F. S. Harmon & Co. v. Olympic Furniture Co.

296 P. 174, 161 Wash. 15, 1931 Wash. LEXIS 955
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 21, 1931
DocketNo. 22861. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 296 P. 174 (F. S. Harmon & Co. v. Olympic Furniture Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
F. S. Harmon & Co. v. Olympic Furniture Co., 296 P. 174, 161 Wash. 15, 1931 Wash. LEXIS 955 (Wash. 1931).

Opinion

Beals, J.

Olympic Furniture Company, a domestic corporation, engaged in business in the city of Olympia as a retail dealer in furniture, being insolvent, under date November 19, 1929, executed to Seattle Association of Credit Men, a corporation, as assignee, an assignment whereby it transferred to its assignee, in trust for its creditors, all of its assets. This assignment was, November 27, 1929, filed- for record in the office of the auditor of Thurston county, and the assignee accepted the trust thereby created, took possession of the assets of the assignor, and proceeded to administer the same. In response to notices sent out by the assignee, most of the creditors executed assignments of their respective claims to the assignee, which were delivered to it to enable it to better carry out the purposes of the assignment.

F. S. Harmon & Company, a general creditor, ignored the assignment, and brought this action against the Olympic Furniture Company (hereinafter called the Furniture Co.) to recover judgment upon the account due it, which was an open account for furniture sold. In its complaint, Harmon & Company alleged the indebtedness in its favor, the insolvency of the Fur *17 niture Co., and its assignment for the benefit of its creditors. Beside the usual demand for money judgment, plaintiff also prayed for the appointment of a receiver. At the time of the filing of the action, an order to show cause was issued requiring the Furniture Co. to appear December 23, 1929, and show cause why a receiver should not be appointed, as prayed for in the complaint. On the return day, the hearing on the order to show cause was continued to December 30 following, on which date the show cause order was stricken from the calendar for want of prosecution.

No further steps were taken in the action until February 11,1930, when, on plaintiff’s motion, an order of default was entered against the defendant (the order reciting that service of process had been made upon the defendant), followed by the entry of a money judgment in plaintiff’s favor, which judgment recited the making of findings of fact and conclusions of law. In this judgment, the plaintiff’s prayer for the appointment of a receiver was ignored. Three days thereafter, February 14, 1930, the plaintiff filed a motion for the appointment of J. H. Blakiston as receiver of the Furniture Co., at which time, without any notice whatever to the defendant, Mr. Blakiston was appointed receiver, and his bond fixed in the sum of one thousand dollars.

Four days later, Seattle Association of Credit Men, a corporation (hereinafter referred to as the Association), filed its petition, praying for leave to intervene in the action, alleging the insolvency of the Furniture Co., and its assignment to the Association for the benefit of its creditors. The petition further alleged the acceptance of the trust by the Association, and that the assignee had been diligently and economically administering the estate of the insolvent for the benefit of its creditors, including plaintiff.

*18 Upon the filing of this petition, an order was entered, allowing the Association to intervene, whereupon the Association filed its complaint in intervention, realleging the matters hereinabove set forth, and praying that an order to show cause be entered, requiring Mr. .Blakiston, as receiver, to appear and show cause why the order appointing him receiver should not be vacated. A motion to vacate and set aside the judgment against defendant and the order appointing the receiver was also filed by the Association, supported by affidavits, stating that no notice of the appointment of the receiver had been given to any person, and setting forth other matters which it was alleged had transpired since the date of the assignment.

The Harmon Company answered the complaint in intervention, denying certain of the allegations therein contained, and pleading’ affirmatively that,' prior to its assignment, the Furniture Co. had paid large sums to certain of its creditors, which payments constituted unlawful preferences, to- the unfair advantage of the creditors so preferred and to the detriment of other creditors, including Harmon & Company. Many affidavits were filed; the receiver filed his answer to the order to show cause-; and the. trial court, April 21, 1930, made an order, containing a brief resume of the prior proceeding’s, and requiring the Association, as intervener, and all persons interested, to appear at a time therein fixed and show cause why the appointment of Mr. Blakiston as receiver should not be confirmed. To this order the Association filed its answer, pleading the assignment to it, and other matters which it considered pertinent.

At the hearing upon this order to show cause, the trial court ruled that the prior appointment of the receiver should be ratified and confirmed. The hearing upon the order to show cause evidently took place On. *19 or prior to May 13,1930, on which date the court signed an order embodying its ruling hereinabove referred to, ratifying and confirming the appointment of the receiver. This order was apparently filed with the clerk on the day it bears date, but the file marks were subsequently erased and a notation written in as follows: “Unfiled at the request of Wayne W. Keyes.” The order was finally filed May 19, 1930, after written notice to the defendant and to the intervener that it would be presented for filing on that date.

Meanwhile, the Furniture Co. filed its voluntary petition in bankruptcy, and, May 17, it was adjudicated a bankrupt. June 13 following, at a meeting of the creditors, Mr. J. H. Blakiston, the receiver, was appointed trustee in bankruptcy of the insolvent. The trustee qualified by filing his bond, and thereafter made a written demand upon the Association to the effect that it turn over to him, as trustee, the assets of the insolvent. This demand was never complied with, but has never been withdrawn.

June 25 following, Mr. Blakiston, as receiver of the Furniture Co., made a written demand upon the Association, requiring it to forthwith surrender to him, as receiver, the property of the Furniture Co. which it had received as assignee. The Association, by letter, declined to comply with this demand, alleging that the order appointing the receiver was void, and that, in any event, the bankruptcy proceedings had superseded the receivership.

July 2, 1930, the court, on motion of the receiver, issued an order to show cause, requiring the Association, as assignee and intervener, and Peter Balkema, its secretary, to show cause why they should not forthwith surrender to the receiver the property in their possession under the assignment from the Furniture Co., or, in case of their refusal so to do, why they *20 should not he punished for contempt. The Association and Mr. Balkema moved to quash this order upon two grounds: First, because the origina] order appointing Mr. Blakiston receiver was void for want of notice, and that the order thereafter entered, purporting to confirm and ratify the appointment of the receiver, was consequently invalid; and, second, that the superior court had jurisdiction neither of the subject matter nor of the parties, because of the pendency of the bankruptcy proceedings.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
296 P. 174, 161 Wash. 15, 1931 Wash. LEXIS 955, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/f-s-harmon-co-v-olympic-furniture-co-wash-1931.