In re Estates of Weimer

23 Ohio Law. Abs. 636, 8 Ohio Op. 314, 1937 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1132
CourtMontgomery County Probate Court
DecidedApril 13, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 23 Ohio Law. Abs. 636 (In re Estates of Weimer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montgomery County Probate Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Estates of Weimer, 23 Ohio Law. Abs. 636, 8 Ohio Op. 314, 1937 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1132 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1937).

Opinion

OPINION

By WISEMAN, J

This matter is presented to the court on the petition of five creditors on their own behalf and on behalf of all other creditors of the Southern Minnesota Joint Stock Land Bank of Minneapolis, and the receiver for creditors of said bank, for the reinstatement of a claim founded upon the statutory liability of a stockholder in said bank, as provided for by Federal Farm Loan Act (U.S.C.A. Title 12, Chapter 7, §812), said liability amounting to a sum equal to one hundred per cent of the par-value of the stock so held. The petitioners alleged that they failed to present their claim to the fiduciary of said estate for allowance within the time prescribed by law.

Inasmuch as the same issue arises in each of the estates it was agreed by coun[637]*637sel and the court that these cases be considered together. Por the purpose of clarity the court will proceed to decide the issue as it arises in the estate of George W. Weimer.

This proceeding falls within the provisions of §10509-134, GC, which provides for the reinstatement of a barred claim. The petitioners claim that they have presented facts sufficient to justify the court in finding that justice and equity requires the court to make an order permitting the petitioners to file their claim for allowance, and that the petitioners are not chargeable with culpable neglect in failing to present their claim within the time prescribed by law. It is contended on behalf of the estate that the petitioners in failing to present their claim within the time prescribed by law, have been guilty of culpable neglect.

The essential facts may be briefly stated as follows: The Federal Farm Loan Board on May 2, 1932, declared the Southern Minnesota Joint Stock Land Bank of Minneapolis to be in default of its obligations and to be insolvent. On the same date a receiver for the bank was appointed. The petitioning creditors herein were appointed members of a committee as trustees for the depositors. Pursuant to authority granted, the petitioners herein on July 28, 1932, filed in the United States District Court, District of Minnesota, Fourth Division, a bill in equity on their own behalf as trustees for the depositing bondholders and on behalf of all other creditors of the bank, seeking to obtain an assessment against each stockholder of the bank to the extent of the liability to which he might be subjected. Due to extended litigation, the court did not make a finding in this case until April 3, 1935, on which date the court rendered a finding of facts and conclusions of law that the bank was insolvent; that the amount of its liabilities exceeded the value of its assets by more than the par value of the capital stock outstanding, and that the necessity had arisen for the enforcement of the statutory liability of the stockholders to the maximum limit thereof. On April 20, 1935, there was entered a decree based upon the finding of facts and conclusions of law referred to, by which an assessment was levied upon all stockholders of the bank equally and ratably, and not one for another, in the amount of one hundred per cent of the par value of the stock held by each stockholder on the 2nd day of. May, 1932. The decree also charged the receiver for the bank with the express duty of collecting the payments from stockholders, maintaining custody of the fund created, and disbursing it under order of the court.

The records of this court disclose the following facts: that George W. Weimer died on February 10, 1933, and on March 1, 1933, the Third National Bank and Trust Company was appointed executor of his estate; that Alexander G. Reed died on March 22, 1934, and on April 9, 1934, Lucy Carr Reed was appointed executrix and Walter Carr was appointed executor of his estate; and that C. J. Ferneding died on June 29, 1931, and on July 25, 1931, H. L. Ferneding and T. A. Ferneding were appointed executors and Marie F. Keve was appointed executrix of his estate. At the time of the death of these decedents, each owned stock in the Southern Minnesota Joint Stock Land Bank of Minneapolis. It will be observed that each decedent died and the personal representatives were • appointed more than four months prior to the entry of the decree of assessment in the creditors’ proceeding in the United States District Court in Minnesota.

After the levy of the assessment against the stockholders by the United States District Court in Minneapolis, separate suits were instituted in the Common Pleas Court of Montgomery County, Ohio, against' the estate of each deceased stockholder. These suits were filed on June 19, 1935, wherein the five petitioning creditors in the instant case were named as plaintiffs. The rer ceiver for the bank was named as a defendant in each of these suits, and on the same day the receiver filed an answer and cross-petition wherein the same claim was set forth. It will be observed that the suits filed in the Common Pleas Court of Montgomery County, Ohio, were filed within two months after the decree was entered in the creditors’ suit in the United States District Court in Minneapolis.

The court finds that the cause of action accrued in favor of the petitioners on April 20, 1935, on which date the United States District Court in Minneapolis found that the necessity had arisen for the enforcement of the statutory liability of the stockholders and thereupon levied an assessment upon the stockholders for their liability. (King v Pomeroy, 121 Fed. 287; Goss v Carter, 156 Fed. 746; Bernheimer v Converse, 206 U. S. 516; Wheeler v Greene, 280 U. S. 49; Drain v Stough, 87 A.L.R. 490).

In each of the three actions filed in the Common Pleas Court of Montgomery Coun[638]*638ty, Ohio, demurrers were filed to the petition and the answer and cross-petition. Since the issues in each case raised the same question, the proceedings against the Reed and Ferneding estates were not pressed, and were permitted to remain in statu quo pending the determination of the questions raised in the Weimer case. Among the questions raised by those demurrers was that of the necessity for alleging in the petition a presentment of the claim to the fiduciary and a rejection by him prior to the commencement of the action. The Common Pleas Court held that the claim being one which had accrued more than nine months after the appointment of an executor, it fell within the operation of §10509-144 GC, and that no allegations of presentation or rejection were necessary. An appeal was taken from the judgment of the Common Pleas Court to the Court of Appeals of Montgomery County. The Court of Appeals held that §10509-112, GC, which is the general section requiring the presentation of claims to the fiduciary, applied to the claim involved, and that a defect appeared in the pleadings by reason of the lack of allegations of presentment within four months after the appointment of the fiduciary or of the reinstatement of the claim under authority of §10309-134, GC. The opinion of the Court of Appeals was rendered on June 19, 1936. A motion to certify was filed in the Supreme Court, which was denied on December 16, 1936. On February 3, 1937, petitions seeking the reinstatement of iheir claims under authority of §10509-134, GC, were filed in each of these estates in this court.

During the time the case which the petitioners filed in the Common Pleas Court was being litigated in that court and in the Court of Appeals, §10509-144 GC was repealed, effective September 2, 1935.

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Related

In re Estate of Christopher
35 N.E.2d 454 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1937)

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Bluebook (online)
23 Ohio Law. Abs. 636, 8 Ohio Op. 314, 1937 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estates-of-weimer-ohprobctmontgom-1937.