Eldridge v. Payette-Boise Water Users' Ass'n

279 P. 713, 48 Idaho 182, 1929 Ida. LEXIS 31
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 31, 1929
DocketNo. 5326.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 279 P. 713 (Eldridge v. Payette-Boise Water Users' Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eldridge v. Payette-Boise Water Users' Ass'n, 279 P. 713, 48 Idaho 182, 1929 Ida. LEXIS 31 (Idaho 1929).

Opinion

*184 GIVENS, J.

— At the instance of plaintiff, a receiver was appointed to take charge of the property of defendant corporation. A large number of creditors filed claims, some of which were disallowed. Exceptions were filed to the report of the receiver by owners of certain of the disallowed claims as follows: J. B. Eldridge, First National Bank of Caldwell, Walter Griffiths, C. M. Rankin, L. J. Magee, Naomi Lambert and W. H. Kollenborn.

A hearing was had on the report and all of the creditors who had filed exceptions to the report of the receiver appeared except Kollenborn. The claims of all creditors who appeared were sustained by the district court either wholly or in part and the receiver overruled in this respect. An order of distribution was entered for the amount of their claims in favor of all creditors, both those appearing and those not appearing, whose claims had been approved by the court.

From this action Kollenborn and F. M. Brown, stockholders in defendant corporation, have appealed, claiming to represent the interests of the other stockholders.

A motion to dismiss the appeal has been filed for the reason, among others, that service of notice of the appeal has not been served on all adverse parties.

The notice of appeal is directed to the plaintiff and defendant, the receiver, and all the creditors who filed exceptions to the disallowance of their claims and appeared at the hearing before the district court.

It is specifically urged in the motion to dismiss that the notice of appeal has not been served on all the other creditors, some forty in number, who made no appearance in the action but whose claims, filed with the receiver, have been approved by the court.

*185 All the creditors, those served and those not served, are interested in having the order allowing their claims sustained. No preferential claims have been allowed.

This court has repeatedly held that service of notice of appeal is jurisdictional and that where such service is not made on all parties whom the judgment on appeal might adversely affect, the appeal will be dismissed.

We may concede that the judgment on appeal in the case before us might adversely affect the creditors who failed to appear at the hearing below, and who, the record discloses, have not been served. But it does not necessarily follow that these creditors ’ should have been served with such a notice. Not all persons whose interests might possibly be adversely affected by the judgment on appeal are entitled to notice but only those persons who are pan'ties. (C. S., sec. 7151.)

The term “adverse party” as used in C. S., sec. 6726, providing for relief from default, has been declared by this court to mean “a party to the original action or proceeding or one who has been brought into the case by the order of the court, or one who has been allowed by the court to intervene or become a party plaintiff or defendant in the action as originally instituted.” (Kerns v. Morgan, 11 Ida. 572, 83 Pac. 954.) We believe that the words as used in C. S., sec. 7153, should be given a similar meaning.

The question of whether a claimant in a receivership action who merely files a claim and makes no further appearance is a “party” to the proceedings is one which, apparently, has been rarely considered by either text-writers or the courts.

Clark in his recent work on Receivers, 2d ed., sec. 649 c, states that “the filing of a claim is not equivalent to a pleading in the case in which the receiver is appointed,” citing International Banking Corp. v. Lynch, 269 Fed. 242.

Discussing the matter further, he says:

“The filing of a claim with a receiver has not the full force and effect of an intervention because the party who files the claim does not, strictly speaking, become a party *186 to the receivership suit. A claim should he verified and when filed with the receiver becomes notice to the receiver of such a claim. The receiver may allow or disallow a claim after thorough investigation as his good judgment and the advice of counsel demand. When this claim is disallowed, the holder of the claim may intervene in the receivership case, ask that he be made a party, and formally present his claim to be heard by the court. He may also, if circumstances of the case demand it, ask leave to sue the receiver on this claim, thereby placing himself in a position to have the judgment of the court reviewed.” (Clark, supra, sec. 656.)

Tardy, in Smith on Receivers (2d ed.), states that “only persons who have intervened and become parties or have in some other way obtained a right to do so may object to the allowance of claims presented (to the court) for approval. (Sec. 593.)

And in a note he elucidates this statement as follows: “Creditors may not object to the allowance of claims until they have become parties by intervening and presenting their own claims.”

It might legitimately be inferred from these quotations that the writers were of the opinion that creditors who have merely filed a claim with a receiver have not thereby become parties to the receivership proceedings.

This conclusion is borne out by the -few decisions which have passed upon similar questions.

In the case of Scott v. Great Western Coal Co., 223 Ill. 271, 79 N. E. 53, a creditor filed a bill against the corporation asking that a receiver be appointed. Other creditors were not made parties, although they did file claims. These same creditors later prosecuted this appeal. The appeal was dismissed on the ground that the appellants were not parties to the record. The court said:

“The plaintiffs in error, claiming to be creditors of the defendant corporation, presented their claims to the receiver. No action was taken by the court allowing or disallowing said claims, nor was leave asked or granted to permit them *187 to file intervening petitions, or to present eross-bills by which their claims might have been adjudicated. The mere filing of a claim with the receiver is not sufficient to make the claimant a party to the proceedings.”

In Jensen v. Angeles Brewing Co., 87 Wash. 392, 151 Pac. 825, the receiver rendered a report to which, at a hearing after notice, several creditors objected. The report was modified and as modified confirmed. The receiver appealed from that part of the order fixing his compensation. Notice of appeal was served on all the creditors who had appeared at the hearing before the trial court at which the order appealed from had been entered. No such notice was served on the other creditors who had merely filed claims. A motion to dismiss was made for want of service on all parties.

A Washington statute requires that notice of appeal shall be served on ‘ ‘ all parties who have appeared in the action or proceeding.” This statute, in requiring service on “all parties,” is substantially similar to our own. (C. S., sec. 7153.) The court in that case said:

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Bluebook (online)
279 P. 713, 48 Idaho 182, 1929 Ida. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eldridge-v-payette-boise-water-users-assn-idaho-1929.