In Re Megill

169 A. 501, 114 N.J. Eq. 604, 1933 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 184
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedFebruary 28, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 169 A. 501 (In Re Megill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Megill, 169 A. 501, 114 N.J. Eq. 604, 1933 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 184 (N.J. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

This matter is of such importance to the court and the public in general — it is so unusual in its nature — that it cannot be passed over in silence, nor can it be passed upon except in such manner as will inform the public generally of the position which the court must of necessity take in matters of this kind.

I have prepared a statement, which I propose to make now, in connection with this affair. That statement was prepared in the hope that it will be sufficiently informative to the general public, and to these men, in particular, and as an admonition *Page 606 to the bar of this county and the state, so that in the future an occurrence of this kind cannot well happen.

Except for the fact that this particular occurrence has resulted in a much more serious challenge of the authority of this court, and a much greater libel upon it, I would not, perhaps, have made my remarks so extensive to-day as I propose to do; but sometimes people who would not otherwise attack one of the state's institutions are moved to do so by encouragement which is given from previous attacks, and since this resolution which is the basis of this proceeding was adopted by the board of commissioners of the borough of Bradley Beach, another gentleman, in no way connected with this affair, has launched a most violent attack upon this court, which will undoubtedly be the subject of appropriate proceedings hereafter. With respect to that particular matter, I was not personally connected, but the fact that it did occur shows the iniquity of the proceedings here under review, and the necessity of the present proceeding, and in my judgment, the later libel perhaps would not have occurred, had not this been a forerunner of it.

This contempt proceeding arises in connection with a decision of this court in Sparks v. La Reine Hotel Corp., docket 76, page 135, and an order of this court pursuant thereto approving the final account of the receivers of the defendant corporation and directing the distribution of the funds in their hands, which order was advised by me on November 21st, 1932. The facts there involved are stated in my opinion filed in that cause disposing of the petition to vacate that order. 112 N.J. Eq. 398.

Of the parties charged with contempt of court, Joseph R. Megill is counsel for the borough of Bradley Beach and a solicitor of this court, and Frank C. Borden, Jr., Bernard V. Poland and John Rogers are the members of the board of commissioners of that borough. Bernard V. Poland is also a solicitor of this court.

The acts and conduct of the parties constituting the contempt so charged, with one exception, were acknowledged and *Page 607 admitted by them in open court and their contempt may, therefore, be considered as committed in facie curiae. No petition, affidavits or formal order to show cause has been filed or entered in this proceeding, as, following the filing of the petition to vacate the order of distribution above referred to, the parties voluntarily appeared in open court, waived the usual formal proceedings and submitted themselves to the jurisdiction of the court, and their voluntary statements were taken and recorded. That such formalities may be waived see In reGlauberman, 107 N.J. Eq. 384; Dorrian v. Davis, 105 N.J. Eq. 147.

The circumstances giving rise to this proceeding, in addition to those stated in my opinion filed in the receivership matter, are as follows:

Notwithstanding the borough of Bradley Beach had received due notice of the filing of the receivers' final report and account in Sparks v. La Reine Hotel Corp., supra, and its default at the hearing thereon, the board of commissioners of that borough, on December 20th, 1932, and within the time in which an appeal from the order approving the receivers' account might have been taken, adopted a resolution reciting the disbursement by the receivers of the balance in their hands and the non-payment of the borough's tax claim, and calling upon the governor and the chancellor "to make an investigation of this case to determine whether or not the various charges allowed can be justified by the laws of this state and the procedure of the court of chancery." The resolution further stated "that if such practices are allowed by the court of chancery, we believe it is time for the governor or the chancellor to devise some means to protect the creditors of such insolvent corporations, especially when it relates to taxes which are to be used for governmental purposes." Under date of December 22d, a certified copy of this resolution was forwarded to the chancellor, who immediately referred the matter to me. The resolution was evidently prepared by counsel for the borough who filed its claim with the receivers and who filed the present petition, although this he denies. *Page 608 If it was not so prepared, it was prepared by Commissioner Poland, a lawyer member of the commission, with the knowledge of such counsel and with his tacit approval and acquiescence. I believe, however, that both took part in its composition and that the ultimate result represented their combined efforts. But it is not necessary to make any definite finding on this point as there are other admitted facts sufficient for a finding of contempt. Not satisfied with the adoption of such a resolution and its certification to the chancellor, and in complete disregard of the orderly procedure prescribed by our Chancery act (1 Cum. Supp.Comp. Stat. p. 269 § 111), the matter was aired in the public press and a copy of the resolution, accompanied by reports of extensive interviews with the borough solicitor, the mayor and the other commissioners, was published in the Asbury ParkEvening Press of December 21st, 1932, under glaring headlines in which it was stated "Bradley Beach calls on Moore and Campbell to explain chancery court practice which cost town $2,015. Honest jury would not fear it, counsel says." The newspaper report quotes counsel for the borough as saying: "An honest vice-chancellor, who has nothing to fear, should welcome an investigation of his office, if only to give it a clean bill of health." (The "honest jury" in the headlines evidently was intended for "honest judge" and was inspired by counsel's alleged statement.) The impropriety of such action is immediately apparent. It can be attributed only to ignorance or to the prevalent hysteria resulting from economic conditions. That it is contemptuous goes without saying, and the inevitable tendency of a spirit thus displayed is to "sap the foundations of public and private confidence and to introduce in its stead universal distrust and distress." It lays the foundation for anarchy, or worse, for "where law ends, there tyranny begins," and shows marked disrespect for our institutions. The perpetrators of this calumny evidently overlooked the fact that this court is a part of one of the three co-ordinate branches of the state government. Under our constitution certain powers are inherent in this court and the legislature, *Page 609 as representative of the people, has enlarged those powers, particularly with respect to matters pertaining to corporate insolvency. In the exercise of these powers, the judiciary "exercises neither force nor will, but only judgment." But so long as the judiciary is composed of human beings it will not be expected to be infallible in its judgment, any more than is any other branch of the government or any individual.

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Bluebook (online)
169 A. 501, 114 N.J. Eq. 604, 1933 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-megill-njch-1933.