Cobb v. Camden Savings Bank

76 A. 667, 106 Me. 178, 1909 Me. LEXIS 41
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedNovember 29, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 76 A. 667 (Cobb v. Camden Savings Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cobb v. Camden Savings Bank, 76 A. 667, 106 Me. 178, 1909 Me. LEXIS 41 (Me. 1909).

Opinion

Savage, J.

Real action. The plaintiffs are the receivers, and trustees appointed under the provisions of sections 80 and 81 of chapter 47 of the Revised Statutes, of the Mount Battie Manufacturing Company, which prior to the proceedings hereinafter mentioned was the owner of the demanded premises. The defendant is the purchaser of the same under an execution sale, the validity of which is presented for the determination of the court.

On December 26, 1905, Brown & Adams, of Boston, creditors of the corporation, brought suit against it, and on the same day caused its real estate to be attached on their writ. Questions of [180]*180law having arisen, they were argued in the Law Court, and the ease was continued on the docket until November 28, 1908, when a certificate of decision was received from the Law Court. Thereupon, as provided in R. S., chap. 79, sect. 49, judgment for the plaintiffs was entered as of the preceding September term of the court. Execution issued December 3, 1908. On this execution the officer returned that he took the lands in question in execution on the same day. After due notice, they were sold on the execution, January 4, 1909, to the defendant, and a sheriff’s deed thereof was given.

In the meantime, in accordance with a vote of the stockholders of the Mount Battie Manufacturing Company, a bill in equity was filed, prior to November 16, 1908, by its treasurer, under the provisions of R. S., ch. 47, sects. 80 and 81, praying for a dissolution of the corporation, and the appointment of trustees. Notice was ordered returnable January 5, 1909, and was served on the corporation November 16, 1908. Public notice was likewise ordered and given. Notice of the pendency of the bill was also ordered and given to all known creditors of the corporation by mail, postage prepaid. Such notice was mailed to Brown & Adams and the Camden Savings Bank, December 2, 1908, the day before the execution in question issued. On January 11, 1909, a decree was entered, by which the corporation was dissolved, and the plaintiffs appointed trustees and receivers. On the same day a deed of the premises to the plaintiffs was executed and delivered in the name of the corporation, by its treasurer.

It also appears that prior to the Brown & Adams attachment, the lands had been attached in the suit of S. Rawitzer & Co. against the corporation. That suit was continued on the docket until January 6, 1909, when a special judgment for the plaintiff was rendered, and execution issued January 11, 1909. And it appears that a portion of the surplus of proceeds of the sale on the Brown & Adams execution has been applied by the officer to the Rawitzer execution.

It is contended by the plaintiffs that inasmuch as the corporation was dissolved, the sale was void because of the non-existence of a corporation defendant, that the statute, under which the hill hi [181]*181equity was brought, R. S., ch. 47, sects. 77-81, contemplates and provides for a ratable distribution of assets among all the creditors, and that because of the dissolution of the corporation, all attachment liens were dissolved. We do not adopt this view. In the first place, the levy and sale in this case took place before the dissolution of the corporation. But further than that we do not think that a proper interpretation of the statute warrants the view that existing liens by attachment are dissolved by statutory proceedings ending in a dissolution of the corporation, although the method of enforcement may be affected, as will be noticed later. The statute, R. S., ch. 47, sect. 77, provides that when the charter of a corporation expires or is terminated otherwise it shall have a corporate existence for three years for winding up its affairs. Section 78 provides that in such case a creditor or stockholder may apply to the court which may appoint one or more trustees to take charge of its estate and effects with power to collect its debts, and defend suits at law, and to sell and convey its real estate. The court has jurisdiction in equity of all proceedings therein. Section 79 provides that the debts shall be paid in full when the funds are sufficient; and when not, ratably to those creditors who prove their debts. By section 80, stockholders may vote to dissolve a corporation, and when they do so, a bill in equity may be filed against it for dissolution by any officer, stockholder or creditor. Such notice thereon as is ordered by the court must be given, and then such proceedings may be had according to the usual course in suits in equity, that the corporation shall be dissolved and terminated. Section 81 reads as follows: • — ■ "Said court has jurisdiction in said cause to appoint receivers, issue injunctions, and pass interlocutory decrees and orders, according to the usual course of proceedings in equity; and shall, moreover, upon dissolving said corporation, or upon terminating its charter, appoint one or more trustees, who shall have all the powers conferred upon similar trustees by sections seventy seven, seventy eight, seventy nine and eighty nine, or by any other law of the State, with such special powers as may be given them by the court. But notwithstanding the appointment of such trustees, said court may superintend the collection and distribution of the-[182]*182assets of said corporation, and may retain said bill for that purpose.”

It has already been seen that the bill in the present case was brought under the provisions of section eighty. But the purpose and effect of the statute must be sought by examining all of the sections which relate to the same subject matter, and which are interwoven by reference. The statute, we think, contemplates that in winding up a corporation, under its provisions, the existing rights of priority of all creditors are to be preserved. To be sure, creditors who have proved their claims are to be paid ratably out of the funds, but the funds out of which they are to be paid are those remaining after payment of secured claims, claims having priority by reason of mortgage, attachments or otherwise. So we conclude that the bill in equity and the proceedings under it did not ipso facto work a dissolution of the Brown & Adams attachment.

The next question is whether, after a bill in equity for dissolution is filed under this statute, and notice is ordered and served, but before the appointment of receivers or trustees, a creditor with •notice, having a pre-existing valid attachment, may lawfully levy his execution upon the real estate of the corporation and sell it, or whether such a sale will be illegal and void.

The plaintiffs contend that the property was in custodia legis, both at the time of the seizure by the sheriff and at the time of the sale, although they were not appointed receivers until after the sale. In the very recent case of Chalmers v. Littlefield, 103 Maine, 271, it was held, in accordance with practically universal authority, that property in custodia legis is not subject to seizure and sale on execution, and that such a sale, without leave of the court first obtained, is wholly illegal and void. In view of this rule, the question to be answered in the case is, whether this property, under the circumstances, was in custodia legis.

First, what is the custody which the law intends? The oft repeated expression is that the custody of the receiver is the custody of the court, and that is custodia legis.

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Bluebook (online)
76 A. 667, 106 Me. 178, 1909 Me. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cobb-v-camden-savings-bank-me-1909.