Irwin's Bank v. Fletcher, Etc., Trust Co., Rec.

145 N.E. 869, 195 Ind. 669, 1924 Ind. LEXIS 180
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 17, 1924
DocketNo. 24,017.
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 145 N.E. 869 (Irwin's Bank v. Fletcher, Etc., Trust Co., Rec.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Irwin's Bank v. Fletcher, Etc., Trust Co., Rec., 145 N.E. 869, 195 Ind. 669, 1924 Ind. LEXIS 180 (Ind. 1924).

Opinions

Myers, J.

This appeal is from an order and judgment of the Marion Superior Court, fixing priorities as between creditors of The Stenotype Company, an insolvent corporation. The Marion Superior Court, on November 14, 1918, appointed the Fletcher Savings and Trust Company receiver for the Stenotype Company, hereinafter referred to as “the company.” The receiver so appointed proceeded to and has converted all of the assets of the insolvent corporation into cash, as shown by its report and supplemental report of January 17 and April 29, 1921, respectively. .

The January report of the receiver classified the creditors of the company as follows: (1) Claims of laborers for personal services rendered the company prior to the appointment of a receiver; (2) claims of creditors, approximately four hundred in number, in whose favor liability was incurred by the company growing out of the performance by it of contracts with the Government of the United States for the manufacture and production of munitions; (3) claims in favor of those who indorsed government notes pursuant to contracts with the company and identified as guarantors’ claims ; *674 (4) claims of creditors who incurred liability for the repayment of a loan of $75,000 with interest and commissions, pursuant to a contract with the company; (5) claims of creditors in whose favor liability was incurred in the general business of the company independent of its munition contracts, and also claims of preferred creditors who were not paid in full by the application-of the particular fund set apart for that purpose.

In this connection, and bearing upon the questions here for decision, attention is drawn to the receiver’s report wherein the money so received by it is classified as: (1) Mortgage fund which was derived from the sale of the real estate, buildings, machinery and other property of the company, aggregating $390,282.34, from which certain deductions were made by reason of prior liens and expenses incident to that fund; (2) money received from the collections of certain notes given to the company for the sale of stenotype machines, amounting to $31,457.04; (3) money paid the receiver by the Government on account of the cancellation of certain munitions contracts, totalling $396,848.32.

The receiver has discharged all obligations of the company to the United States Government, claims of laborers for,personal service, and has turned over to the mortgage creditors the fund, less the amount required to pay prior liens, arising from the sale of all property held by the company at the time of the execution of the mortgage. Out of Fund No. 2, the receiver paid the Bankers Investment Company $19,464.54. There is no objection to the action of the court in ordering the receiver to make the above payments, nor to the court’s allowances payable out of Fund No. 3 on account of the administration and settlement of the insolvent estate.

The question of priorities in the payment of claims between creditors or classes of creditors was presented *675 to the trial court by intervening petitions; First, by the Guaranty Trust Company of New York as trustee representing the mortgage creditors seeking priority, over all creditors under the terms of the mortgage; Second, the Bankers Investment Company asserting priority of payment out of Fund No. 2 of the balance due it by virtue of a contract bgetween the company and itself of date August 12, 1914; Third, the munition creditors— material-men—claiming priority in the payment of their claims out of Fund No. 3 on the theory of an equitable assignment and lien on that fund, in accordance with the contracts of February 7, 14 and April 15, 1918, between the company and its guarantors on notes to the United States Government, and its indorsers of notes to the Continental National Bank and Irwin’s Bank; Fourth, the Riverside Metal Company insists that it was entitled to priority over all of these intervening creditors on the ground that 'it was a subcontractor of the Stenotype Company, and, as such, a commitment creditor under an Act of Congress known as “the Dent Act”; Fifth, Stoughton A. Fletcher, Bankers Investment Company, William G. Irwin, and Irwin’s Bank demand priority of payment of their claims out of Fund No. 3 under the provisions of a contract between the company and the Continental National Bank, Irwin’s Bank and these intervenors, of date February 14, 1918, whereby these banks loaned the company $75,000 with Fletcher, Bankers Investment Company' and William G. Irwin as indorsers. The notes to the Continental National Bank were paid by the indorsers. The five notes to Irwin’s Bank, aggregating $25,000, do not appear to have been paid.

The trial court, upon the issues thus tendered, found the order of priority in the payment of claims out of Fund No. 3 as follows: First, Munition creditors; Second, Commissions to guarantors of Government notes; *676 Third, Fletcher, Bankers Investment Company and Irwin on account of notes indorsed by them; Fourth, Commissions in favor of the last named parties by reason of their indorsements.

The Riverside Metal Company’s claim of priority over other munition creditors, and that of the Guaranty Trust Company, and the demand of the Bankers Investment Company to the balance of the fund arising from the collection of stenotype notes, were each denied. The action of the court upon the various issues tendered is questioned by proper assignments of error.

From a careful examination of the record, briefs on file, and from counsel’s oral argument, we are impressed with the thought that many of the questions here presented have their origin in the conclusion of counsel as to the legal effect of the contracts of date August 12, 1914, February 7 and 14, and April 15, 1918, and the mortgage dated May 1, and recorded May 29, 1917.

For the purposes of this opinion, we will refer to creditors represented by the Guaranty Trust Company, trustee, as “Guaranty Company”; the indorsers on the $300,000 note to the government as “Goodrich”; creditors S. A. Fletcher, Bankers Investment Company, and William G. Irwin, indorsers for a loan of $75,000 to the company, as “Fletcher”; creditors growing out of contracts for material furnished and to be furnished in connection with the performance of the company’s contracts with the Government of the United States for the manufacture and production of munitions as “munitions creditors”; and the Bankers Investment Company as the “Bankers.”

We will first call attention to the claims of the “Bankers” against Fund No. 2. It takes the position, first, that it was entitled to all of the money collected by the receiver on account of notes of the company in its hands at the time of the receiver’s appointment. At the trial, *677 it was agreed that the receiver ha'd collected on account of stenotype notes $31,457.04, which included notes actually discounted and delivered to the “Bankers” in the sum of $23,396.34. From this latter amount, the receiver paid school commissions amounting to $3,257.85, and allowed discounts on notes paid before maturity in the sum of $673.95, totalling $3,931.80, leaving a balance of $19,464.54, which was paid to the “Bankers.”

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Bluebook (online)
145 N.E. 869, 195 Ind. 669, 1924 Ind. LEXIS 180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/irwins-bank-v-fletcher-etc-trust-co-rec-ind-1924.