In Re the Receivership of Security Trust Co.

30 Haw. 343, 1928 Haw. LEXIS 37
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 22, 1928
Docket1787
StatusPublished

This text of 30 Haw. 343 (In Re the Receivership of Security Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re the Receivership of Security Trust Co., 30 Haw. 343, 1928 Haw. LEXIS 37 (haw 1928).

Opinion

*344 i OPINION OF THE COURT BY

BANKS, J.

On February 21, 1922, the Henry Waterhouse Trust Company, Limited, was appointed receiver for the Security Trusti Company, Limited, an Hawaiian corporation having its principal place of business at Hilo. John Chalmers, the petitioner, in the instant case, being á creditor of the trust company, filed with the receiver two statements of his claim against the trust company. The first statement was filed on April 1, .1922, and the second statement was filed on July 16, 1925. Both claims were for the sum of $16,828.22 with interest at the rate of eight per cent per annum from January 1, 1922. The apparent reason for'filing the second claim was that in pursuance of a legislative enactment of 1925 and in pursuance of an order of the circuit court of the fourth circuit the receiver published a notice calling upon all persons having claims against the trust company, to file their claims, .duly verified, within a specified time. There is no question that Chalmers filed his claim within the time speci *345 fied 'in the notice nor that it was duly verified. There is also no dispute as to the correctness of the amount of the claim nor as to the fact that it has not been paid in whole or in part. On the 22d day of April, 1927, Chalmers filed in the circuit court of the fourth circuit a petition alleging in substance that his claim belonged to that class of obligations which, under certain statutory provisions which we shall mention later, is entitled to preferential payment, and praying that the receiver be ordered to classify it and pay it out of the funds of the trust com-, pany available for that purpose. The circuit judge decided adversely to Chalmers and entered a decree dismissing his petition. From this decree Chalmers appealed and the case is now in this court for determination.

Before taking up the questions that are of vital importance to the parties we will dispose of a matter of procedure adopted by the circuit judge, to which our attention has been called and upon which it is desired that we express an opinion.

At the conclusion of the evidence presented in behalf of Chalmers (the petitioner) the receiver, without offering any evidence, rested the case and thereupon moved for the dismissal of the petition. Counsel for Chalmers objected to this procedure on the ground that the receiver having rested without offering any evidence the only question presented was whether under the law and the evidence before the court the petitioner was entitled to the relief prayed for, and that he was entitled, under well established practice, to open and close the argument. The circuit judge, however, took a different view and the motion was heard, counsel for the receiver opening and closing the argument. An exception was taken to this ruling but no request is made for a reversal of the final decree on the ground that the ruling was error, but we are asked to state for the guidance of inferior courts *346 what in o!ur opinion should have been the procedure under the circumstances.

In Re Title of Pa Pelekane, 21 Haw. 175, 178, this court said: “At the close of the case for the Territory, the respondents, without resting, moved that the application be dismissed on the ground that the petitioner had failed to establish or support the material allegations of the petition, and had failed in its proof. The court granted the motion. The procedure was improper. A proceeding to bring land under the operation of the law providing for the registration of titles is of the nature of a suit in equity, and the rules of equitable procedure generally apply. In equity it is not correct practice for the court to dismiss a ¡bill at the close of the complainant’s case, on the motion of the respondent, unless the respondent also rests.” The court cited in support of its conclusion Territory v. McCandless, 16 Haw. 728; Texeira v. American Dry Goods Assn., 17 Haw. 41; Estate of Keaho, Id. 308.

In none of these cases was the court dealing with the precise question now under consideration. What it would have held if the respondent had rested at the close of complainant’s evidence is merely conjectural. Since the respondent in the instant case chose not to offer any evidence but 'relied on the failure of the petitioner to establish his right to a favorable decree its motion to dismiss the petition was the equivalent of a final submission of the cause upon its merits. The complainant holding the affirmation of the issues thus presented should have been permitted to open and close the argument. In Koebel v. Doyle, 256 Ill. 610, 614, the court said: “The party has a right to submit his cause to the chancellor upon the evidence addticed if he sees fit, and the motion, if made, was neither more nor less than a submission of the cause to the chancellor.”

We will next dispose of the contention of the receiver *347 relating to the form of the claims filed with it by Chalmers. This contention is that neither of these claims indicates on its face any intention by Chalmers to assert a right of preferential payment and therefore he cannot now assert snch right. Assuming that neither of these claims bears upon its face any indication by Chalmers to have it classified as a preferential claim, we think this fact alone does not bar him from now claiming that it is of that character. It is conceded that there is nothing in the statute of 1925, to which we have already referred, which requires claimants to indicate in their written claims whether the trust company’s indebtedness to them arose out of circumstances that give them a preference of payment or whether it arose out of circumstances that create an ordinary debt. It is also conceded that there is no such requirement in the order of the court under which the present receiver published notice to creditors to present their claims nor in the notice itself. It is easy to imagine a situation in which under the law of estoppel a creditor might so designate his claim as to mislead the receiver and thus preclude him from subsequently changing such designation. No such situation, however, exists in this case. The receiver has not been induced by the form of the claims filed by Chalmers to do anything detrimental to itself or to other creditors of the trust company: In the absence of facts which might create an estoppel and in the absence of legislative enactment we see no reason why Chalmers cannot now seek to establish his claim as one entitled to preferential payment. The receiver is an officer of the appointing court and it is its duty to classify and pay claims, not according to the form in which they are filed but according to the facts under which the indebtedness arose.

We come now to the consideration of the more important aspects of the case. The primary question, of course, is whether under the evidence Chalmers’ claim was *348 at the time he filed it of that character which,, according to the provisions of our statute relating to the use to be made of the assets of insolvent trust companies, places it in a position of advantage over other claims of a lesser degree. The statute (Sec. 3488, R. L. 1925,) is as follows:

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Related

Territory of Hawaii v. McCandless
16 Haw. 728 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1905)
Texeira v. American Dry Goods Ass'n
17 Haw. 41 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1905)
In re Title of Pa Pelekane
21 Haw. 175 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1912)
Koebel v. Doyle
100 N.E. 154 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1912)

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30 Haw. 343, 1928 Haw. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-receivership-of-security-trust-co-haw-1928.