Denco Development Co., a Corporation, an Alleged Bankrupt v. Community Savings & Loan Assn.

376 F.2d 548
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJune 1, 1967
Docket21021_1
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 376 F.2d 548 (Denco Development Co., a Corporation, an Alleged Bankrupt v. Community Savings & Loan Assn.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Denco Development Co., a Corporation, an Alleged Bankrupt v. Community Savings & Loan Assn., 376 F.2d 548 (9th Cir. 1967).

Opinion

MARVIN JONES, Senior Judge.

Denco Development Co. (Denco), an alleged bankrupt, appeals the judgment of the United States District Court for the Central District of California. The judgment reversed an order of the Referee in Bankruptcy awarding to Denco the balance of certain funds in the hands of the Receiver, and instead awarded the funds to appellee Community Savings and Loan Association (Community).

The facts found by the district court are, in summary, as follows:

Denco borrowed money from Community to build apartment houses on 29 tracts of real estate and secured the loan with deeds of trust making Community beneficiary. The buildings were constructed, and Denco subsequently defaulted on the loan. Community elected to foreclose and sell the property, pursuant to a remedy provided in the deeds of trust. On the day before the scheduled sales, however, an involuntary petition in bankruptcy was filed against Den-co. The Referee in Bankruptcy issued a temporary order restraining the sales and placing the real estate under the control of a receiver.

Community then applied to the Referee for an order directing the Receiver to sequester the rents arising from the property and to hold them for Community’s benefit; the deeds of trust provided for the collection of rents as an alternative remedy. Before the hearing on the application the parties agreed that the decisions of the Referee would, in addition, cover deeds of trust on 72 other pieces of property of Denco, a total of 101. Community, which was beneficiary under these deeds also, stipulated that an additional order restraining the sale of the 72 pieces of property would not be necessary.

*550 At the hearing on the application for sequestration the Receiver assured the Referee in the presence of the parties that the money from the 101 pieces of property generated by the rents therefrom would be used only for Receiver’s costs and for operation of the property, and that the balance would be held for Community’s benefit and not made part of the alleged bankrupt's assets subject to the claims of general creditors. The assurance was acceptable to Community, and no formal order on sequestration was made.

Subsequently, Denco, Community, and the Receiver stipulated in writing, in part:

Community * * * by way of compromise * * * stipulates and agrees to forego, waive and relinquish all rights * * * to recover any such deficiency sum that might occur or remain by reason of said foreclosure * * * should above Honorable Court * * * allow and permit Community to proceed with its foreclosure. [Record, p. 114.]

On the same day, pursuant to the stipulation, the Referee and the Honorable Albert Lee Stephens, Jr., District Judge, dissolved the order restraining the foreclosure sales on the 101 pieces of property. Record, pp. 50, 51.

The foreclosure sales were held. At the time of the sales Community was attempting to recover two amounts it alleged were owed to it. The first consisted of the principal due on the loan to Denco, the interest on the principal, and trustee’s fees related to the sales. This amount was covered by the deeds of trust and was satisfied when, at the foreclosure sale, Community purchased the properties for an amount equal to the principal, interest, and fees. The second, also covered by the deeds of trust, consisted of other fees paid by Community: to its appraisers for information used by Community in its effort to have the order restraining the sales dissolved; to its attorneys in the same regard and in regard to the attempt to secure sequestration of rents, profits, and issues; and a default charge on the unpaid balance. The three items in the second amount totalled $19,100, which exceeds the sum held by the Receiver after payment of his fees and expenses.

Following the sales, the Receiver, Den-co, Community, and the Intervenors stipulated in open court that an order might be entered dismissing the involuntary petition in bankruptcy.

The issue in this case is whether, as the district court held, Community is entitled to the balance of the funds in the hands of the Receiver by virtue of its claims to the second amount discussed above; or whether, as the Referee in Bankruptcy held, the funds should be awarded to Denco, the alleged bankrupt.

Denco argues on appeal that the appointment of a Receiver did not effect transfer of title to the property, but rather that title remains in the alleged bankrupt until the disposition of the property was determined by the bankruptcy court. Imperial Assur. Co. v. Livingston, et al., 49 F.2d 745, 749, 74 A.L.R. 1336 (8th Cir. 1931). Denco maintains that since it retained title it should receive the rental income collected during that period. Community admits that normally a mortgagee is not entitled to rents from mortgaged property unless it is in possession, but points out that here it would have been in possession but for the temporary restraining order. Community argues that it did what it could under the circumstances by securing the Receiver’s assurance that any rents collected would be held for Community’s benefit. In support appellee cites Mortgage Loan Co. v. Livingstone, 45 F.2d 28 (8th Cir. 1930), cert. denied, 290 U.S. 685, 54 S.Ct. 121, 78 L.Ed. 590 (1933).

In Mortgage Loan, supra, the trustee under a second mortgage was estopped by a petition in bankruptcy and a restraining order of the bankruptcy court from foreclosing on the secured property, a hotel. However, the mortgagee received the assurance of the Receiver that rents from the property would be kept in a separate accounting; as here, no for *551 mal order of sequestration was made. The restraining order was eventually lifted, and at the foreclosure sale a deficit resulted. The mortgagee thereupon demanded the rental funds held by the Receiver. On appeal, the circuit court stated:

It is argued, and the lower court was of the view, that they were not entitled to these funds because they had never acquired actual possession of the property * * *. The mortgagee from time to time asked the court for permission to foreclose, which carried with it a request for possession, and asked the court to direct the receiver to apply these rents and profits, insurance, and interest * * *. They [the mortgagees] were, of course, unable to take possession of the property from the receiver except on an order of court, and the record in this ease warrants the conclusion that the receiver was acting not only on behalf of the general creditors, in so far as this property was concerned, but was also acting in behalf of these mortgagees * * *. By carrying on the business of this hotel company through a receivership, the court assumed the burden of administering the property and collecting the income therefrom for the benefit of whomsoever was entited thereto. This is not a case where the mortgagor was permitted to remain in possession of the property and to receive and disburse the earnings, but is a case where a receiver was appointed, who at the demand of the mortgagees, collected, impounded, and separately kept these funds. He was their receiver * * *. [Id. at 32.]

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Related

In re Consolidated Pioneer Mortg. Entities
91 F.3d 151 (Ninth Circuit, 1996)

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376 F.2d 548, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/denco-development-co-a-corporation-an-alleged-bankrupt-v-community-ca9-1967.