In re Mann

116 F. Supp. 852, 1953 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2323
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedOctober 2, 1953
DocketNos. 10310, 10311
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 116 F. Supp. 852 (In re Mann) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Mann, 116 F. Supp. 852, 1953 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2323 (D. Md. 1953).

Opinion

WILLIAM C. COLEMAN, Chief Judge.

These two proceedings are now before the Court on petitions of Peoples First National Bank & Trust Company, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (hereinafter referred to as the Bank), to sell as pledgee or as a judgment creditor of The Sherwood Distilling Company (hereinafter referred to as Sherwood) and its president, Louis Mann, 980 shares of the capital stock of Sherwood, being all of the Sherwood stock outstanding which the Bank [853]*853acquired as collateral security for the debt upon which the Bank obtained a judgment against Sherwood and Mann in this Court on March 15, 1951, in the amount of $694,600 and interest, in civil suit No. 5105. This judgment was affirmed by the Court of Appeals for this Circuit, Sherwood Distilling Co. v. Peoples First Nat. Bank & Trust Co., 193 F.2d 649. Petition for writ of certiorari, filed by Sherwood and Mann in the Supreme Court, 344 U.S. 818, 73 S. Ct. 13, was subsequently denied and no payment has ever been made on account of this judgment.

In addition to this stock given as collateral, the Bank was given certain warehouse receipts for whiskey and other spirits covering substantially all of the inventory owned by Sherwood and Mann. Subsequent to the filing of the suit by the Bank in which the Bank obtained its judgment as aforesaid, Sherwood and Foust Distilling Company, Inc., an affiliate, filed interpleader actions against the Bank and other creditors of Sherwood and Mann, due to the fact that such creditors held duplicate or conflicting warehouse receipts as collateral, or as apparent owners, covering all of the aforesaid whiskey and other spirits also covered by the warehouse receipts held as collateral by the Bank. In these inter-pleader proceedings this Court, therefore, issued orders restraining the inter-pleader defendants from selling, removing or otherwise disposing of any of the whiskey and other spirits pending further order of this Court. These restraining orders did not, however, apply to the stock of Sherwood held by the Bank as collateral.

The Bank’s petitions further set forth that the present value of the whiskey and other spirits represented by the warehouse receipts, held as collateral by the Bank, is far less than the amount of its judgment against Sherwood and Mann; and that the Bank believes it possesses the right to sell the stock notwithstanding the petitions in bankruptcy pending in these proceedings, but that it is appropriate to obtain prior approval of this Court. The Bank further asserts that the shares of stock of Sherwood which it holds as collateral are only of nominal value, if any, in view of Sherwood’s financial condition. It represents that it will purchase this stock at such sale or cause it to be purchased by a nominee, if it can be purchased at such sale for not more than $25,000. The Bank further represents that if and when it or its nominee becomes the owner of such stock, it will promptly take the necessary steps to consent to Sherwood being adjudicated a bankrupt, or to place Sherwood in voluntary bankruptcy in this Court; that the sole reason for such contemplated action is to expedite an orderly liquidation of Sherwood’s assets for the benefit of all of Sherwood’s creditors, as their rights may be determined pursuant to law, and that the Bank and other creditors of both Sherwood and Mann will clearly benefit if the bankruptcy of Sherwood is expedited in this manner. The Bank has sent copies of its petitions to counsel of record of all of the known creditors of Sherwood and Mann.

In the answer of Sherwood to the Bank’s petition, Sherwood denies its insolvency on the dates of the acts of bankruptcy alleged in the petition filed against it. It also denies that the Bank is a pledgee of the 980 shares of the Sherwood stock; asserts that it would be most inappropriate, unprecedented and contrary to law for this Court to approve the sale of this stock by the Bank, and denies that other creditors of Sherwood and Mann will benefit if the bankruptcy proceedings against Sherwood and Mann are interfered with as proposed by the Bank’s petition for sale of the Sherwood stock. Sherwood further asserts that this Court has no power to authorize the Bank, a creditor, and not a receiver or trustee appointed by this Court, and not representing the general creditors ■ of Sherwood and Mann, to sell the stock in execution upon its judgment; but that even if this Court be deemed to have such power, the circumstances do not warrant any such authorization and such would be an abuse of the discretion of this [854]*854Court; that the Bank is attempting by its petition to seek the aid of this Court to perfect a non-existent preference to the injury of both Sherwood and Mann, and if either is adjudicated a bankrupt, to the injury of the general creditors of both of them; that to permit the pledgee Bank to sell the stock would be to deny Sherwoo'd and Mann the right to a hearing on the issue of their insolvency and other issues, contrary to due process of law, and would also defeat their right of appeal from any adverse decision by this Court on questions heretofore presented in this proceeding.

The following are my views and my conclusions: This has been, from the very beginning, a bankruptcy proceeding fraught with endless obstructions, due primarily to the attitude and mismanagement of Mann as president and in control of Sherwood through his stock ownership. Without going into the details of his attitude and mismanagement, suffice it to say that Sherwood is in a very bad condition at the present time. That is obvious from what has been developed in these bankruptcy proceedings. Sherwood has a great number of creditors to whom large sums are owed. Its warehouse receipts are legion. There is a question about their fraudulent duplication; there is a question about who owns the receipts. Even though all of this mismanagement and fraud may not be attributable to Mann, it is a fact that all of these circumstances just referred to have brought about an extraordinary situation, whereby the bankruptcy proceedings have been protracted for an inordinate length of time.

There is involved here by reason of the warehouse receipts a commodity, whiskey, which may be likened to perishable goods, in one sense, in that there is a very fickle market in that commodity; and at every turn the bankruptcy proceedings become more and more involved. It is true that the company, as well as Mann, have certain legal rights that cannot be taken away from them under the present bankruptcy proceedings. This Court recognizes that fully, and has no disposition, no intent whatsoever, to impair or interfere with those rights. But creditors have rights also; and in connection with those rights arises the question as to what may be done with respect to the stock which has been pledged to the creditor bank as security for the large debt due it. Adjudication of the validity of this debt and the pledge of the stock to secure it has been established in civil action no. 5105. This Court has been asked to pass upon the creditor bank’s right to sell this stock. A petition to be informed as to what are the rights of the pledgee creditor has been presented to the Court and all questions involved fully argued.

As stated by counsel for the Bank, Mann, as a large but unsecured creditor of his company, apparently has no chance of salvage for himself except through postponing adjudication in the forlorn hope that something unforeseeable may inflate the value of his company’s assets. But this circumstance is often present when collateral is to be sold.

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Bluebook (online)
116 F. Supp. 852, 1953 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2323, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-mann-mdd-1953.