Mark Mfg. Co. v. Joseph Nelson Supply Co.

237 P. 223, 65 Utah 320, 1925 Utah LEXIS 58
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedMay 9, 1925
DocketNo. 4249.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 237 P. 223 (Mark Mfg. Co. v. Joseph Nelson Supply Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mark Mfg. Co. v. Joseph Nelson Supply Co., 237 P. 223, 65 Utah 320, 1925 Utah LEXIS 58 (Utah 1925).

Opinion

FRICK, J.

The Joseph Nelson Plumbing & Heating Supply Corporation, hereinafter called appellant, appeals from an order or judgment of the district court of Salt Lake county, by which said court vacated an alleged receiver’s sale, and from its refusal to confirm the same, and also appeals from the order or judgment of said court directing that the property in question be readvertised and resold by the receiver, and from the confirmation of said sale.

The matter relating to the vacating of the first sale, which will be referred to more particularly hereinafter, and the refusal of the court to confirm the sale, was before this court on application by appellant for a writ of mandate and for a writ of prohibition. Joseph Nelson Plumbing & Heating Supply Corp. v. McCrea, Dist. Judge; 64 Utah 484, 231 P. 823, where both writs were denied upon the ground that the appellant had a speedy and adequate remedy by appeal. The former proceedings, however, were commenced before the property was resold, and this appeal, as before stated, is from the refusal of the court to confirm the first sale and also from the confirmation of the final sale.

*322 Respondents have interposed an objection to appellant’s bill of exceptions, in which the evidence and proceedings relating to both sales are certified to this court upon the ground that the same was not settled and certified to within the time required by our statute.

No notice of decision was served on appellant. In view of that, the 30-day period within which a proposed bill of exceptions must be served on the adverse party was not set in motion. That question was settled by this court in the recent ease of Jenkins v. Stephens, 64 Utah 307, 231 P. 112, where it is held that the serving of a notice of decision is a prerequisite to starting the statute to running, unless the service of such notice is expressly waived by the adverse party. It is further held that the taking of an appeal does not start the statute to running. This case comes squarely within the rule there announced, and hence the objection to the bill of exceptions must be overruled.

The facts material to this appeal, briefly stated, are these:

On the 18th day of July, 1922, in an action commenced by the Mark Manufacturing Company, nominal plaintiff here, against the Joseph Nelson Supply Company, a corporation, hereinafter called company, one T. A. Williams was appointed receiver of said company. The receiver immediately took possession of all of the assets of the company, and, at the request of the principal creditors, and under the direction of the court, took charge of the business carried on by the company with the view of ultimately liquidating its debts. The receiver, under the direction of the court, carried on the business of the company for a period of about two years, when he became convinced that he was not making any progress in paying off the debts of the company, although he had been able during that time to increase its assets to some extent. Accordingly, in August, 1924, the receiver filed a petition in said court, setting forth the facts relative to the conduct of said business, and stating the amount of the assets and liabilities of the company. In his petition it was made to appear that, while the assets had been increased, the liabilities to creditors had increased to a *323 larger extent, and that the assets were wholly insufficient to pay the debts in full. The receiver, after stating the facts in that regard, further stated that in his judgment it was not for the best interests of the creditors to attempt a continuance of the business of the company by the receiver, but that it was for the best interests of the creditors that all of the assets of the company be sold and the proceeds be ratably distributed among the creditors. The district court, after considering the petition of the receiver, on the 8th day of August, 1924, entered an order that all of the assets of the company be sold by the receiver, and that he immediately publish notice for bids, which notice should be published for a period of 40 days. Pursuant to such order the receiver published a notice that he “will receive written bids on or before September 17, 1924, for the whole or any part of the assets” of the company. He also gave information in such notice to whom and where said bids should be directed.. Just before the 40 days expired, the court, upon application, made and entered an order extending the time within which bids must be made for an additional 30 days. The publication of the original notice was accordingly continued for another 30 days, and the receiver asked for written bids as before to be made on or before October 17, 1924.

Pursuant to the notice ending on October 17, 1924, the receiver received three written bids, all of which are contained in the record. After receipt of the bids, to wit, on October 20, 1924, the receiver duly informed the court of the receipt of said bids by filing a written report to which said bids were attached, and in the report the receiver also advised the court which of the three bids, in his judgment, was the highest and best bid, and asked that the highest bid be accepted, and that the sale be confirmed by the court. After the bids and the report of the receiver had been filed, the court ordered the receiver to publish a notice to the parties to the action and to the creditors of the company. The receiver thereupon published a notice to all concerned that written bids had been made and received by him, setting *324 forth in the notice the terms and amounts of the bids and the names of the bidders, and also set forth in said notice that on November 1, 1924, a hearing would be had in said court upon the sale of the assets of the company to the highest bidder, whose name was stated in the notice, and upon “the recommendation of said receiver that such sale be confirmed and approved.” The hearing was, however, continued from the 1st to the 8th of November. On the 8th of November, 1924, the matter came on for hearing upon the report and recommendation of the receiver.

In the meantime the company whose assets were being sold filed an objection to the confirmation of the sale as recommended by its receiver. Upon objections being made that the company had and could have no standing in court as against the action and report of its receiver, the court, nevertheless, peimiitted the objections to stand as if they were made by the stockholders of the company. The court then proceeded to hear evidence upon the question whether the sale reported by the receiver should be approved and confirmed. After considerable evidence had been produced on the part of some of the creditors to the effect that the highest bid reported by the receiver was a fair and proper bid, and that the same should be approved and the sale confirmed, the court, for,some reason not disclosed by the record, if indeed there was any reason, ■ announced that it would receive new and additional bids from any one present for the assets of the company. The appellant then submitted two bids, both of which were addressed to the receiver. Its first bid was identical in amount and in terms with that of the highest bid upon which the hearing for confirmation was then being had.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
237 P. 223, 65 Utah 320, 1925 Utah LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mark-mfg-co-v-joseph-nelson-supply-co-utah-1925.