Moody v. Port Clyde Development Co.

66 A. 967, 102 Me. 365, 1907 Me. LEXIS 65
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedFebruary 5, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 66 A. 967 (Moody v. Port Clyde Development Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moody v. Port Clyde Development Co., 66 A. 967, 102 Me. 365, 1907 Me. LEXIS 65 (Me. 1907).

Opinion

Spear, J.

The Port Clyde Development Company is a corporation established under the laws of Maine in 1902. The purposes of the corporation were very broad including the right to carry on a general grocery business; and general ship building and ship repairing business ; to own and operate saw mills ; to carry on a general fish and canning business ; to carry on a general ice business; to carry on a general real estate business; to carry on a general teaming, transportation, express and forwarding business; and to do all things that may be incidental to the accomplishment of the foregoing objects.

On the 14th day of February, 1906, the Georges National Bank of Thomastou attached the real estate of said company and on the 28th day of February, made service of a writ upon W. A. Moody, its president.

On the 13th day of March, 1906, William A. Moody, who is identical with W. A. Moody, upon whom the writ was served, filed a bill in equity under the provisions of chapter 85 of the Public Laws of 1905, alleging among other things, that he was a stockholder and creditor of the company; that he was informed and believed, and therefore alleged, that the corporation was in imminent danger of insolvency, and that the estate and effects of the company, through attachments and litigation, and through proceedings hostile to the interests of said Moody and other unsecured creditors and stockholders, were in danger of being wasted or lost. The bill in its prayer among other things, asked for an injunction, both temporary and permanent, restraining the corporation, its officers and agents, [372]*372from transacting any business until the further order of the court and also for the appointment of one or more receivers to wind up the affairs of the company, and that the court would make all decrees and orders that might be proper and necessary under the provisions of chapter 85 of the Public Laws of 1905, or*bnder any other law relating to the subject matter of the bill of complaint.

On the 12th day of March, 1906, the company appeared by. ■attorney, admitted the truth of every allegation in the bill and on the 16th day of March, 1906, a decree of the court was filed stating that the case come on for hearing and on bill and answer by agreement, the parties being represented by counsel, and that all the allegations of the bill were admitted in the answer. Whereupon it was “ordered, adjudged and decreed that the allegations in said bill, that said corporation is in imminent danger of insolvency and that the estate and effects of said Port Clyde Development Company through attachment and litigation, and through proceedings hostile to the interests of said complainant Moody and other unsecured creditors and the stockholders- are in danger of being wasted or lost, and also each and every allegation in said bill of complaint, are sustained, and that a receiver should be appointed .... to wind up the affairs of said corporation with power to institute or defend suits at law in equity or in his own name as receiver, to demand, collect and receive all property, books, papers and assets- of said corporation, to sell, transfer or otherwise convert the same into cash; and to conduct and carry on the business of said corporation as ordered by this court, and to hold and use the assets of this corporation subject to and under the further order of this court.”

On the 11th day of August, 1906, the Georges National Bank, plaintiff in the above mentioned suit, filed a petition in the nature of a bill in equity in the Supreme Judicial Court, directed to the Justice thereof who made the above decree, alleging that it was a creditor of said bank to the extent of $4000 for money loaned; that on Feb. 14, 1906, it brought a suit against said company and William A. Moody signer of the note, and made an attachment on the real estate of said company; that subsequently the'company was placed in the hands of a receiver on the petition of said Moody;_ [373]*373that said action of said bank was pending in the Supreme Judicial Court for Knox County and would be in order for trial at the September term; that said company filed a defense claiming that .it was in the hands of a receiver and that the attachment of said bank was dissolved ; that the company was insolvent and that the receiver should collect and distribute the assets of the company and pay the creditors a pro rate percentage in the nature of a dividend in insolvency proceedings.

The petitioner further alleged that the proceedings were illegal, and that the acts of the receiver would be in violation of the National Bankruptcy Law; that the proceedings under which the receiver was acting and the statute under which the proceedings were instituted, in which he was appointed receiver, were in the nature of an insolvent law which could not operate during the existence of the National Bankruptcy Act, and moved that the proceedings of appointing said receiver and said receiver-ship, be dismissed; that said bank be allowed to prosecute its suit without any interference or objection on the part of the alleged receiver.

Notice was ordered upon this petition and a hearing had on the 11th day of September, 1906, and the prayer of the petitioner denied. To this decree, denying the petition, the petitioner excepted and his exceptions were allowed.

The petitioner contends that upon this state of facts, and a proper interpretation of the statute under which the receiver was appointed the court had no jurisdiction in the matter of appointing the receiver.

I. Because at the time of filing of the petition for the receiver, the Development Company was insolvent.

II. Because the Act of 1905 under which the receiver purported to have been appointed, was in effect an insolvent law.

III. Because when said receiver purported to have been appointed, the National Bankruptcy Law had been, and then was, in operation, and suspended and rendered inoperative the statute of 1905, which in practical effect was an insolvent law, and deprived the state court of any jurisdiction in the matter of appointing a receiver by virtue of such statute.

In the future discussion of this case the petitioning bank will be [374]*374called the plaintiff, and the Port Clyde Development Company, the defendant.

The first contention of the plaintiff, that the defendant, at the time of its petition for a receiver, was insolvent, appears to be well established, not only by the facts, but admitted by the allegations in the defendant’s bill. Item 4 alleges imminent danger of insolvency. Item 5 goes further and avers that the estate and effects of the defendant company, through attachments and litigation and other proceedings, are in danger of being wasted or lost. Item 4 does not technically allege insolvency, and while item 5 does not use the word insolvency ” to express the condition of the company, it nevertheless employs, to express that condition, the language which defines the legal meaning of the word insolvency.” In other words, the defendant instead of using the term, uses the definition. But the language of the bill used to express this condition so nearly comports with the phraseology employed in Morey v. Milliken, 86 Maine, 464, to define insolvency, that a reasonable inference might suggest it to have been intended to follow that opinion. This case declares that insolvency exists in its application to persons engaged in commercial pursuits

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Bluebook (online)
66 A. 967, 102 Me. 365, 1907 Me. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moody-v-port-clyde-development-co-me-1907.