First Nat. Bank v. Bonner

74 F.2d 139, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 3893
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedDecember 18, 1934
DocketNos. 1007 and 1017
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 74 F.2d 139 (First Nat. Bank v. Bonner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First Nat. Bank v. Bonner, 74 F.2d 139, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 3893 (10th Cir. 1934).

Opinion

McDERMOTT, Circuit Judge.

Equity Rule 75 (28 USCA § 723) prescribes the procedure for drawing onto the record a condensed statement of the trial proceedings. It contemplates one statement, and one only. If counsel cannot agree upon a fair condensation of the evidence, the trial eourt is empowered to direct a proper statement. This rule has been flagrantly violated here. There are six separate fragmentary statements of one trial, labeled “Supplemental Statement,” “Amendment of Narrative Statement,” “Additional and Corrective Statement,” etc. Moreover the statements contain comment, ai'gument, and italicized documents which very manifestly are not a narrative of what occurred at the trial, but are contentions of counsel. Such have no place in a condensed statement.

By this slovenly disregard of the rule, counsel have saved themselves a little work, but by shouldering that work onto the members of this court, they have caused us to expend a disproportionate amount of labor in trying to figure out what evidence was adduced at the trial and injected an element of uncertainty into what should be certain. Counsel know, and doubtless count upon, the reluctance of courts to punish clients for the derelictions of their counsel by dismissing appeals or assessing penalties. Barber Asphalt Paving Co. v. Standard, etc., Co., 275 U. S. 372, 48 S. Ct. 183, 72 L. Ed. 318. If our repeated admonitions continue to be disregarded, and drastic steps must be taken, counsel who are responsible should indemnify their clients for the consequences of their own neglect.

From this unsatisfactory record, and from the opinions on two former appeals (Cassidy v. Bonner (C. C. A.) 54 F.(2d) 234, and Bonner v. Cannon (C. C. A.) 60 F.[141]*141(2d) 228), we glean that in 1922 J. S. Mullen was adjudged a bankrupt, his estate consisting chiefly of mortgaged real estate. The Waddell Investment Company owned mortgages on many of the farms involved, and Bonner owned a second mortgage on many of the farms mortgaged to Waddell. The appellants in 1007 held liens on other lands. The lands were sold free of encumbrance, the liens attaching to the proceeds. Twelve years have elapsed; the bankruptcy proceeding is still open, and the appellants in .1007 have been denied the proceeds of their securities because of controversies in which they are not c-oneemed. All of the uneneumbei'ed assets of the estate, and thousands of dollars more, have been dissipated because the bankruptcy court undertook to administer encumbered real estate when it must have been apparent there could be no surplus for the general creditors. This was done despite the unbroken line of authorities that it should not be done. Kimmel v. Crocker (C. C. A. 10) 72 F.(2d) 599, and the many eases there cited. Despite the fact that their compensation depends upon the amount of moneys disbursed by them, referees should resist the importunities of mortgagees who desire to cut off rights of redemption, and should decline to administer encumbered properties unless there is a real prospect of a surplus for general creditors. With this general background, we proceed to the three questions presented on these two appeals.

Appeal In No. 1007.

The trustee deposited proceeds of all sales in one bank account, without earmarking the funds. It is assumed that he kept books, at least sufficient to enable him to keep track of the proceeds which were impressed with liens in favor of different mortgagees. The fact that all the moneys of the estate were in one account at the bank is no justification for displacing a lien of a mortgagee on thp proceeds of his security in favor of another mortgagee of other real estate, or for using the funds of one mortgagee to pay expenses or losses connected with a controversy over lands in which such mortgagee had no shadow of interest or claim. Yet «eat is the result of the order appealed from.

Bonner and one Cassidy were in a controversy over priority of liens on two pieces of real estate — a controversy in which these appellants had not the slightest concern. On December .16, 1925, at a general meeting of the creditors, Bonner and Cassidy agreed that Cassidy had a prior lien as to one tract, and that the referee might make an order to that effect. The referee, now dead, evidently understood that the agreement covered both tracts; at any rate, he signed a written order directing the trustee to draw his warrants in favor of Cassidy for $3,973.-12 and “please issue at once and forward to me to be countersigned and delivered.” The trustee did as directed; the warrants were issued, countersigned and delivered to Cassidy.

Some time prior to March 2, 1926, the mistake of the referee was discovered; on that date Bonner filed a petition with the referee setting out that $2,329.89 had been paid Cassidy by mistake, and asking that “the referee make an order directing the said W. J. Cassidy to pay back into the hands of the trustee, and on final hearing that said funds be directed to be paid to the said W. M. Bonner.” The referee, after a full hearing, decided that Bonner’s lien was prior, and also granted Bonner’s petition of March 2, viz. — “the said W. J. Cassidy is ordered and directed to forthwith return all funds to H. M. Cannon, Trustee, which ho received from the said H. M. Cannon, Trustee, under said order from the sale of the above described property * * * that the trustee herein, H. M. Camion, be, and he is hereby directed to turn over the said sum of $2329.89, the amount received from the sale of said property.”

That order was affirmed by this court (Cassidy v. Bonner, 54 F.(2d) 234) and is final.

Efforts to collect the sum from Cassidy or the sureties on his supersedeas bond having failed, Bonner then asked that the trustee pay such sum of $2329.89 to Bonner, either personally or from other funds of the estate. The order now appealed from was entered pursuant to that request, and directs that this sum be credited to Bonner in his accounts with Cannon, the trustee. The effect of this order is that this loss, occasioned by a bona fide mistake of the referee, is saddled upon appellants who are strangers to the controversy and in no way responsible for the loss. This is clearly erroneous.

In the first place it is an impeachment and modification of the order of March 24, 1926, affirmed by this court and final. That order granted the petition of Bonner and was the proper method of rectifying the mistake as far as it could be. It ordered Cassidy to “forthwith return” the sum received from Cannon and directed Cannon to turn over “the said sum of $2329.89, the amount received from the sale of said property.” [142]*142That order is clear, correct, and final. Bonner had a lien on a specific fund; it had found its way by mistake to Cassidy; Cassidy was directed to return'it to Cannon, whereupon Cannon was directed to turn it over to Bonner. To convert that lien on a specific fund into a general claim against the estate, is to amend and modify an order which has become final.

The Special Master, appointed in the present case, seemed to be of opinion that the order of the referee to the trustee to pay Cassidy was void because Bonner and his counsel testified they had stepped out of the hearing room when the order was made. The controversy was pending before the' referee; Bonner and his counsel were present at a general meeting of the creditors; the referee was advised a settlement had been made as to one tract, and his jurisdiction was specifically invoked by a request to enter an order by agreement.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
74 F.2d 139, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 3893, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-nat-bank-v-bonner-ca10-1934.