Hewitt v. Walters

119 P. 705, 21 Idaho 1, 1911 Ida. LEXIS 147
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 19, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 119 P. 705 (Hewitt v. Walters) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hewitt v. Walters, 119 P. 705, 21 Idaho 1, 1911 Ida. LEXIS 147 (Idaho 1911).

Opinion

AILSHIE, J.

The plaintiff applied to this court for an alternative writ of prohibition against Hon. E. A. Walters, a judge of the fourth judicial district, and O. E. Cannon, a receiver appointed by and acting under the direction of the judge of said court, to prohibit and restrain further proceedings under an order of sale made and entered by the judge of said court. At the suit of a creditor of the Great Western Beet Sugar Co. a receiver was appointed to take charge of the property and business of the corporation, who thereafter qualified and took charge of its property and continued to conduct the business under the direction of the court.

Various phases of that question have been considered by this court in the following cases: Idaho Fruit Lands Co. v. Great Western Beet Sugar Co. et al., 17 Ida. 273, 105 Pac. 562; S. C., 18 Ida. 1, 107 Pac. 989; Hewitt v. Great Western Beet Sugar Co., 20 Ida. 235, 118 Pac. 296.

[5]*5The plaintiff herein held a mortgage on the property of the Great Western Beet Sugar Co., and on about August 4, 1908, commenced his action in the district court of the fourth judicial district in and for Elmore county, to foreclose the same, and such proceedings were thereafter had as resulted in the entering of a decree of foreclosure on July 21, 1910, adjudging the plaintiff entitled to recover the sum of $109,275 from the Great Western Beet Sugar Co., and giving him a decree of foreclosure for that sum. It appears that the receiver in some way became a party to this foreclosure suit. Whether he was brought in by order of the court or by supplementary proceedings or on petition in intervention does not appear, but that he was taken into consideration and treated as a party to the action by the decree is clear upon the face of the decree itself. Most of the defendants defaulted, but a number appeared and answered and filed cross-complaints. It was adjudged and decreed that some nine of these defendants had claims that were prior and superior to the claim of the-plaintiff. They were accordingly given priorities by the decree. The decree thereupon describes the property to be sold and orders and adjudges that the property shall be sold by the receiver, and. out of the proceeds of the sale, the receiver shall pay, “All costs, claims and expenses incurred by said receiver, including all receiver’s certificates issued by said receiver, prior to the date of such payment, and all receiver’s certificates heretofore issued by Norman Isachson, receiver, under order of this court, for his costs and expenses as receiver, and for the care, preservation, protection, repair and maintenance of said system, and the costs of sale, and all other expenses of whatsoever kind properly chargeable against said estate.” This foreclosure decree further adjudged and decreed, “That the said The Great Western Beet Sugar Co. and all persons claiming by, through, or under it, and all lien claimants and judgment creditors be debarred and foreclosed of all right of redemption from such sale, and upon such sale being confirmed by the court, or the judge thereof at chambers, said receiver shall execute and deliver a deed or deeds of conveyance of the property so sold to the purchaser or purchasers [6]*6thereof.” Thereafter and on October 17, 1911, the attorneys who represented the plaintiff Hewitt in the foreclosure suit and the attorneys who represented the defendants who appeared in that case signed a stipulation which was entitled in the receivership case, and filed the same with the receiver. This stipulation is as follows:

“In the Matter of the Receivership of THE GREAT WESTERN BEET SUGAR CO.
“To O. E. Cannon, Receiver:
“The undersigned, attorneys for parties plaintiff and defendant in that certain action in the District Court of the Fourth Judicial District of the State of Idaho, in and for Elmore County, wherein Henry Hewitt, Jr., was plaintiff, and the Great Western Beet Sugar Co. et ah, were defendants, present herewith a copy of the decree made and entered in said action for your approval, and request that said parties plaintiff and defendant, each of them respectively, be accepted and admitted by you as creditors, mortgagees and lien holders of said Great Western Beet Sugar Co., and in the order of priority as in said decree set forth.
“Dated October 17, 1911.
“ J. G. WATTS.
“J. M. OWEN.
“D. B. GREEN.
“E. M. WOLFE.
“W. C. HOWIE.
“dan McLaughlin and
“PAGE & ENGLERT.
“J. L. NIDAY-
“B.'T. GRIFFITH.
“IRA E. BARBER.
“CHAS. F. KOELSCH.
“CAVANAH & BLAKE.
“A. F. SOLISS by O. O. HAGA.
“RICHARDS & HAGA.
“K. I. PERKY.
“WYMAN & WYMAN,
“For BESSIE STOETZEL.”

[7]*7Thereafter and on November 10, 1911, the judge heard the petition and application of the receiver for authority and an order to sell the property of the Great Western Beet Sugar Co., and thereupon made and entered an order directing a sale of the property and estate of the company in the hands of the receiver. At the same time the court directed that the same preferences, priorities, and order of distribution of the proceeds of the sale be observed as directed by the decree of foreclosure. It is parts of this order of sale that the plaintiff herein contends are in excess of and beyond the jurisdiction of the court. It contains a great many recitals and orders and directions to the receiver, which it is unnecessary to recite or consider here. We will only give the substance and effect of those portions of the order to which the plaintiff herein objects and urges as constituting an excess of jurisdiction. They are in substance as follows:

1. The order adjudged all indebtedness and expense of all kinds incurred by O. E. Cannon, as receiver, and by his predecessor, one Norman Isachson, aggregating upward of $43,000, to be a first and prior lien on the property covered by the mortgage of the plaintiff herein, and that the same should be paid before the payment of the plaintiff or any of the other liens or claims adjudged and decreed by the foreclosure judgment ;

2. The order directed that no bid should be received or accepted by the receiver for a less sum than $56,546.79;

3. It was ordered and directed that the receiver after making the sale should pay all receiver’s certificates, together with the interest thereon at the rate of 10% per annum from the date of their issuance;

4. It was ordered and directed that the sale should be made without the right of redemption, and that no redemption should be allowed after the acceptance of the bid and the confirmation of the sale by the judge of the court and that a deed absolute should thereupon be made to the purchaser.

We will consider the foregoing questions in the order in which they are above stated.

[8]*81.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
119 P. 705, 21 Idaho 1, 1911 Ida. LEXIS 147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hewitt-v-walters-idaho-1911.