Jarret Bros. v. Carroll Worsted Mills, Inc.

12 R.I. Dec. 20
CourtSuperior Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 27, 1934
DocketEq. No. 12069
StatusPublished

This text of 12 R.I. Dec. 20 (Jarret Bros. v. Carroll Worsted Mills, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jarret Bros. v. Carroll Worsted Mills, Inc., 12 R.I. Dec. 20 (R.I. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

BAKER, P. J.

Heard on petition of the Industrial Trust Company that an ex parte order entered May 20, 1933, authorizing the receiver of the respondent corporation to prosecute an action at law against, said bank, be revoked and rescinded and that said receiver be ordered to discontinue said action.

In this case it appears that the respondent corporation on February 13, 1933, executed a renewal note for $11,500 to the Industrial Trust Company. This note was endorsed and matured May 15th next. On April 3, 1933, a temporary receiver of said respondent corporation was appointed and qualified, and on April 18th the same person was appointed and qualified, as permanent receiver.

On said April 3rd, the respondent corporation had on deposit with the Industrial Trust Company a checking account amounting to $6,S62.96. On the date of his appointment, the temporary receiver and his attorney went to the Industrial Trust Company and interviewed one of its officers and demanded the turning over of the checking account of the respondent corporation. The bank officer replied in substance that there was at that time no checking. account because it had been credited on the note of the respondent corporation which the bank was holding. On April 21, 1933, the Industrial Trust Company filed a claim with the receiver against the respondent corporation in the sum of $4,593, being the balance due upon said note in question. Some conversation between the receiver’s attorney and the officers of the bank followed in regard to the disposition of said checking account. When the note matured May 15, 1933, the endorser was duly charged. May 17th and 18th there were further conversations between the interested parties and on May 20th, the receiver obtained from the Court the ex parte order involved in this proceeding and began suit against the bank to recover the amount of the checking account. On June 7, 1933, the receiver filed his report on the allowing and disallowing of claims as required by the provisions of the decree under which he was appointed. The claim of the Industrial Trust Company was allowed by the receiver without prejudice to his right to recover from said bank the full amount of said checking account. On June 14, 1933, the report of the receiver on allowed and disallowed claims was approved by the Court. No notice was [21]*21sent to the Industrial Trust Company as to this hearing because its claim had' been allowed.

The bank first contends in support of its petition that the law covering the situation presented herein is so well settled in its favor that the suit by the receiver is an improvident act.

There can be little or no question regarding the duty of the receiver to reduce to possession all the assets of the insolvent respondent corporation and, if necessary, to bring suit to accomplish this result.

An examination of the cases in this state bearing upon the point involved herein reveals that they are practically all actions at law and are brought by the plaintiff: in his representative capacity as receiver, assignee, executor, administrator, or the like.

The provisions of the decree under which the receiver was appointed authorized him to collect the assets of the respondent corporation and to bring suit for them if necessary. Fu-ther, he is given the same general powers under the provisions of Sec. 58, Chap. 248, Gen. Laws 1923.

In the opinion of the Court, it is very doubtful if the receiver needed the specific authority given him by the ex parte order of May 20, 1933, to which the bank is now objecting. Ordinarily a defendant is not in a position to select the forum in which it is sued. This usually rests with the plaintiff:. It is, of course, true that in the matter now before the Court, the Industrial Trust Company is in a dual position, being the defendant in the suit brought by the receiver and also being a general creditor with a claim against the insolvent corpora-, tion.

In Tillinghast, Receiver, vs. Champlin, 4 R. I. 173, the Court held that a defendant was not in a position to object that a receiver had brought a suit without first obtaining special permission.

An examination of the authorities brought to the Court’s attention relating to the bank’s right of set-off in this jurisdiction leads the Court to the opinion that the question is not so clearly and definitely determined that the act of the receiver herein in bringing action against the bank is improvident. The receiver is representing all the creditors of the respondent corporation and it is his duty to use all reasonable means to increase the assets of said corporation in his hands. If the set-off herein is allowed as claimed by the bank, the latter is preferred to that extent over the creditors. Further, the amount involved is substantial, being almost $7,000.

The matter is not now before the Court on the merits of the dispute between the receiver and the bank, but on the issue as to whether or not the receiver should be allowed to proceed with the action at law which he has started against the bank. For that reason it is, perhaps, not necessary to analyze at this time all the authorities in detail. It ■ seems reasonably clear that the bank’s contention that the general weight of authorities permits the right of set-off is sound.

Yol. 7, C. J. 656;
25 L. R. A. (N. S.) 393;
Michie on Banks & Banking (Per. Ed.) Vol. 5, p. 243.

The receiver is depending chiefly on the decision of the Court in the case of Ellis, Assignee, vs. First National Bank of Woonsocket, 22 R. I. 565. In that case the Court held that the bank did not have the right to set off a deposit of a depositor who had made an assignment for the benefit of creditors against an unmatured obligation of said depositor. The case has been cited as showing that Rhode Island is with the minority jurisdictions in not permitting such a set-off.

[22]*22Wright vs. Seaboard Steel & Manganese Corp., 272 Fed. 807;
43 A. L. R. (1926) Anno. 1325, 1330.

It appears to the Court that there is no decision in this State directly on all fours with the case at bar. The bank contends that its position in claiming the right to set-off is supported by several cases, viz:

Clarke, Receiver, vs. Hawkins, 5 R. I. 219;
Nightingale vs. Chafee, 11 R. I. 609;
Hall vs. Greene, 24 R. I. 286;
Troup vs. Mechanics Nat’l Bank, 24 R. I. 377;
Clarke vs. Lincoln Trust Co., 50 R. I. 493.

In the case of Clarke, Receiver, supra, where a set-off was allowed, it would appear that the obligation had matured.

In Nightingale, supra, the Court held that an assignee for the benefit of creditors lost his right to recover the deposit if said deposit was not transferred to his name as assignee or if the suit was not brought before the note held by the bank matured. The decision of the Court appears to rest upon a construction of the statute relating to set-off and holds that the right of set-off is determined by the state of the claim at the time of the commencement of the action.

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Related

Wright v. Seaboard Steel & Manganese Corp.
272 F. 807 (Second Circuit, 1921)

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12 R.I. Dec. 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jarret-bros-v-carroll-worsted-mills-inc-risuperct-1934.