In re Ellington Planting Co.

60 So. 25, 131 La. 653, 1912 La. LEXIS 1168
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 4, 1912
DocketNo. 19,090
StatusPublished

This text of 60 So. 25 (In re Ellington Planting Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Ellington Planting Co., 60 So. 25, 131 La. 653, 1912 La. LEXIS 1168 (La. 1912).

Opinion

SOMMERVILLE, J.

This is a proceeding by the liquidator in this insolvency to compel the Whitney Central National Bank and the liquidators of the State National Bank, creditors of the insolvent, to share ratably the funds in his hands, as shown on the account filed by him, with the creditors of the insolvent firm of John Barkley & Co., which firm are also creditors of the insolvent. The said banks are the holders of promissory notes of the insolvent, drawn to the order of Barkley & Co., and indorsed by them, and pledged by them to the banks long prior to- the insolvency of the Ellington Company and Barkley & Co. to secure indebtednesses due by Barkley & Co. to the banks.

The parties to this suit are: First, the Ellington Planting Company, Limited, represented by James W. Martin,- liquidator, appointed by the board of directors of the said company February 3, 1910, and confirmed by order of the civil district court February 21, 1910; second, the Whitney Central National Bank, which holds the promissory note of John Barkley & Co., secured by the demand note of the Ellington Planting Company, limited, which latter note was indorsed by said Barkley & Co.; third, the State National Bank in liquidation, a creditor of Barkley & Co., similarly placed to the Whitney Central National Bank; fourth, A. G. Ricks, assignee of the rights of Barkley & Co.

The Ellington Planting Company, Limited, as its name indicates, was a corporation engaged in the planting business. Its stock was owned mainly by the members of the firm of Barkley & Co. And said firm were the commission merchants of the planting company. The Ellington Company became indebted to Barkley & Co., and gave its demand note to the latter February 15, 1906, for the sum of $25,000, payable to the order of Barkley & Co.; and again on January 31, 1907, the Ellington Company gave a similar note to Barkley & Co. for $75,000. These are the notes which were indorsed and given by Barkley & Co. to the two banks already named on their respective dates, and they are the notes in contest in this case.

In June, 1908, Barkley & Co., having become involved, obtained from their creditors an extension of time for the payment of their debts until March 1, 1909. July 9, 1909, Barkley & Co. made a voluntary assignment of all their property to A. G. Ricks for the benefit ratably of the creditors of said Barkley & Co., and the individual members of that firm, which assignment was accepted by the creditors of Barkley & Co. without-judicial proceeding.

Among the creditors of Barkley & Co. were the two banks which are now before the court claiming a priority of payment over Barkley & Co. out of the funds of the Ellington Planting Company, which fund the liquidator of that company now proposes to distribute.

When the two banks agreed in writing that Barkley & Co. might assign their property to A. G. Ricks for the benefit of all the creditors of said firm, they stipulated in said agreement that:

“It is further understood that any and all creditors holding collateral or other securities for the debts due to them, or any of them, shall have the right to resort to such collaterals or other securities for the payment of their respective debts, and that such creditors shall be bound by this agreement only to the extent of any balance which may remain due after resort to such securities.”

The quoted paragraph was doubtless Inserted in tha.t agreement out of an abundance of caution so as to prevent any question about the banks having abandoned the collateral securities which they held. The banks, in loaning money to Barkley & Co., exacted securities from that firm to protect themselves from loss, in the event of the insolvency pf Barkley & Co. In the absence of an express abandonment and surrender of [657]*657said securities, the banks would be considered to have retained same in their full force and effect, so that they could assert prior claims over the ordinary creditors of Barkley & Co., and the securities or pledges in their possession would be worthless and misleading if they did not give the banks superior claims to these ordinary creditors of Barkley & Co.

[1, 2] On March 16, 1909, when Barkley & Co. made a voluntary and extrajudicial assignment to Mr. Ricks as trustee, the two demand notes of the Ellington Company did not pass into the possession of Mr. Ricks, trustee; they were in the possession of the banks. They formed no part of the assets of Barkley & Co. on that date, and the trustee of Barkley & Co. cannot claim any portion of the proceeds of those notes unless there is a surplus on a settlement of the Ellington Company with the banks. And counsel for the trustee on their brief admit:

“If any creditor had collateral security, that necessarily would be in his own hands, and no assignment to A. G. Ricks as trustee could affect the rights of the creditor holding same, or give Ricks possession thereof.”

Again counsel say:

“Unless the Whitney Central National Bank and the State National Bank can show that they were ‘creditors holding collateral or other security for the debts due to them,’ the judgment of the district court is erroneous.”

The banks have shown that they are. creditors holding collateral securities for the debts due to them in the shape of two promissory notes of the Ellington Company, indorsed by Barkley & Co., and offered and filed in evidence in this case.

Nevertheless counsel argue:

“Mr. Ricks represents the aggregated creditors of John Barkley & Co. and claims the dividend for these creditors. John Barkley So Co. were insolvent, and it is their creditors, through their common representative, who are here demanding-only that the creditors receive their ratable share of this asset of John Barkley & Co., and that it be not applied wholly to the satisfaction of the debts due to the banks to the exclusion of all of the creditors of that firm.”

And they argue further that:

“While John Barkley & Co. might not contest the priority set up by the banks, the representative of all the other creditors certainly has the right to do so.”

We have seen that Barkley & Co. and the individual members of that firm transferred to A. G. Ricks, as trustee, -all of their property. Mr. Ricks thus became the trustee of and for Barkley & Co. and the individual members of that firm. Mr. Ricks was authorized by the several creditors of Barkley & Co. to accept the assets of that firm for their benefit, and, to that extent, he represents the creditors of that firm. He was authorized by Barkley & Co. to dispose of these assets “and to distribute the proceeds derived therefrom among the creditors of said firm as shown by their books.”

Under the foregoing conditions, A. G. Ricks is in no different position'from that occupied by Barkley & Co., his assignors. The notes here sued upon were not in the possession or under the control of Barkley & Co. at the time of the assignment by that firm, and Barkley & Co. did not transfer or attempt to transfer these notes. They had already passed from Barkley & Co. into the possession of the two banks which now hold them. They were transferred at a time when Barkley & Co. had the right to transfer them, and Mr. Ricks, trustee, is not assailing these transfers because of any illegality.

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

Related

Security Warehousing Co. v. Hand
206 U.S. 415 (Supreme Court, 1907)
Appeals of Fourth National Bank
16 A. 779 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1889)
Thompson v. Southern Sawmill Co.
48 So. 769 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1909)
Nicolopulo v. His Creditors
37 La. Ann. 472 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1885)
Citizens' Bank v. Maureau
37 La. Ann. 857 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1885)
Renshaw v. His Creditors
40 La. Ann. 37 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1888)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 So. 25, 131 La. 653, 1912 La. LEXIS 1168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-ellington-planting-co-la-1912.