Mauran v. Crown Carpet Lining Co.

50 A. 331, 23 R.I. 324, 1901 R.I. LEXIS 135
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedNovember 13, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 50 A. 331 (Mauran v. Crown Carpet Lining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme 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
Mauran v. Crown Carpet Lining Co., 50 A. 331, 23 R.I. 324, 1901 R.I. LEXIS 135 (R.I. 1901).

Opinion

Rogers, J.

This is an application by Mendell W. Crane, trustee in bankruptcy of the respondent corporation, for an order that John H. Flanagan, receiver of said corporation under an appointment by this court, be required to convey and deliver to the trustee in bankruptcy, the property and effects of said Crown Carpet Lining Co., now in his possession as such receiver.

The facts on which the application is based, are undisputed and are as follows :

June 1st, 1901, William J. Braitsch attached the personal property and effects of the respondent corporation for debt due him from it, and placed a keeper in charge thereof. June 14th, 1901, William A. Mauran and Suchet Mauran, minority stockholders in the Crown Carpet Lining Co., filed a petition in this court under the provisions of Gen. Laws cap. 177, § 27, as amended by chapter 655, passed at the January session, 1899, representing that the estate and effects of said corporation are being misapplied and are in danger of being wasted and lost,- and praying that said corporation might be dissolved and a receiver of its estate and effects appointed. On June 20, 1901, upon the consent of the then parties to said last mentioned petition, a decree was entered in this court appointing John H. Flanagan receiver of said corporation and authorizing and directing him as such receiver to convert all the estate and property of said corporation into cash by sale at public auction upon notice as prescribed in said decree, and to hold the proceeds of such sale, together with such other assets as might come into his hands, to await the further order of the court. The receiver at once took possession of the property of said corporation, and *326 on June 21st, 1901, Braitsch, the attaching creditor, surrendered possession of the attached property to said Flanagan as receiver, and withdrew his keeper, On June 26, 1901, a creditor’s petition in bankruptcy was filed in the United States District Court for the district of Rhode Island against said corporation, wherein on July 15, 1901, it was duly declared a bankrupt, and on July 26, 1901, the said Mendell W. Crane was elected as trustee in bankruptcy of said corporation and duly qualified as such. The sale by Flanagan, the receiver appointed by this court, ordered to be made as hereinbefore set forth, was postponed from time to time on order of this court, but finally after a stipulation was signed by all the parties in interest wherein it was set out that for the. purpose of saving expense, it seemed best to the parties in interest that said estate and effects be sold without further adjournment, it was stipulated that said sale might be held on Fi’iday, July 12, 1901, as advertised by John H. Flanagan, receiver, without further adjournment and that the rights of all parties should be the same as if said sale was adjourned from time to time until after adjudication upon the petition in bankruptcy then pending against said Crown Carpet Lining Co., and the election of a trustee in bankruptcy of the estate and effects of said corporation, which said trustee if and when so appointed should have the same right to claim the proceeds of sale and under and subject to the same conditions and none other that he would have had to claim the estate and effects of said corporation had said sale not taken place, and should in all respects have the same rights against the receiver as if said sale had not taken place. Said stipulation was approved by this court July 11, 1901, the sale was had and the receiver holds the proceeds thereof for the further order of this court.

Braitsch, the attaching creditor, as well as the petitioners for a dissolution of and a receiver for said corporation, oppose the granting of the application of the trustee in bankruptcy; and the sole question now before us is whether in the condition of affairs as above set forth, the trustee’s application should be granted.

*327 It is to be observed that, while the petition of the Mauran's for the dissolution of and the appointment of a receiver for said corporation describes them only as stockholders,' the agreed statement of facts in the case shows that they were also creditors of said corporation.

(1) ' “ The plenary and' paramount power of congress to establish uniform laws on the subject of bankruptcies throughout the United States,” says Hall, J., In re Deposit and Savings Inst., Fed. Cases No. 12211, p. 141, “is given in express terms by the constitution of the United States. It is therefore'very clear that when congress has exercised the power thus conferred their action must necessarily control or limit the exercise of the power of the states over the same subject matter; and that whenever any state legislation, or any action of the state courts, comes practically into actual conflict with the proper execution of the laws of congress, con.stitutionally passed under such grant of power, state legislation and the jurisdiction and action of the state courts must yield to the paramount authority of the national government.”

The object and intent of the national bankrupt law is to place the administration of the affairs of insolvent persons and corporations exclusively under the jurisdiction of the federal courts sitting as courts of bankruptcy ; and the enactment of the national bankrupt law now in force suspended all actions and proceedings under State insolvent laws nqt commenced before the passage of the national bankruptcy act, at least in all cases provided for by such bankruptcy act. In re Merchants Ins. Co., Fed. Cases, No. 9441; United States Bankruptcy Act, § 70, last clause.

The proceeding in the State court against-the Crown Carpet Lining Co., resulting in the appointment of a receiver, was practically an insolvency proceeding. Its object was to collect and distribute its property in this State, at least, among its creditors. It was commenced by stockholders and creditors because its estate was being misapplied and was in danger of being wasted. The decree appointing the receiver was assented to by said corporation, and while the petition *328 does not in terms a] lege insolvency, yet the cause alleged, the action taken, and the fact that in proceedings in involuntary bankruptcy filed twelve days after the preferring of the petition in the State court for a receiver, it was declared bankrupt by the United States Bankruptcy Court, all show that said corporation was insolvent, and that the proceeding in the State court was but an attempt to forestall action in the United States Bankruptcy Court, and, for some reason not known to the court, to have its affairs settled by the State tribunal.

The case In re The Lengert Wagon Co., decided in the United States District Court for the southern district of New York, on October 9, 1901, 110 Fed. Rep. 927, seems to us to be analogous, if not, indeed, practically similar to the case at bar. That was a motion to compel a receiver appointed upon proceedings in a State court to turn over property of a bankrupt corporation. In that case certain j udgments were entered against the Lengert Wagon Co. in the Supreme Court of New York, and thereunder, on September 20, 1901, property of the corporation was levied upon by the sheriff under executions issued on the judgments.

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Bluebook (online)
50 A. 331, 23 R.I. 324, 1901 R.I. LEXIS 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mauran-v-crown-carpet-lining-co-ri-1901.