Nebraska Mercantile Co. v. Nathanson Bros.

20 F.2d 330, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2525
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMay 11, 1927
DocketNo. 7571
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 20 F.2d 330 (Nebraska Mercantile Co. v. Nathanson Bros.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nebraska Mercantile Co. v. Nathanson Bros., 20 F.2d 330, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2525 (8th Cir. 1927).

Opinion

POLLOCK, District Judge.

This appeal brings up for review an order of the District Court refusing to allow a claim of $16,444.67 against the bankrupt estate of Black & Hansen Company, duly adjudged a bankrupt March 5, 1924; also, holding claimant, the appellant (hereinafter called the Mercantile Company), had received a voidable preference, which must be returned. This order was made on a petition to review an order of the referee allowing the claim and denying the Mercantile Company had received any preferential payment, which should be returned to the estate before its allowance. The trial court, on petition to review, set aside this order of the referee and entered the following order:

“In the matter of Black & Hansen Company, Bankrupt. No. 2856. Bankruptcy Order.
“This matter came on for hearing on the petition to review an order of the referee in bankruptcy, overruling objections of certain creditors to the allowance of claim of Nebraska Mercantile Company, in the sum of $16,-444.67, and allowing said claim in full, and also refusing to find certain payments to have been preferences. After due consideration thereof, and being fully advised in the premises,
“It is ordered by the court that the order of the referee be and the same is hereby reversed, with directions to find the payments to be preferences and to require the substituted parties claimants to restore the same to the trustee.”

An examination of the record discloses, before adjudication in bankruptcy and before the bankruptcy proceeding was instituted, the Mercantile Company, claimant, in pursuance of a resolution passed by its board of directors, assigned all its property to one F. J. Coates, as trustee, and the corporation was dissolved. The rights and powers conferred upon Coates as assignee by the instrument of assignment read, among other things, as follows :

“ * * * Do hereby sell, assign, transfer, and convoy to F. J. Coates, as trustee, for the use and benefit of the stockholders of the Nebraska Mercantile Company, all of the accounts receivable of said corporation as of this date, including all notes, mortgages, judgments, and liens of every kind and description, wheresoever situated, vesting full power and authority in said F. J. Coates, trustee, to collect said accounts, notes, mortgages, and liens, to file suit in his own name, as trustee, to execute releases of mortgages, judgments, and liens, and to do such other acts as may be necessary in the collection of said assets.
“Done at Grand' Island, Nebraska, this 27th day of December A. D. 1924. [Signed] C. C. Hansen, President. [Corporate Seal.]”

The claim of the Mercantile Company against the bankrupt estate was made and filed by C. C. Hansen on February 2, 1925. Hansen had been the former treasurer of the corporation. Thereafter, at a hearing before the referee on December 29,1925, as a statute of the state makes the directors of a dissolved corporation trustees of its properties for the benefit of its shareholders, and as the proofs at the hearing before the referee did not disclose who said directors were, time was granted to the claimants until January 9, 1926, to establish who said last directors of the dissolved corporation were. Thereafter, on application of F. J. Coates, the directors of the corporation were by order of the referee allowed to be substituted in place of the former treasurer as claimant for the corporation, and the claim was thereupon allowed by the referee.

The objection to the allowance of this demand was first made by the trustee in bankruptcy. Thereafter amended specifications of objections were filed by the trustee in bankruptcy and by creditors of the bankrupt, Nathanson Brothers Company and Carson, Pirie, Scott & Co., and thereafter, before hearing of the claim, the trustee withdrew his objections to its allowance, and the claim was contested by the creditors alone.

Asa claim presented against a bankrupt estate under the Bankruptcy Act (Comp. St. § 9585 et seq.) and General Orders in Bankruptcy, when properly verified and present[332]*332ed, places the duty of coining forward with proof upon the objectors to its allowance (Whitney v. Dresser, 200 U. S. 532, 26 S. Ct. 316, 50 L. Ed. 584), a question arising on this record is: Was this claim properly verified and presented ?

As the corporation was dissolved and dead before the claim was filed or presented by its former treasurer for the corporation, it is clear the corporation as such did not and could not have a claim to present. Therefore the claim as originally presented could not be allowed. While, under the laws of Nebraska, directors of a corporation at its dissolution by operation of law became trustees of its property for the benefit of shareholders, yet the directors became trustees only of property owned by the corporation at the time of its dissolution. In this case, by assignment made on authority of a resolution of the board of directors of the Mercantile Company, all of its property, including the claim in question, had passed to a trustee for the benefit of its shareholders under an express trust. Who, then, in such case, was authorized to make the claim or have it allowed, save such trustee, to whom the elaim had been duly transferred by assignment? While such objection is not made or stressed by the objections filed, yet it arises plainly on the face of the record, and is open to inquiry on the question of the proper filing and proof of the claim.

Coming now to the question of preference, it is conceded between December 13 and 27, 1923, the Mercantile Company received from the bankrupt concern $10,700. That the bankrupt must have been insolvent at the date these payments were made clearly appears from the record. On account of the close relationship between the officers of the two corporations, and the caution with which their dealings should be scrutinized, the only satisfactory conclusion, from a consideration of all the proofs in the record which the mind can reach, is that the officers of the Mercantile Company must have known of the insolvent condition of the now bankrupt as determined by the trial court.

To our minds there can be no doubt whatever, on the entire record in this case, but that the payment by bankrupt and its receipt by the Mercantile Company of the $10,700 paid ■on the elaim presented herein, at the date it was paid and under the circumstances of its payment, operated as the granting of such a preference to the creditor as will, if the remainder of the claim be proven against the .bankrupt estate, and dividends be paid and received, thereon in like manner as to other creditors of the same class, permit the Mercantile Company or its now shareholders to receive a greater proportion of its claim, if valid, than would be received by other creditors of the same class, and that such a preferential payment may not stand and the remainder of the elaim be allowed against the bankrupt estate. In Keppel v. Tiffin Savings Bank, 197 U. S. 356, 25 S. Ct. 443, 49 L. Ed. 790, Mr. Chief Justice White clearly states the fundamental purpose of the Bankruptcy Aet to be as follows:

“We think it clear that the fundamental purpose of the provision in question was to secure an equality of distribution of the assets of a bankrupt estate.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 F.2d 330, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2525, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nebraska-mercantile-co-v-nathanson-bros-ca8-1927.