Newcomer v. Miller

172 A. 242, 166 Md. 675, 92 A.L.R. 1043, 1934 Md. LEXIS 75
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 25, 1934
Docket[No. 47, January Term, 1934.]
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 172 A. 242 (Newcomer v. Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Newcomer v. Miller, 172 A. 242, 166 Md. 675, 92 A.L.R. 1043, 1934 Md. LEXIS 75 (Md. 1934).

Opinion

Bond, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellants are owners of all the stock of a corporation, bought in by them at an auction sale of collateral security for debts owed to them, and, in a proceeding in which receivers were appointed for assets of the corporation, they filed a petition for leave to examine the corporation’s books. The receivers answered, resisting the allowance of it, the petition was denied, and the appeal is from the denial. The receivers were appointed in a consensual proceeding, instituted in the name of the wife of the petitioners’ debtor; her husband, who was president of the corporation, answered and consented in its name; and the husband and the wife’s counsel were appointed receivers. Subsequently all the property of the corporation was sold by the receivers to the wife, and the sale was finally ratified in the absence of exceptions to it, and for the conclusion of the proceeding there remains, subject to the controversy now here on appeal, only the accounting and distribution of the proceeds. The petitioners question the validity of debts claimed for the wife, and com *677 plain of the whole proceeding as a maneuver of their debtor to hinder recovery on liis debts, and to retain the property for his own benefit; and inspection of the corporation’s books is applied for as a means of testing these claims advanced against the assets' as superior to the claims of the petitioners as stockholders, and for protection of the interests of the petitioners generally.

The receivers, the appellees, have filed a motion to dismiss the appeal, and a first question is whether the petitioners have a right of appeal from such action of the court at anytime, and, if at any time, whether the order was such a final one as would permit of appeal at this stage of the case. Objection is made by the receivers that there was no auditor’s account of the proceeds of sale yet stated and made subject to exceptions, nor was there any other proceeding open and to which the application for examination of the books would be relevant.

There is no dispute on the essential facts so far alleged. C. Wilbur Miller and his wife owned jointly all the stock of a Worthington Valley Company, which held 1,700 acres of land, with improvements and equipment for a farm and a dairy. It was valued formerly at $800,000 and more. Miller was president of the company. He had for some time past been indebted to the two petitioners on promissory notes in amounts aggregating $1,500,000, and the stock of this company had, as stated, been pledged as collateral security, 600 shares with Hewcomer, and 400 with the trust company. On June 29th, 1933, the bill in equity was filed in the name of Mrs. Miller, alleging that the corporation was indebted to her, and praying that receivers pendente lite be appointed for its assets, the answer was filed for the corporation by the husband, consenting to the receivership, and the husband and Mr. Anderson, who had filed the bill for the wife, were appointed receivers. The petitioners complain that knowledge of the fact that all the stock was then pledged for the hus^ band’s debts was withheld from the court, and that the pledgees were given no' notice of the proceeding. On July *678 26th, 1933, the foreclosure and sale of the collateral occurred, and the petitioners and appellants then became owners of all the stock.

On August l'Oth, 1933, the receivers reported to the court a contract with Mrs. Miller, subject to approval by the court, to purchase all the assets of the corporation for $45,810.02, subject to existing mortgages of a total of $209,189.98, making the total purchase price $255,000. It was later reported that Mrs. Miller held a mortgage. The receivers valued the property at approximately $230,000, and testimony of three experts placed even lower valuations on it; and in one of its orders the court recited that the sale had been accepted only after consultations with the court on conditions and possibilities of sale. An order nisi required that exceptions be filed by September 25th, and, none having been filed, the sale was finally ratified on that day.

On the same day the petitioners filed, a first petition for appointment of co-recpivers because of opposition of the receivers to the petitioners’ interest, and an advantage they would have in the contest of interests in the sole possession of information concerning all rights and claims, and because of need of the petitioners for protection; but the court, considering that there was nothing to’ be done except to distribute the proceeds of sale; found no need of additional receivers. The petitioners were, however, admitted as parties to the cause. •

On the day after the dismissal of that first petition, it appears the petitioners wrote a letter to> Mr. Anderson requesting permission to examine the books, and a second letter with the same request on November 7th, but received no answers because, as it happened, Mr. Anderson was confined to his home by sickness; and, having failed to- obtain the permission sought, the appellants filed the petition now to be considered, that for an order for the examination, “to ascertain as nearly as possible the true financial condition of the defendant corporation and the amount of its assets and liabilities, and, in particular, the actual amounts dire or owing *679 between tbe defendant corporation and C. Wilbur Miller and bis wife.” The recéivers answered, resisting tbe allowance of the examination, and the court, after a hearing, announced a readiness to set aside the sale, and to discharge the receivers, if good ground should be shown, but concluded that, there being no attack on the previous orders., the proceeding that remained being only that of distribution of proceeds of the sale, and an allowance of examination of books having a tendency to delay and hinder the administration of the receivership', the petition should be dismissed.

The application here is not one for the production of books and papers by an adversary owner or possessor' of them. However the receivers may stand in personal opposition to the applicants, they are as receivers entirely neutral custodians, and are to be treated as such. More accurately, the court itself is the custodian; the receivers holding for the court. Day v. Postal Telegraph Co., 66 Md. 354, 368, 7 A. 608; Blum v. State, 94 Md. 375, 380, 51 A. 26. And the holding is not only for the direct use of the court and its receivers in the administration of the receivership, but also for the use and benefit of all parties in interest, including the applicants. High Receivers, sec. 134; Clark, Receivers, sec. 768; Smith, Receivers, (2nd Ed.) (Tardy) 199; Manning v. Securities Co., 242 Ill. 584, 90 N. E. 238. The applicants have had from the beginning an interest in the assets as pledgees and owners of the stock, conveyed to them as a means of repayment of large loans, and their interest is involved in a proceeding conducted by representatives of the pledgors., with the anticipated result of leaving the security good for nothing. They are, in fact, as the owners of the stock of the corporation, the only parties now having the ultimate legal interest in t-he books. They question the good faith of the receivership proceeding, charging fraud in it.

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Bluebook (online)
172 A. 242, 166 Md. 675, 92 A.L.R. 1043, 1934 Md. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newcomer-v-miller-md-1934.