Mayer v. Harrison

166 P.2d 674, 161 Kan. 80, 1946 Kan. LEXIS 217
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMarch 9, 1946
DocketNo. 36,397
StatusPublished

This text of 166 P.2d 674 (Mayer v. Harrison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mayer v. Harrison, 166 P.2d 674, 161 Kan. 80, 1946 Kan. LEXIS 217 (kan 1946).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Thiele, J.:

On September 22, 1944, The Advance Furnace Company, hereafter called the Furnace Company, filed its petition in the above entitled action to have the district court set aside its judgment of July 2, 1943, approving a receiver’s sale of personal property. W. B. Harrison and June H. Mayer filed separate demurrers to the petition on the ground the petition failed to state facts sufficient to warrant any relief in favor of the Furnace Company and from adverse rulings each appealed to this court. The Furnace Company has also appealed from a ruling adverse to it, which will be mentioned later. An understanding of the matter requires a short statement of matters leading up to the judgment of which complaint is made.

June H. Mayer and Fred N. Probst were partners operating under the name of United Parts Manufacturing Company, hereafter called the United Parts, and engaged in making parts for airplanes under subcontracts with prime contractors. The partners could not agree and on February 1, 1943, Mayer sued Probst for dissolution of the [81]*81partnership and for the appointment of a receiver and on the same day Paul Hatfield was appointed receiver. Mrs. Mayer purchased the interest of Probst and issues between them were settled, but the court by order continued the proceedings for determination of the rights of creditors. On March 10,1943, the court made an order fixing a time for filing of claims and claims were filed by the Furnace Company for $519.21, by the Union National Bank for $12,377.26, and by W. B. Harrison for $15,094.60, the latter claim being for money advanced for pay roll. On June 28, 1943, these claims were allowed. On June 23, 1943, the receiver filed a report showing that he had on hand cash in the amount of $5,099.06, and accounts, equipment and material all totaling $10,721.19, and that liabilities were receiver’s notes amounting to $2,009.05 and receiver’s certificates amounting to $8,000, and accounts payable amounting to $3,715.89, or a total of $13,724.94, leaving an apparent deficit for creditors of $3,003.75, and listing as contingent assets the value of which could not then be ascertained (a) shipments of material and parts in transit and (b) disputed claims against debtors. On June 28, 1943, the receiver filed an application to sell all of the assets, consisting of machinery, office furniture, materials on hand, accounts and notes receivable and assignments of unfulfilled contracts, and on the same day the trial court made an order that the property be sold on July 1, 1943, at the place of business, as a whole for cash and if the purchaser be anyone having a claim against the receiver that the claim be applied proportionately as a part of the consideration. The receiver was directed to give notice by one publication in the “Wichita Eagle” and the notice mailed to all creditors. On July 2, 1943, the receiver filed his verified report of sale showing that he sold all of the assets of United Parts and that the highest and best bid was $8,450 by D. A. Clem. On the same day the trial court heard the application of the receiver for confirmation of the sale and ordered that the sale to Clem for $8,450 of “all assets consisting of accounts and notes receivable, furniture, machinery, material and unfulfilled contracts, and all other physical assets and assets, claims and demands of United Parts Manufacturing Company and automobile, a 1939 Ford coupé, No.-” be affirmed and approved and that Clem be allowed to apply accounts and notes receivable held by him against the receiver in lieu of cash, and further that the receiver from cash on hand and moneys received from the sale (the respective amounts of which are not stated) be authorized [82]*82and empowered to pay all obligations of the receivership and the costs of the action and taxes due. The record is silent as to what claims were paid or the amount thereof, or the costs, or the taxes, but we are told that nothing was paid on general claims. If any objection was made to any of the above proceedings, it is not disclosed by the abstract or counter abstract filed herein nor is there any showing of final disposition of the action.

As previously mentioned, on September 22, 1944, the Furnace Company filed its verified petition asking the trial court to set aside its order of July 2, 1943, approving the sale. For its cause of action it alleged (1) that it was a judgment creditor of the partners and that its judgment had never been paid although it had attempted to collect from Mayer inasmuch as Probst had been adjudicated a bankrupt; (2) that Mayer had charge of the books of United Parts and was conversant with the financial affairs of the partnership prior to the receivership and afterwards; (3) that plaintiff Mayer was the daughter of W. B. Harrison who advanced money to the receiver and was issued receiver’s certificates, that at the time the action was commenced the partnership was working on a subcontract with the Curtiss-Wright Company, a prime contractor, that the United Parts continued to attempt to work on the subcontract after the receiver was appointed and that the funds used to operate the partnership were obtained by Harrison at various times in return for which he received receiver’s certificates; (4) that the United Parts kept an adequate set of books to show the value of the work in progress on war contracts and that Mayer failed to advise the receiver of the fact that the accounting system used by the partnership would enable him to determine the approximate value of the work in progress and that Mayer fraudulently led the court and the receiver to believe that the value of the work in progress at the time the subcontract with the Curtiss-Wright Company was terminated could not be determined and that the value of the item was nonexistent; (5) that Mayer connived and conspired with Harrison to lull other creditors into a false sense of security as shown by two letters attached as exhibits which are more fully mentioned later and that the Furnace Company was led to believe that Harrison was going to subordinate his claim to the rights of other creditors and that the assets of the partnership included only named physical assets but that the value of contingent claims against prime contractors, especially Curtiss-Wright Company, was [83]*83nonexistent; (6) that the receiver, on June 28, 1943, purported to sell all of the assets of the partnership to satisfy expenses of administration, but that the sale was made upon an inadequate notice as a matter of law, that the sale was made to the agent, partner or joint adventurer of Harrison, one D. A.

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Bluebook (online)
166 P.2d 674, 161 Kan. 80, 1946 Kan. LEXIS 217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayer-v-harrison-kan-1946.