Goddard v. Electric Shovel Coal Corp.

97 F.2d 754, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 3862
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMay 24, 1938
DocketNo. 6499
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 97 F.2d 754 (Goddard v. Electric Shovel Coal Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goddard v. Electric Shovel Coal Corp., 97 F.2d 754, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 3862 (7th Cir. 1938).

Opinion

TREANOR, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from an order and judgment of the District Court vacating a previous order of the same court. The previous order allowed a claim of the Mississippi Coal Corporation which had been filed in a receivership cause entitled Illinois Printing Company et al. v. Electric Shovel Coal Corporation, D.C., 20 F.Supp. 181.

The claim in question had been filed in May, 1932, and was based upon a note for 856,217.50 and two open accounts of $10,000 and $18,000 respectively. The claim was in the usual form and verified by the treasurer, but the note was not attached. One of the sworn statements was that the claim “is now owing the claimant and there has been no assignment of it and no person other than claimant has any interest in it.” Upon objection to the claim by the receiver it was referred to a Special Master in Chancery. The Master reported that no one appeared in behalf of the claimant and that the claim apparently had been abandoned. Ilis recommendation was that the claim be not allowed. In his report, respecting this claim, the Master stated that the evidence submitted by counsel for the receiver in support of the objections to the claim disclosed that the Electric Shovel Coal Corporation had counterclaims against the Mississippi Coal Corporation that would caucel the entire indebtedness claimed by the Mississippi Coal Corporation in its proof of claim, except as to a balance of $8,755.50. The report of the Master concluded as follows:

“As the claim of Mississippi Coal Corporation was not proven and appears to be abandoned, and in view of the fact that the set-off on behalf of the Receivers does not exceed the amount of the claim and therefore no judgment is asked against Mississippi Coal Corporation, I am not making more specific findings.”

Under date of April 24, 1933, the following entry appears in the record of the receivership proceedings:

“Now on this 24th day of April, A. D. 1933, It Is Ordered by the Court that the Report of William II. Haight, Special Master in Chancery, on the claim of the Mississippi Coal Corporation against Electric Shovel Coal Corporation, a corporation, is hereby confirmed.
“It is further Ordered that the Claim of the Mississippi Coal Corporation is allowed in the sum of $8,755.50 and disallowed as to all of the remainder.”

In the meantime one Goddard, inter-pleader-appellant here, had commenced suit against the Mississippi Coal Corporation, and on May 3, 1934, supplemental to his suit, he obtained a writ of attachment, or garnishment, against the receiver of the Electric Shovel Coal Corporation; and in answer to interrogatories the receiver stated that he held in his hands money due the Mississippi Coal Corporation in the sum of $8,755.50. Goddard obtained a judgment against the Mississippi Coal Corporation in the sum of $8,-880.85 on June 13, 1934, and the District Court later enjoined Goddard from proceeding further in his garnishment suit against the receiver of the Electric Shovel Coal Corporation. As a result of activities of other creditors of the Mississippi Coal Corporation, the receiver of the Electric Shovel Coal Corporation filed a petition in the receivership cause in which he recited the indebtedness of himself to the Missis[756]*756sippi Coal Corporation in the sum of $8,-755.50 and prayed that the court order the several claimants to the fund to answer his petition and present their claims to the fund. On December 6, 1935, the District Court directed the receiver to pay. the money owing to the Mississippi Coal Corporation to the clerk of the District Court, “subject to any order which may be made by the Court upon said claim or upon any other claim that may be filed in said intérpleader suit * *

Subsequently, all claims against the Electric Shovel Coal Corporation having been paid, the receivership was terminated and the receiver was ordered and directed to deliver to the Electric Shovel Coal Corporation all property of any kind and character received by him from the corporation as receiver, or acquired by him as such receiver for and on behalf of the corporation.

An order terminating the receivership was entered on the 25th day of June, 1936, but the order left unchanged the status of the fund which, by the order of December 6, 1935, the receiver had been directed to pay to the Clerk of the District Court, “subject to any order which may be made by the court upon said claim * *

On the 23rd day of March, 1937, the Electric Shovel Coal Corporation, by leave of court, filed what it denominated “its intervening petition,” in which the corporation set up a claim of ownership to the fund which the receiver had deposited with the Clerk of the Court under the order of December 6, 1935.

The motion of Goddard to dismiss the intervening petition was overruled, and the movant was ruled to plead to the petition. After a hearing upon the petition and a-nswer thereto,, the District Court found that the entry of April 24, 1933, which allowed the claim of the Mississippi Coal Corporation in the sum of $8,755.50 was the result of inadvertence and mistake; and the court stated as a conclusion of law that the order should be vacated and that all subsequent orders of the court which were based thereon should be vacated. From the order and judgment of the District Court giving effect to the foregoing finding and conclusion of law this appeal is prosecuted by Goddard.

The evidence discloses that after the discharge of the receiver the Electric Shovel Coal Corporation discovered that the claim of the Mississippi Coal Corporation had been made fraudulently, or mistakenly, by the Mississippi Coal Corporation; that at the time the claim was filed, the note upon which the claim for $56,217.50 was based had been transferred and the Mississippi Coal Corporation did not then, nor at any time thereafter, own the note, although a sworn statement accompanied the claim to the effect that the Mississippi Coal Corporation was the owner of the note in question, that there had been no assignment of it and that no person, firm or corporation other than claimant had any interest in it. It also appears from the evidence that after the Electric Shovel Coal Corporation had been discharged from the receivership the then owner of- the note in question took steps to collect the note from the discharged corporation and that the corporation had executed a new note in payment of the note in question, and that the new note had been accepted in full and final payment of the old note. There was also in evidence a stipulation between- the Mississippi Coal Corporation and Electric Shovel Coal Corporation stating that the Mississippi Coal Corporation was not entitled to recover upon its claim, which had been filed in the receivership proceeding; and it was “stipulated and consented that an order be made and entered vacating the order of April 24, 1933, and directing that the sum of $8,755.50 be paid and returned forthwith together with any interest or accruals thereon to Electric Shovel Coal Corporation.”

It is important first to consider the respective interests of Goddard and the Electric Shovel Coal Corporation in the fund which is the subject of the present controversy. Goddard claims the fund as a judgment creditor of the Mississippi Coal Corporation; but there has not been at any time any adjudication that Goddard has a legal interest in the fund.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Wilson v. Los Angeles County Employees Ass'n
273 P.2d 824 (California Court of Appeal, 1954)
Acme Poultry Corporation v. United States
146 F.2d 738 (Fourth Circuit, 1944)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
97 F.2d 754, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 3862, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goddard-v-electric-shovel-coal-corp-ca7-1938.