.

It appears that defendant Nichols was engaged in farming on a large scale, in Lincoln county, operating one farm' of twenty-two hundred acres, which he owned subject to certain mortgages, and another farm, situated at some distance from the first, of six hundred and forty acres, which he held under lease.

Nichols being very heavily indebted and insolvent, some of his principal unsecured creditors, after conference, determined that a receiver should be applied for, and solicited respondent Fraser to act in .that capacity, agreeing with him that his services would be worth fifty dollars per month, and that so long as actual farming operations should continue, he should employ Nichols to superintend and manage them under the receiver’s general directions. Accordingly, this action was brought, and respondent was duly appointed as above indicated.

The farming operations were continued under the receiver for one year, but without profit, the lease on the six hundred and forty acre farm then expiring. By order of the court, the receiver borrowed ten thousand dollars to finance his year of operations, issuing receiver’s certificates, which recited that they were a first lien upon all of the property of the estate, subject to the real estate mortgages, then existing. After the result of the year of operations was determined, the receiver, under order of the court, sold all of the personal property, as well as the crop produced; and, after paying operating expenses, expenses of the sale, and the like, applied the balance of the funds available toward the payment of the receiver’s certificates, with *617 accrued interest, and all were retired, except a small amount which, with interest, amounted, at the time of the making of the final order, to $632.72.

On April 22, 1922, the receiver, by petition, brought to the attention of the court the fact that the twenty-two hundred acre farm was encumbered by two mortgages, aggregating the principal sum of twenty-seven thousand dollars, upon which there was past due and unpaid interest in the sum of seventeen hundred dollars ; that foreclosure was threatened, and unless the overdue interest was paid, the expenses of foreclosure would be added, and the property would probably be lost.

Thereupon, the court ordered the receiver to make a second issue of receiver’s certificates in the amount of seventeen hundred dollars, to be a lien upon all of the property of the insolvent, subject to the mortgage and to the prior issue of receiver’s certificates. This was done, and the money so raised applied to the payment of the interest on the mortgages. Thereafter, the receiver rented the lands belonging to the estate, receiving one-third of the erop as rental; but apparently the returns were disappointing, and nothing more was ever paid upon any of the receiver’s certificates. It appears to be admitted that these results were due to general conditions over which the receiver had no control, and it is nowhere intimated that the failure to obtain greater financial returns was due'to any fault or omission on the part of the receiver.

Thereafter, from year to year, covering the seasons of 1923, 1924 and 1925, upon application of the receiver, he was directed in advance to apply so much of the rental received from the mortgaged lands as might be necessary to the payment of interest on the mortgages, in order to prevent foreclosure, and apparently, in the expectation or hope that conditions *618 might improve, the land might become salable and. something could be realized from the equity.

On January 26, 1926, the receiver again presented' a like petition to the court, in which he again showed to. the court that the mortgages were subject to foreclosure, which was threatened, that he had no property, or money from which he could pay the mortgages or. interest, that it had been impossible to find a purchaser for ■ any of the land, and that he believed he could secure an agreement with the holders of the mortgages-for an extension of time to February 1, 1927, upon condition that he pay to the holders of the mortgages' all, or so much as might be necessary to cover accruing interest, of the proceeds received as rental, after deducting therefrom cost of sacks necessary to be furnished and the court costs of the receivership, inelud-ing a reasonable compensation to the receiver and his attorneys.

On the presentation of the petition, an ex parte order was made, permitting the receiver to renew the lease for one year upon the same rental of one-third of the crop, and authorizing him to enter into an agreement with the holders of the mortgages, by which the net proceeds of the rental received, “after deducting costs, charges and expenses, and reasonable expenses of the receivership,” were to be applied toward the reduction of interest due on said mortgages and toward the payment of the taxes on said lands.

It is true that, in this order of January 26, 1926, in reciting what was asked for by the petition, the word “current” is used, making the recitation read, “after deducting a sufficient amount to pay current costs of the receivership' and the cost of sacks, etc.” It appears that, during the year 1926, the landlord’s por-' tion of the crop coming into the hands of the receiver" was of the value of, and sold for, $1,837.97, out of' *619 which, the receiver paid insurance on grain $6.77; sacks $106.85; expenses three trips to Wilbur, $45 ; and telephone tolls $5.40; as shown by the receiver’s final account ; and the appellant Phoenix Mutual Life Insurance Company, holder of the first mortgage, now claims that the balance of the proceeds of the crop, after deducting these items, amounting to $1,623.95, should have been paid to it under and by virtue of the order óf January 26,1926; while, in. fact, the order appealed from treats this .balance as property of the estate, directs the payment of the compensation of the receiver and his attorneys therefrom, and the balance of $523.38 is directed to be paid by the receiver to the holders of the first issue of receiver’s certificates' to apply on the balance due thereon.

No formal contract was entered into between the mortgagees and the receiver, each side apparently relying upon the court’s order as being a sufficient contract. The appellant insurance company contends that, its mortgage being then foreclosable, its forbearance obtained by virtue of the order of January 26, 1926, resulted in the creation of the fund now in controversy, and that the fund came into existence charged with a trust in its favor, so that neither the crop nor its proceeds ever became a part of the insolvent estate. In a general sense, we think that contention is sound; but, even so, the crop and its proceeds were chargeable with whatever the order, under which the fund was created, charged it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
261 P. 408, 145 Wash. 614, 1927 Wash. LEXIS 958, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/campbell-v-nichols-wash-1927.