Caplinger v. Patty

398 F.2d 471, 1968 U.S. App. LEXIS 6063
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJuly 18, 1968
Docket18987_1
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 398 F.2d 471 (Caplinger v. Patty) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Caplinger v. Patty, 398 F.2d 471, 1968 U.S. App. LEXIS 6063 (8th Cir. 1968).

Opinion

398 F.2d 471

Don CAPLINGER, Individually and as Trustee for Waldenburg
Gin & Elevator Supply Company, Inc., Appellant,
v.
Claibourne W. PATTY, Jr., Trustee in Bankruptcy for
Waldenburg Gin and Supply Co., Inc., Bankrupt, Appellee.

No. 18987.

United States Court of Appeals Eighth Circuit.

July 18, 1968.

Lee Ward, of Ward & Mooney, Jonesboro, Ark., for appellant.

Isaac A. Scott, of Wright, Lindsey & Jennings, Little Rock, Ark., for appellee.

Before VAN OOSTERHOUT, Chief Judge, BLACKMUN, Circuit Judge, and VAN PELT, District Judge.

VAN OOSTERHOUT, Chief Judge.

This is a timely appeal by Don Caplinger, individually and as trustee for the Waldenburg Gin & Elevator Supply Company, Inc., hereinafter for convenience jointly referred to as Caplinger,1 from final order of the District Court denying review of an order of the Referee in Bankruptcy in a reclamation proceeding wherein Caplinger was ordered to turn over to the Trustee in Bankruptcy for the Waldenburg Gin and Supply Co., Inc., Bankrupt, $11,500 which he had received as proceeds from a mortgage foreclosure sale in the state court.2

We shall briefly summarize the background material. Caplinger's corporation, being the owner of the gin plant here in controversy, consisting of real estate, buildings, ginning equipment and other personal property, on June 26, 1964, sold and conveyed all of such assets (not the corporate stock) to Waldenburg Gin and Supply Co., Inc., a new, unrelated and separate corporation, the stock of which was owned by Mr. and Mrs. Clinton E. Bowling, the bankrupt in this proceeding, for $80,000. $50,000 of the sale proceeds was paid Caplinger with proceeds obtained by the purchaser from the Bank of Harrisburg through a first mortgage loan on the real and personal property sold. Caplinger received the balance of the purchase price in the form of a $30,000 mortgage, subject to the Bank's first mortgage on the real and personal property sold. The bankrupt, soon after the sale, paid Caplinger $5,000 on his second mortgage and paid some interest on the first mortgage, but has made no other payments. In the spring of 1965, Bowling advised the Bank and later Caplinger that he was abandoning the property and that he would make no more payments, and he actually abandoned the property on or about June 14, 1965.

The Bank and Caplinger jointly employed attorney Collier to foreclose their respective first and second mortgages. The joint foreclosure action was filed in the state court on June 10, 1965. A decree foreclosing the mortgages was entered on July 9, 1965. The mortgaged property was sold at public auction at a foreclosure sale in conformity with the decree and Arkansas law on August 19, 1965, to Donald Parker for $63,904.80.3 The referee's certificate on the petition for review shows that the proceedings instituted by the Trustee against the Bank and the purchaser Parker were dismissed and that no appeal or review was sought upon the portion of the referee's order sustaining the sale to Parker and determining the validity of the Bank's prior lien on all the mortgaged property.

On August 25, 1965, an involuntary petition in bankruptcy was filed against Waldenburg Gin and Supply Co., Inc., and such corporation was adjudged a bankrupt by default on September 17, 1965. The Trustee was thereafter appointed and he brought this action. Additional material facts will be discussed during the course of the opinion.

Caplinger asserts the following errors as a basis for reversal:

1. There is no competent evidence to show that the bankrupt was insolvent at some time material to this proceeding.

2. There is no substantial evidence to support a finding that Caplinger's mortgage lien upon the personal property was not perfected by compliance with the provisions of the Arkansas U.C.C. more than four months prior to bankruptcy.

3. There is no factual basis for marshaling the assets of the bankrupt so as to deprive Caplinger of his admittedly superior lien upon the real estate of the bankrupt.

We believe that Caplinger's first two contentions lack merit. The trial court in its opinion of September 23, 1966, has convincingly demonstrated that the bankrupt corporation was insolvent at all times material to this action. There is substantial evidence to support the referee's findings, approved by the trial court, that Caplinger did not perfect his mortgage lien against the Trustee by reason of his failure to make the required statutory filing in the office of the Secretary of State, as required by Ark.Stats.Ann. 85-9-401(1) (c). The Trustee's testimony to the effect that he searched the appropriate records in the office of the Secretary of State and found no record of such lien standing unrebutted affords evidentiary support for such finding. Caplinger's attorney, when asked by the referee whether there had been a filing with the Secretary of State, said his office had prepared the papers and he had no information such filing had been made and that he was not representing that such action had been taken. In the joint foreclosure action, an allegation was made that notice of the Bank's lien had been filed with the Secretary of State but no similar allegation was made with respect to the Caplinger mortgage.

We consider Caplinger's third contention to be meritorious. It is undisputed that the Bank's first mortgage constitutes a valid lien against both the real and personal property described therein. It is likewise undisputed that Caplinger's mortgage constitutes a valid lien against the real estate, which lien was acquired at the time of the recording of the mortgage on June 26, 1964, more than four months prior to bankruptcy.

Two bank officers handling the transaction, joint attorney Collier and Mr. Caplinger each testified that on oral agreement was entered into between the Bank and Caplinger in connection with the joint foreclosure to the effect that the proceeds of the sale of the personal property would first be applied on the Bank's mortgage with the deficiency, if any, to be paid out of the real estate.

The Bank officers testified that it was in accordance with their custom to resort to personal property first toward the satisfaction of claims due them. Such evidence, although oral, was not controverted. The referee made no credibility finding. He disposes of the issue by saying that the real estate and personalty were not in fact sold separately and that any arrangement of the kind claimed would not be binding upon the Trustee since he was not a party to the action.

The claimed oral agreement and custom is in accord with the general equitable principles upon which marshaling of assets is based. In Bank of Bentonville v. Swift & Co., 233 Ark. 808, 348 S.W.2d 881, 882, the court states:

'The marshaling of assets is a proceeding peculiarly within the jurisdiction of the chancery courts.

'In 35 Am.Jur. p.

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