Hart v. Wiltsee

19 F.2d 903, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2378
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedMay 17, 1927
DocketNo. 2070
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 19 F.2d 903 (Hart v. Wiltsee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hart v. Wiltsee, 19 F.2d 903, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2378 (1st Cir. 1927).

Opinion

BINGHAM, Circuit Judge.

July 14, 1922, Henry S. Parker, a creditor of the New England Oil Corporation, brought a creditor’s bill seeking the appointment of receivers for the oil corporation in the District Court of Massachusetts. July 20, 1922, Gas-par G. Bacon and Irvin MeD. Garfield were appointed receivers. January 8, 1923, the New England Oil Refining Company and Francis R. Hart, Daniel G. Wing, Alfred L. Aiken, Allan Forbes, Frank Finsthwait, and Thomas F. West, Jr., a committee representing the holders of notes of the New England Oil Corporation, were made parties to the receivership proceeding. January 22, 1923, the committee presented a plan of reorganization,1 which the court on February 17, 1923, approved. February 26, 1923, Ernest Wiltsee was allowed to intervene and file a late'proof of claim, and on June 27, 1923, was adjudged a creditor of the Oil Corporation in the sum of $176,000, wljich judgment on January 5, 1925, was affirmed by this court. May 8, 1924, Wiltsee filed a petition (see margin2) asking information as to the [905]*905reorganization effected by the committee and tbe manner of carrying it into effect. August 13, 1924, a decree was entered directing the committee to give the desired information. August 27, 1924, the committee filed its report. March 13, 1925, Wiltsee filed a second petition asking for further information. April 4, 1925, he filed another petition, as an amendment to his petition of March 13, in which he set out that the object and purpose of the plan of reorganization and the intervention of the noteholders’ committee were to acquire control of the New England Oil Refining Company, in the interest of the Petroleum Heat & Power Company and other companies in order to control or destroy the competition in interstate commerce in fuel oil, and particularly to control or destroy the competition of the Ballard Company therein, and prayed an investigation of the activities of the notehold-ers’ committee, the syndicate, the syndicate’s managers, and others who participated in the plans of reorganization, “to the end that it may be determined whether the order and decree of approval of said plans ought not to be revoked, or some other appropriate remedy be given to your petitioner and other creditors and stockholders of the defendant, New England Oil Corporation, and that in said inquiry witnesses having knowledge of the facts be summoned and orally examined.” April 27, 1925, a decree was entered requiring the committee to make a further report, which it did on May 19, 1925.

Hearings were had at various times on the petition of May 8, 1924, and petition of March 13, 1925, as amended April 4, 1925, down to June 26, 1925, when the court declined to proceed further with the Sherman Act inquiry and ordered it and the evidence taken under it struck out. Thereafter hearings were had, at which testimony was taken, both oral and written, when on July 29, 1925, the taking of evidence was concluded. July 28, 1925, the day before the completion of the evidence, Wiltsee filed a petition in his own behalf asking damages against the noteholders’ committee for failure of duty. July 31, 1925, he presented a petition (see margin3) in behalf of himself and all [906]*906other creditors of the Oil Corporation who might become parties thereto, containing substantially the same allegations as the petition of July 28th, and ashing for damages against the committee. August 4, 1925, the District Court allowed the last petition to be filed nunc pro tune as .of May 8, 1924, the date of Wiltsee’s original petition.

[907]*907October 7-8, 1925, a decree was entered in wbicb it was found tbat tbe committee obtained tbe decree of February 17, 1923, approving tbe plan of reorganization through fraud and were guilty of fraud in carrying out tbe plan. It ordered (1) rescission or modification of the decree of February 17, 1923, approving tbe plan, so far as it affect[908]*908ed the rights of Wiltsee or any other creditors of the receivership estate who might thereafter join in the proceedings and be held entitled to rescind the settlement of their debt claims with the committee; and (2) that creditors, who in good faith and without notice of the invalidity of the reorganization proceedings assigned their claims to the committee or its nominee and accepted preferred and common stock of the Refining Company for their debt claims, by joining in these proceedings were entitled to elect to rescind said settlements, return their stock to the receiver for the committee, and be reinstated in their rights as unpaid creditors of said receivership estate and/or against said committee.

The committee undertook to appeal from the decree of October 7-8,1925, but the District Court denied their right to do so. The committee then filed a petition in this court for a writ of mandamus requiring the District Court to allow their appeal. November 16, 1925, the petition for mandamus was denied. Thereafter on December 14, 1925, a decree was entered in the District Court amending the decree of October 7-8, but only in so far as the decree of October 7-8 fixed the time when the acts and things therein required to be done should be performed. This decree ordered the receiver to notify creditors of the opportunity to join in the proceedings and rescind their debt settlements, and directed that the case stand for hearing January 25, 1926, on “all petitions to intervene and objections thereto and any other appropriate pleadings, as well as on the general issue of the extent of the committee’s liability.

Numerous creditors in tbe early part of January, 1926, filed petitions to intervene and on January 18,1926, tbe committee filed objections to tbe claims of tbe intervening creditors and to tbe attempted rescissions by tbe creditors permitted by tbe decree of October 7-8 — December 14, 1925. January 23, 1926, tbe committee filed various motions to tbe effect that (1) Wiltsee’s petition of July 28, 1925, should be dismissed on tbe ground that tbe claim therein set out belonged to tbe receivership estate and could only be enforced by tbe receiver in separate proceedings, and that that petition was superseded by the Wiltsee petition of July 31, 1925; (2) that tbe petition of July 31st be dismissed; and (3) that tbe petitions filed on behalf of all former creditors be dismissed. On that date (January 23) tbe committee also, without waiving their rights under their motions, filed answers to tbe petition of July 31, 1925, and to tbe creditors’ intervening petitions.

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Bluebook (online)
19 F.2d 903, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hart-v-wiltsee-ca1-1927.