London & North West American Mortgage Co. v. St. Paul Park Improvement Co.

86 N.W. 872, 84 Minn. 144, 1901 Minn. LEXIS 882
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJuly 5, 1901
DocketNos. 12,684—(182)
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 86 N.W. 872 (London & North West American Mortgage Co. v. St. Paul Park Improvement Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
London & North West American Mortgage Co. v. St. Paul Park Improvement Co., 86 N.W. 872, 84 Minn. 144, 1901 Minn. LEXIS 882 (Mich. 1901).

Opinion

START, C. J.

On July 30,1895, the plaintiff, a creditor, began this action against the defendant St. Paul Park Improvement Company, a corporation, for the sequestration of its property and the appointment of a receiver. The allegations of the complaint show that the action was brought under the provisions of G. S. 1894, c. 76, although it was not so expressly alleged. Such proceedings were thereafter had in the action that judgment was duly entered on September 16, 1895, sequestering the property of the defendant, and appointing Charles W. Farnham as receiver. On February 1, 1896, the court made an order requiring creditors of the defendant to exhibit their claims and become parties to the action within six months after the date of the first publication of the order. The order further provided that the receiver, any creditor, or any stockholder, might, [146]*146within thirty days after the expiration of the six-months limitation, file objections to the allowance of any claim so exhibited. Pursuant to this order, the plaintiff and the other creditors exhibited and filed with the court their claims against the defendant. No objections were filed by any one to the allowance of any of the claims so filed. Afterwards, and on September 1, 1900, the court, on petition of plaintiff, made its order designating a time and place for a hearing on such claims.

Meanwhile on December 6, 1899, the receiver presented to the court a petition praying for an assessment of the stockholders on account of their liability for the debts of defendant, pursuant to Laws 1899, c. 272. Thereupon the court made its order fixing a time and place of hearing on such petition, notice of which was duly given. The hearing upon such claims presented by creditors against the corporation, and the hearing upon the receiver’s petition for an assessment of stockholders, were heard by the court at the same time. After hearing the evidence of the respective parties as to each of such matters, the court, on December 15, 1900, made its order determining the amount due upon the claims of the respective creditors, and allowing the same. It also, on the same day, made its order levying an assessment upon the stockholders of the defendant corporation of sixty per cent, of the par value of the stock held by them, respectively. Certain of the stockholders appealed from the order allowing and adjudicating the claims of creditors against the defendant corporation, and also from the order levying an assessment upon the stockholders. The appeals were argued and submitted together.

1. The respondent moves the court to dismiss both appeals, for the reason that each is taken from a nonappealable order. As to the appeal from the allowance of the creditors’ claims, it is urged that the appeal is simply from the trial court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law. 'While the action of the court was in the form stated, yet the court did adjudge, determine, and allow the claims of the creditors against the corporation. It was, in effect, a judgment allowing the claims of creditors against the corporation, and therefore appealable. The order [147]*147assessing the stockholders was a final one, affecting a substantial right, made in a special proceeding. It was appealable. While many of the facts in this case, and the evidence tending to establish them, are relevant to both appeals, yet the orders appealed from are not interdependent, and separate consideration of them will best tend to a clear and correct understanding of the merits of each.

2. The appellants assign ninety-six errors, some of which are so obviously without merit that it is unnecessary specially to refer to them. The first objection to the order allowing the claims meriting consideration is to the effect that the dismissal by stipulation, without prejudice, of the supplemental complaint, by one of the creditors of the corporation, impleading the stockholders, and the proceedings thereunder making them parties to the action, operated as a dismissal also of the claims of creditors theretofore filed against the corporation. Intervening complaints of creditors exhibiting their claims against the corporation were filed before such supplemental complaint, and they were in no manner connected with, or dependent upon, the latter; therefore neither the filing of the supplemental complaint nor its dismissal affected the status of the claims theretofore exhibited in this action against the corporation. It is urged that a large number of claims allowed were barred by the statute of limitations. None of the claims were barred as to the corporation when the creditors’ intervening complaints, exhibiting their respective claims, were filed. The filing of such complaints had the same effect, as to the tolling of the statute, as the commencement of an original action by the creditors against the corporation would have had. It follows that the statute had not run as to any claim at the time the court made its order allowing claims, or as' to proceedings to enforce the liability of stockholders for the payment of such claims.

Another assignment of error is this:

“The court erred in allowing claims amounting in the aggregate to $39,751.46, because, if any claims were properly proven, thev amount in the aggregate to no more than $29,751.46.” '

[148]*148The appellants urge, under this assignment of error, that the evidence showed that the receiver, through his attorneys, collected from the estate of a deceased stockholder, for and on account of his stock liability, the sum of $10,000, which should have been applied pro rata as a payment upon the claims of the creditors. Assuming, without so deciding, that the assignment of error is sufficient to authorize a consideration of this question, we are of the opinion that the trial court did not err in not applying any part of the alleged fund upon the claims of creditors. The claim of each creditor was a separate and independent cause of action against the corporation, and, if it be conceded that there was in the hands of the receiver or his attorneys any money which equitably ought to be applied in payment of the claims of creditors, none of them could lay claim to any specific portion of the fund, and give credit therefor on his claim. Therefore the creditors were entitled to prove their claims, and have them allowed, without reference to the supposed fund in the hands of the receiver. Of necessity, they could only prove their claims for the amounts which they did. This conclusion does not prejudice the stockholders; for the trial court, by its order allowing the claims, expressly provided

“That all moneys which may be realized and become applicable to the payment thereof [the claims so allowed] in this action be so paid and applied in such manner and proportion as the court may hereafter direct.”

Under this provision, it is open to the appellants to secure an accounting as to the fund, and an application of any balance in the hands of the receiver, applicable to the payment of debts, to the payment, pro rata, of the claims of creditors as allowed by the court.

The intervening creditors, in support of their several claims against defendant, offered in evidence certain promissory notes wherein the defendant was named as payee, each of which purported to have been indorsed or payment thereof guarantied by the defendant. The promissory notes, and the indorsements and guaranties thereon, were received in evidence, without prelimi[149]*149nary proof of their execution.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
86 N.W. 872, 84 Minn. 144, 1901 Minn. LEXIS 882, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/london-north-west-american-mortgage-co-v-st-paul-park-improvement-co-minn-1901.