In re Auto Safety Signal Lamp Co.
This text of 237 F. 299 (In re Auto Safety Signal Lamp Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
W. Bancroft Mellor was the treasurer of the bankrupt company and was mentioned in the schedule filed as a debtor. After the trustee had called on Mellor to turn over the sum of $598.49, he (Mellor) filed a claim against the bankrupt wherein he admitted having received $598.49 from-the bankrupt company, but set off a claim, alleged to be due him, greater, in amount, to wit, $2,096.25, leaving an alleged balance in his favor in the sum of $1,497.76. Mellor was examined concerning his claim, and the testimony of other witnesses was taken, resulting in the disallowance of it by the referee, who as a result of such hearing found and reported that Mellor’s indebtedness to the bankrupt company as treasurer was $682.74, made up of $598.49 admitted having received and the further sum of $84.25 presented and proved by the trustee.
, Summing up all of the reasons assigned for reversal of the order of the referee, the complaint is that the proceeding is unauthorized and that the evidence is insufficient to support the order in view of the former finding of the referee, that Mellor was a debtor to the bankrupt company as treasurer for the amount which he was directed to turn [301]*301over. While it appears that the referee, in disallowing the claim of Mellor, “states his (Mellor’s) indebtedness- to the bankrupt company as $682.74,” nevertheless, showing how he arrives at such amount, he clearly indicates in his former report, as he has since stated, justifying the order, that this amount is not a mere debt due by Mellor to the bankrupt company, but is, in fact, money which Mellor, without right or title, took from the company while he was treasurer, and has since failed to return. The referee’s report shows, and the same is borne out by the evidence, that Mellor filled in and made payable to himself certain checks, signed in blank by the president, while he (Mellor) was treasurer of the company, and which payments Mellor charged to commissions pretended to be due him for sale of stock, under an alleged agreement between him and the executive committee of the board of directors. The referee further found that this alleged agreement was never entered into; that Mellor, as treasurer of the company, had no right to draw checks payable to himself for commissions ; and that therefore, this sum having been improperly withdrawn from the treasury of the bankrupt company, Mellor had no title thereto, and was accordingly “indebted in that sum to the trustee.” The finding that the bankrupt so retained the money stated is justified from the evidence, and, Mellor having submitted to the court’s jurisdiction in attempting to establish a claim against the bankrupt company, forms a proper basis for the order that followed. Wiswall v. Campbell, 93 U. S. 347, 23 L. Ed. 923; In re Blake (C. C. A. 8th Cir.) 17 Am. Bankr. Rep. 668, 150 Fed. 279, 80 C. C. A. 167.
The order of the referee is affirmed.
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237 F. 299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-auto-safety-signal-lamp-co-paed-1916.