In re Drake Motor & Tire Mfg. Corp.

16 F.2d 142, 1923 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 990
CourtDistrict Court, D. Tennessee
DecidedJuly 26, 1923
DocketNo. 2625
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 16 F.2d 142 (In re Drake Motor & Tire Mfg. Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Drake Motor & Tire Mfg. Corp., 16 F.2d 142, 1923 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 990 (tennessed 1923).

Opinion

HICKS, District Judge.

I briefly review the preceding steps in this controversy:

On June 6th George S. Barger and others filed an involuntary petition in bankruptcy against the Drake Motor & Tire Manufacturing Corporation. On June 12th the Drake Corporation answered the petition, admitting all its material allegations. On June 14th Ralph Cate was appointed receiver of the Drake Corporation. On June 21st R. A. Brown, receiver, and William Hill, J. R. Sea-ton, Brace B. Seaton, and E. B. Brace were allowed to enter their appearance and make defense to the involuntary petition filed by Barger and others. They made defense by answering and by motion to revoke the appointment of Cate, receiver of this court. This motion was denied on July 11, 1923.

On June 26th Newman and others, petitioning creditors in the involuntary petition, moved to revoke the order allowing Brown, receiver, and others to file an answer and to strike the answer from the record, which motions were disallowed on July 11, 1923. On June 20, 1925, the petitioning creditors, Barger and others, filed a petition seeking an injunction against Hill and others, inhibiting them from interfering with the process, procedure, and jurisdiction of this court in hearing and determining the involuntary petition in bankruptcy filed against the Drake Corporation on June 6th, which motion was allowed as against Hill, the Seatons, and Bruce on July 11, 1922. The clerk was directed to set the case for hearing upon the involuntary petition upon the question of adjudication “at as early a date as compatible with a speedy determination thereof.”

No further steps were taken in this case, until July 19th, when the Drake Corporation filed its petition herein, averring, in substance, that it desired to file a voluntary pe[143]*143tition in bankruptcy, setting out certain grounds therefor in said petition, and averring that they were intimidated and prevented from so doing by certain threats and innuendoes made by Brown, receiver, and by Hill and others, their agents and attorneys, to the effect that, if it should file said voluntary petition in bankruptcy, its officers and directors would be immediately prosecuted for contempt of the chancery court upon a charge of violating an injunction of that court.

On July 20th Brown, receiver, and others moved to strike said petition for an injunction from the record, and also answered said petition. In this answer a point blank denial is made of any threats having been made that, in ease the officers and directors of the Drake Corporation filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy, they would be prosecuted for contempt and placed in jail. It is also specifically denied that there has been any intimidation by threats or otherwise to prevent the Drake Corporation from filing a voluntary petition. There does, however, appear in said answer the following statement:

“The affairs of said corporation and its properties and assets are now in the hands of respondent R. A. Brown, as receiver under a chancery court proceeding pending in the chancery court of Knox county, Tenn., and are wholly within the jurisdiction of that court, and neither the said Moore & Hartman nor any other person now has any authority to act for or on behalf of said corporation, except by and with the consent and under the authority and orders given of and by said chancery court. Said corporation and all its officers, directors, and representatives, if any there be, have been enjoined by said chancery court from in any way disposing of or transferring or changing the nature of any of the property or assets of any kind or character belonging to said corporation, and notwithstanding the motion in said chancery court by some of the alleged directors of said corporation to have the injunction dissolved, said chancery court refused to dissolve the same, and said injunction is still in full force and effect. Moreover, said proceeding in chancery has been sustained as a general creditors’ proceeding and said injunction has, by order of said chancery court, been enlarged so as to enjoin the defendant corporation and all its officers, directors, agents, and attorneys from instituting any sort of proceeding or taking any sort of action which would in any way be preliminary to, in aid of, incidental to, or have the effect of transferring the title or possession of any of the property and assets .of said defendant corporation or changing its nature, status, or condition in any sense whatsoever, or the taking of any step or the doing of anything, the purpose or effect of which might be to defeat this court of its jurisdiction and possession of any of the property or assets, books, papers, or records belonging to defendant corporation. And this enlargement of the injunction of said chancery court is also stiff in full force and has not been modified or dissolved.”

The case referred to in the excerpt from the said answer is a biff filed by William Hill, J. R. Seaton, Bruce B. Seaton, and E. -B. Bruce against the Drake Motor & Tire Manufacturing Corporation, on April 12,1923, and pursuant to the filing of said bill R. A. Brown, clerk and master of the court, was appointed receiver of the Drake Corporation, and the Drake Corporation was enjoined from disposing of or changing the nature of any of the assets thereof. Upon its being made to appear to this court that Brown had been appointed receiver in the state court case prior to the appointment of Cate, the receiver of this court, and that an application to the Court of Civil Appeals by the defendants in that case, seeking to supersede the appointment of Brown, receiver, had been denied by the said Court of Civil Appeals, and that the bill in the state court had been filed prior to the petition for involuntary bankruptcy in this court, this court, recognizing the rule of comity .existing between state and federal courts, and recognizing the unquestioned rule of law that one court should not summarily undertake to remove property in the hands of and under the jurisdiction of another court, directed its receiver, Ralph Cate, upon demand made of him by Brown, receiver of the state court, to deliver possession of all the assets of the Drake Corporation to the said Brown, receiver, and to then make proper application to the chancery court for the return of all of said assets to him (Cate) as the receiver of this court. By decree of the chancery court that court did direct its receiver, Brown, to demand of Cate, the receiver of this court, possession of said assets, and the receiver of this court immediately complied with said demand, and it appears from the petition of Barger and others, filed in this cause on June 20,1923, that on June 19,1923, Cate, the receiver of this court, filed his petition in the state court cause making application that the possession of said assets be restored to him as receiver in this proceeding.

So far as this court is advised from the [144]

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Bluebook (online)
16 F.2d 142, 1923 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 990, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-drake-motor-tire-mfg-corp-tennessed-1923.