Central Trust Co. of New York v. Worcester Cycle Mfg. Co.

128 F. 483, 1904 U.S. App. LEXIS 4697
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Connecticut
DecidedFebruary 26, 1904
DocketNo. 927
StatusPublished

This text of 128 F. 483 (Central Trust Co. of New York v. Worcester Cycle Mfg. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Central Trust Co. of New York v. Worcester Cycle Mfg. Co., 128 F. 483, 1904 U.S. App. LEXIS 4697 (circtdct 1904).

Opinion

TOWNSEND, Circuit Judge.

On or about June io, 1897, J. Burnett Nash began an action in the superior court of the state of Connecticut, for the county of Middlesex, against the Worcester Cycle Manufacturing Company, by virtue of a writ directing the attachment of the defendant’s property. By virtue of said writ the sheriff levied upon and attached all of defendant’s property, both real and personal, within said Middlesex county, and took possession of all of its personal property. Said property was afterwards appraised as being of the reasonable value of $xoo,ooo. On or about June 26, 1897, the Central Trust Company of New York instituted a suit in this court to foreclose a certain mortgage, under which it claimed a lien on certain property of said Worcester Cycle Company located in said Middlesex county, and in said suit Erank Sullivan Smith was appointed receiver. At the time of his appointment the sheriff was in possession of all of said personal property as aforesaid. The receiver duly demanded said property, and the sheriff refused to yield possession thereof.

On or about the 10th day of July, 1897, said Nash and said receiver entered into a stipulation which recited that, whereas said Nash—

“Contends that he has certain valid and subsisting attachments * * * against the real and personal property of the said defendant, * * * and said Nash has levied thereunder upon all the personal property of the said defendant; and whereas, the said receiver maintains that he is at present entitled to the actual possession of all of said property of defendant in said state of Connecticut, and that his appointment as such receiver has dissolved said attachments, and is anxious to proceed at ’once as receiver, without the necessity oí instituting legal proceedings for the purpose of obtaining possession of said personal property; and whereas, both parties agreed that the personal property of the defendant can be realized upon to the best advantage of all parties concerned by being speedily disposed of, and each party is desirous of preserving intact, with the least possible expense, all his personal rights in the premises, the parties stipulate and agree as follows:
“The receiver shall, as soon as he can obtain a hearing, with the full consent of the said Nash, move in the proper courts in Massachusetts and Connecticut for an order embodying the following directions, to the granting and entry of which this stipulation and agreement is subject:
“First. That the said Nash withdraw the sheriff’s keepers in possession under his said attachments.
[485]*485“Second. That such withdrawal of keepers by said Nash, and the taking possession of said attached property by said receiver, and the disposal of said personal property by said receiver in accordance with the orders of the said courts, shall be without prejudice to the said rights of said Nash under said attachments, or the claims upon which the same are based, to all intents and purposes as if this consent had not been given.
“Third. That the said Nash, without hindrance, allow said receiver to dispose of said personal property as directed in said first-mentioned orders, or as may be directed by future orders of-the said courts, entered upon three days’ notice in writing to said Nash or his attorneys, Messrs. Perkins & Jackson, of 115 Broadway, New York City.
“Fourth. That the present rights of said Nash to the said attached property shall, if the same be sold by the said receiver, be transferred to the proceeds of the said property in the hands of the said receiver, who shall hold the said proceeds subject to the said rights, and that if the said attached property be hereafter manufactured up, together with other property not in any way bound by the said attachments, then the said receiver shall hold, subject to the said rights, a sum equivalent to the proper appraised value, as shown in the said receiver’s inventory, to be filed within ten days from the date of said order, of such attached materials as enter into the construction of such manufactured articles.
“Fifth. The right of the'said Nash to accrued legal costs and disbursements on said attachments, and the amount thereof, shall be passed upon by said courts, and the said receiver shall reserve in his hands a sum sufficient to pay such costs as are provided for in the statutes of Connecticut and Massachusetts, and shall pay the same as directed by the said courts.
“J. Burnett Nash,
“By Perkins & Jackson, Attys.
“Frank Sullivan Smith, Receiver.”

This stipulation was presented to, and ratified and approved by, this court; and an order was entered that said Nash should withdraw the sheriff's keepers in possession under his said attachment, and that such withdrawal and taking possession and disposition of said property by said receiver should be without prejudice to the rights of said Nash in said attachment, or the claims upon which the same were based. The court further ordered that said Nash allow said receiver to dispose of said personal property as directed by order of court, and that the present rights of said Nash in said property, if sold by the receiver, should be transferred to the proceeds of said property, as provided in said stipulation. Under said stipulation and order the sheriff, by direction of said Nash, surrendered possession of said property to the receiver.

On or about November 5, 1897, Charles C. Goodrich, of Hartford, in the state of Connecticut, was, on the application of a creditor of said Worcester Cycle Company, duly appointed by the probate court for the district of Middletown trustee in insolvency of said company for the benefit of the creditors, and duly qualified as such trustee, and petitioned for leave to intervene and answer in said foreclosure suit, which petition was granted; and upon appeal the Circuit Court of Appeals modified the decision so as to allow the intervener to be heard by proof and argument on behalf of the parties whom he represented, namely, the creditors of the defendant. In said petition to intervene, said Goodrich alleged, inter alia, that “the said sheriff retained possession under certain attachments of all of said personal and mixed property of the defendant,” etc., until after the filing and entry of said stipulation and order. In his answer, subsequently filed, said Goodrich, [486]*486trustee, - makes the same allegation and admission, and later, namely, on October n, 1898, said Goodrich, trustee, made an express stipulation to the same effect; and this court, in its interlocutory decree, filed November 23, 1898, expressly found the fact of said possession by the sheriff until the delivery of the property to the receiver as aforesaid. Afterward said Goodrich, trustee, contended, and the Circuit Court held, that said mortgage was invalid as to the personalty because the property attempted to be covered thereby was not “particularly described,” as required by the Connecticut statutes, and the mortgagee had not taken possession thereof.

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Central Trust Co. v. Worcester Cycle Mfg. Co.
114 F. 659 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Connecticut, 1902)

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Bluebook (online)
128 F. 483, 1904 U.S. App. LEXIS 4697, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/central-trust-co-of-new-york-v-worcester-cycle-mfg-co-circtdct-1904.