Mitchell Bros. v. Green & Burnham & Indian Head National Bank
This text of 62 N.H. 588 (Mitchell Bros. v. Green & Burnham & Indian Head National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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An order made at the trial term charging the trustee upon its disclosure for money collected upon the book accounts, and for the uncollected accounts and books of account held by assignment, and appointing a receiver, was confirmed by the decision in Mitchell v. Green,
The assignment was a pledge of the accounts to the trustee to secure its claim against the principal defendants, and the trustee was liable to be charged for their value after satisfying the indebtedness for which they were pledged. Boardman v. Cushing,
The trustee claims that the assignment of the accounts to the trustee was to hold them only until its debts should be paid, and that the books of account themselves were not "goods, chattels, rights, or credits of the principal defendants," in the trustee's hands, within the meaning of those terms, and with which the trustee could be charged. A trustee may be adjudged chargeable for any personal property, subject to mortgage, pledge, or other lien, and for any promissory note or other security for the payment of money, or any chose in action on which an execution cannot be levied, and if chargeable a receiver may be appointed. G. L., c. 249, ss. 27, 28; Fling v. Goodall,
Trustee charged.
CLARK, J., did not sit: the others concurred.
Since the foregoing opinion was given, at the June term, 1882, the plaintiffs, at the trial term, have made a motion that the trustee be charged for the value of the uncollected accounts on the defendants' books at the time of the service of the plaintiffs' writ, and upon this motion the following additional facts are found:
When the indebtedness to the trustee had been paid, while the motion to charge the trustee was pending at the trial term, September, 1880, and before any order had been made charging the trustee, in the first instance, and appointing a receiver, one of the defendants called on the trustee for the money collected and deposited there, and for the uncollected accounts and books, and requested that their clerk, who had been collecting the accounts, be directed to give up the books to them. The clerk was referred to the trustee's legal adviser, who, without a knowledge of all the facts or of any purpose of the defendants to secrete the books, suggested *Page 591 that the trustee having been paid had no further claim upon the books, and upon his advice the clerk gave them up to the principal defendants. Immediately after his appointment, the receiver demanded the books, but was unable to obtain them for nearly two years, when they were delivered to him by the defendants. The defendants, on receiving the books, secreted them to prevent their going into the hands of the receiver. While they had them, they collected upon the accounts written in the books $2,683.88, and appropriated the larger part of it to their own use. Neither the trustee nor its counsel had any knowledge that the books were, or were to be, secreted. The trustee was charged $2,683.88, and excepted.
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62 N.H. 588, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mitchell-bros-v-green-burnham-indian-head-national-bank-nh-1883.