In Re O'Gara Coal Co.

12 F.2d 426, 46 A.L.R. 916
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMarch 10, 1926
Docket3638
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 12 F.2d 426 (In Re O'Gara Coal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re O'Gara Coal Co., 12 F.2d 426, 46 A.L.R. 916 (7th Cir. 1926).

Opinion

12 F.2d 426 (1926)

In re O'GARA COAL CO.
GARDNER
v.
CHICAGO TITLE & TRUST CO.

No. 3638.

Circuit Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit.

March 10, 1926.
Rehearing Denied April 26, 1926.

Arthur M. Cox, of Chicago, Ill., for appellant.

Hiram T. Gilbert, of Chicago, Ill., for appellee.

Before EVANS, PAGE, and ANDERSON, Circuit Judges.

PAGE, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal by the trustee in bankruptcy of the O'Gara Coal Company, here called trustee, from an order of the District Court, directing the trustee to pay to the receiver of the La Salle Street Trust & Savings Bank, here called receiver, $25,650.

On petition filed September 13, 1913, O'Gara Coal Company was adjudged a bankrupt, and trustees were appointed, who acted from November 11, 1913.

Funds, known by the bank to be trustees' funds, amounting to $19,843.62, were, on June 11, 1914, by the trustees deposited in the La Salle Street Trust & Savings Bank. The bank closed on June 12, 1914, owning the demand collateral note of O'Gara Coal Company, dated September 6, 1913, for $15,000, secured by 1,500 shares of the capital stock of the Harrisburg Saline Colleries Company, a subsidiary of, and whose stock was owned by, O'Gara Coal Company.

The trustees' claim was allowed against the bank in the state circuit court for $19,843.62. Dividends paid thereon reduced it, on June 12, 1918, to $12,994.93.

September 11, 1914, the receiver filed its note in bankruptcy as an unsecured debt, and the same was then allowed in full, as found by this court, in Re O'Gara Coal Co., 278 F. 509. August 21, 1917, the receiver made proof of the above note as a secured debt. No reference is made in the proof to the fact *427 that the claim was formerly filed and allowed as an unsecured claim, except the following:

"The foregoing proof of debt is made by this deponent by way of amendment to his proof of debt heretofore and on, to wit, September 11, A. D. 1914, filed in the above-entitled court and cause."

The following appears as a part of said proof:

"No valid or bona fide sale of said securities was heretofore made by said La Salle Street Trust & Savings Bank or by any one claiming through or under said bank."

May 22, 1918, the trustee filed in the bankruptcy proceedings a petition asking that the indebtedness between the two concerns be set off, one against the other, and that, upon the payment of any balance due from the trustee to the receiver the collateral held by the receiver, in equity, be released and decreed to the trustee. The receiver contested, but on October 26, 1920, the referee made an order, finding in favor of the right of set-off and that the trustee, upon the payment of any balance, was entitled to cancellation of the note and surrender of the collateral. In February following, the court affirmed that finding, whereupon the matter was appealed to this court and the right of set-off was denied. In re O'Gara Coal Co., 278 F. 509 (January 3, 1922). The Supreme Court reversed this court on April 9, 1923 (261 U. S. 453, 456, 43 S. Ct. 424, 67 L. Ed. 741, 29 A. L. R. 622), the opinion concluding:

"The bankruptcy court may allow the bank's claim for such sum only as may seem to the court to be owing above the value of the security (section 57e [Comp. St. § 9641]), and may withhold dividends upon that sum until the debt due to the trustee has been paid."

After the remanding order, the record shows the following order was made by the referee on June 18, 1924:

"Order claim of William C. Niblack, receiver of La Salle Street Trust & Savings Bank, be allowed for $2,105.07, collateral held by claimant to be surrendered to trustee on payment of claim."

The court reversed that order and allowed the bank's claim for $15,000, with interest at the rate of 6 per cent. from September 1, 1913, ordering that the trustee withhold dividends until the trustee's claim was paid.

The matter was again appealed to this court, and reversed because the mandate of the Supreme Court had not been properly followed. 5 F.(2d) 1019.

Thereafter the receiver filed in the District Court a petition in which is brought together, for the first time, much of the proceedings in the District Court, the Court of Appeals, and the Supreme Court. The prayer of the petition is that the trustee be required to pay to the receiver the $15,000 note, with interest at 6 per cent. from its date. Other than a clear presentation of many facts, not so presented to the Court of Appeals and Supreme Court before, we do not see that the petition has any place in the record.

From the petition, it appears that, when the trustee, on May 22, 1918, filed its petition for set-off, all parties knew that the O'Gara Company had become solvent. When the negotiations were commenced does not appear, but the petition shows that on May 31, 1918, the O'Gara Coal Company and its bondholders' committee had entered into an agreement which recognized the solvency of the company and presented to the District Court a plan, to be consummated under the direction and order of the court, for the purpose of readjusting its mortgage indebtedness and the payment of all claims against the O'Gara Coal Company and its subsidiary companies. The plan provided for the conveyance of the properties of the subsidiary companies to the O'Gara Company and for the payment, out of funds to be set aside for that purpose, of all the indebtedness of the O'Gara Company.

The District Court entered a decree on May 9, 1919, for the purpose of carrying out the objects of the agreement and the petition filed, in which the trustee was directed to reserve funds for the purpose of paying "the claims of creditors of the O'Gara Coal Company," the order being to "pay immediately * * * all claims which have been allowed herein at the full amount of such allowance, without interest except as to secured claims, all claims to which no objections have been or shall be filed, and, where objections apply to part only of a claim, the full amount of each such claim unobjected to without interest, retaining in his possession in each such instance a sum sufficient to pay that portion of the claim covered by objections until such objections shall be disposed of, then pay according to decision of court."

It is not set out in the petition, but it appears that the whole matter upon that petition and the decree was brought to and passed upon by this court and affirmed, on September 24, 1919, in O'Gara Coal Co. v. N. Y. Central R. Co., 260 F. 742, 171 C. C. A. 480. It appears that, pursuant to that *428 decree, the O'Gara Coal Company was reinvested with its property and paid all of the claims of the O'Gara Coal Company which had been theretofore allowed, and that the trustee had sufficient funds to pay all claims remaining unpaid, including that of the receiver.

In connection with the petition, there was filed a stipulation, from which it, for the first time, appears that, at the time of the petition in bankruptcy and at the time of the filing of the receiver's claim as an unsecured claim, the collateral stock had no value, and at all times after January 1, 1917, eight months before the receiver filed his claim as a secured debt, the stock was worth at least $50,000.

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Bluebook (online)
12 F.2d 426, 46 A.L.R. 916, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-ogara-coal-co-ca7-1926.