Galbraith v. Kline

7 F.2d 682, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1264
CourtDistrict Court, D. Montana
DecidedJune 26, 1925
DocketNo. 4
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 7 F.2d 682 (Galbraith v. Kline) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Montana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Galbraith v. Kline, 7 F.2d 682, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1264 (D. Mont. 1925).

Opinion

PRAY, District Judge.

This is a suit in equity to determine the right to possession of $18,600, deposited in the Glasgow National Bank, of Glasgow, Mont., and other property specifically described in the complaint and hereinafter mentioned.' Said sum of money represents the proceeds of sale of the Mercantile business formerly owned and conducted by Ambrose W. Chapin, above-named bankrupt, as hereinafter set forth. The other property described in the complaint consists of real estate, a certificate of deposit in the sum of $1,861.30, and cash amounting to $1,251.31; the last two items having been derived from sales, in the regular course of said business by plaintiff under an assignment from said Chapin. The real estate, certificate, and cash last mentioned are in possession of plaintiff, and the final disposition of all of said property awaits the result of this suit.

The facts appear to he as follows: That on September 13,1920, Ambrose W. Chapin, residing and doing business at Scobey, Mont., under the name and style of Scobey Mercantile Company, was the owner and possessed of certain personal and real property in Scobey, Mont., and certain real property in Canada; that he was indebted to divers persons, most of them nonresidents of Montana; that he was-insolvent, and on that day, while temporarily sojourning in St. Paul, Minn., conferring with his creditors, he made, executed, and delivered to John P. Galbraith, as his assignee, plaintiff herein, a deed of assignment, which was accepted by Galbraith, who assumed the execution thereof, and which, according to plaintiff, was duly assented to and accepted in writing by all of the then existing creditors (parties of the third part therein) of Chapin and the Scobey Mercantile Company, and on that day, Chapin made, executed, and delivered to Galbraith, as such assignee, separate deeds to all of his real estate; that by such assignment Chapin “sold, transferred, assigned, and delivered” to Galbraith all his property, real and personal, in trust, to take possession and convert the same into cash, pay the necessary expenses, and then the creditors, and any residue remaining was to be paid to Chapin.

Galbraith at once took possession of the property by his agent, one Peterson, as he was authorized to do by Ms deed of assignment. The deed of assignment was never recorded, but the deeds conveying the real estate were duly recorded in the proper counties. During the time Galbraith was in possession, as trustee, from September 13, 1920, to May 11, 1922, he disbursed to the creditors a dividend of 10 per cent., which they accepted. The creditors never objected to the assignment, which seems to he, in effect, a common-law trust agreement, or to the plaintiff’s management thereunder. Chapin had no property in Minnesota. All of the property subject to plaintiff’s management and control was situated at Scobey, Mont., with the exception of the said tract of 160 acres of land in Canada, which appears to have been mortgaged for $1,200.

On May 11, 1922, one Hillman, who succeeded Peterson as the agent of plaintiff, was ejected from said place of business by Chap-[683]*683in’s son, and plaintiff never thereafter regained possession of the Mercantile business. Hillman at the time protested against being ejected and dispossessed of the business, and plaintiff lias never consented to or acquiesced in such action. It does not appear that plaintiff has over committed any breach of his agreement. On May 11, 1922, the same day that plaintiff was dispossessed of the Mercantile business, said Chapin filed his voluntary petition in bankruptcy, was adjudged by above court as a bankrupt and his estate was referred to the referee at Glasgow, Mont. At the first meeting of creditors on May 27, 1922, the defendant herein was elected the trustee and qualified.

On May 13, 1922, the plaintiff, without knowing of the bankruptcy proceeding by Chapin, commenced an action in the district court of Daniels county, Mont., whereby he sought to recovei’ possession of the property that had been taken from his agent, Hill-man, and the property thereafter remained in the custody of the sheriff until May 31, 1922, when the plaintiff and defendant entered into an agreement (Exhibit H, in complaint) wherein they agreed that second party (defendant herein) should be permitted to inventory and ascertain the value of the property in question, and that thereupon the defendant, as such trustee, would apply to the referee for an order to sell the property, subject to further conditions in the agreement, as follows; agreed that plaintiff shall have possession until “ownership and right of possession and right of administration” has been determined by the court, and that no sale shall bo made until then, but that a sale might be made upon their joint written consent, approved by the referee, and upon giving a joint bill of sale, and that the proceeds of any such sale should be deposited to the joint credit of plaintiff and defendant as such trustee, after deducting expenses, and that the balance should remain “intact until the final determination of the ownership thereof.” They further agreed that defendant demands possession, and, unless delivered before June 30, 1922, that defendant will commence action for adjudication in the proper court “to determine validity of common-law trust deed under which said first party holds.” They further agree that no rights are waived on either side. This agreement was approved by the referee, who thereafter repudiated it, and together with the trustee (defendant herein) took possession of the Mercantile business and properly over the protest of plaintiff.

Prior to the commencement of this action, plaintiff demanded of defendant and of the referee that they deliver possession of the property to plaintiff and demand was refused. Chapin is indebted to creditors in the sum of $44,000, and therefore there can bo no equity in said property in favor of Chapin after the payment of his indebtedness. On July 29, 1922, the real property at Scobey, Mont., and the merchandise and fixtures, were sold by defendant for $18,-600. The sale was thereafter confirmed by the referee, and the money deposited in the Glasgow National Bank. Defendant has made the following disbursements: Montana Abstract Company, $32; taxes to county treasurer of Daniels county, $961.51; Sam Grossman, $75. The Wüliston Farmers’ Creamery Company is a creditor, and has been ever since the giving of the trust deed to plaintiff, and has never filed its claim in the bankruptcy proceedings. It also appears that plaintiff has never complied with sections 6144 to 6154, inclusive, of the Revised Code of Montana for 1907, and has never complied with the statutory provisions in force in Minnesota relating to assignments.

In the stipulation of the parties as to the evidence, dated November 26, 1924, and received December 30, 1924, it 'appears that the witness Peterson, the first agent of plaintiff in charge of the Mercantile business, made a list of creditors from Chapin’s books about the time of the execution of the trast agreement, and that the latter and Ms soil were employed there as clerks, so that the probability of a mistake having been made in the list of creditors is remote. Furthermore, it appeal’s that none of the persons or firms set out by Chapin in his schedules in bankruptcy and included in the stipulation has ever filed a claim in the bankruptcy proceedings, nor does the name of any of them appear on the creditors’ list concerning which testimony was given by plaintiff and Peterson.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 F.2d 682, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/galbraith-v-kline-mtd-1925.