Ohio Casualty Ins. v. Freshwater Construction Co.

32 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 464, 1933 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1816
CourtCuyahoga County Common Pleas Court
DecidedOctober 31, 1933
StatusPublished

This text of 32 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 464 (Ohio Casualty Ins. v. Freshwater Construction Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ohio Casualty Ins. v. Freshwater Construction Co., 32 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 464, 1933 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1816 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1933).

Opinion

Ewing, J.

The questions for decision in this case arise upon two applications by the receiver of the Freshwater Construction Company for instructions of the court, as to the distribution of funds which have come into his hands by his sale, under orders of this court, of certain chattel property of that company which came into possession of the receiver [465]*465by virtue of his appointment at the beginning of the case.

The first request seeks the instruction of the court as to the receiver’s duty with respect to intervening claims asserted by the county treasurer for two items of personal property tax, the first item being the assessment for the year 1930 in the sum of $1,066.17 which accrued prior to the receivership, and the second item being the assessment for the year 1932 amounting to $956.34. In addition he has requested instruction as to the payment and priority, if any, of the corporate franchise tax assessment due to the state for the year 1932. The receiver was appointed and qualified on January 4, 1932. The action is one brought by the Surety Company apparently in equity but claimed by their brief to be brought under favor of Sections 12206 and 12208, General Code, to subject the assets of the defendant construction company to such extent as is necessary to reimburse the surety company for the expenditures which it has been required to make by reason of its liability as surety on bonds given by the construction company to assure its performance of public improvement contracts.

Such claims of the surety company have heretofore been determined by another branch of this court to total $64,512.20. Pursuant to the order of sale under such decree the receiver sold an automobile, and office furniture from which he realized the sum of $425.25 and miscellaneous road building equipment and materials from which he realized the sum of $13,815.31. The automobile and the office furniture were free from encumbrance, but at the time of his appointment the road building equipment and materials were encumbered by a chattel mortgage executed by the construction company on the 7th day of May, 1931, in favor of the plaintiff surety company and the defendant the Standard Trust Bank jointly. This chattel mortgage was duly filed for record on May 8, 1931, and by the agreed statement, of facts is conceded to have been a valid mortgage securing an amount due the mortgagees in excess of the sum realized from the sale. Said mortgaged chattels were sold by the receiver pursuant to a stipulation of the mortgagees and an order of court providing for the transfer of the lien of such mortgage to the [466]*466funds realized by the sale, the claims under the mortgage having been asserted by cross-petition.

The receiver has already expended with approval of court from the funds received by him $4,618.80 as costs and expenses of administration and still has in hand a balance of $9,621.76 together with some other assets which are unencumbered but which have not been liquidated and of which the value has not been determined. By the first request for instruction the court is therefore called upon to determine whether the residue of proceeds of sale of such mortgaged chattels should be paid to the mortgagees or alternatively, whether and to what extent the claims for unpaid taxes are entitled to preference over debts secured by the chattel mortgage.

As to the duty of the receiver to pay the small item of corporate franchise tax in preference to all other claims, there can be no doubt since the statute (Section 5506, General Code) provides that such tax shall become the first and best lien on all corporate property.

The question as to the asserted right of preference of the 1932 tax which accrued during the receivership may, similarly be disposed of without difficulty. It was conceded in oral argument that this assessment was based upon a return made by the receiver himself and the statute then and now existing requires the return of the corporation in receivership to be made by the receiver. This is Section 5370, General Code, which became effective June 30, 1931. On this subject this statute was a change merely in form and not in substance from former Section 5372-1, General Code, which the Supreme Court construed in Morrow v. Hess, 116 O. S., 439, holding- that it required property to be listed by the receiver having possession thereof upon tax listing day. The listing day, of course, means the date for filing the return which by Section 5367, General Code, is to be done between February 15th and March 31st. In the court’s opinion the taxation statutes should further be construed as requiring this tax to be paid by the receiver as an incident of his care of the property in his hands. Furthermore, it seems to be almost universally held, as a -rule of administration both in this state and elsewhere, that taxes accruing- during receiver[467]*467ship upon property in the hands of a receiver shall be treated and paid as part of the costs and expenses of administration.

But the question as to the delinquent personal tax of 1930 is one of far greater difficulty. It is conceded that there is no statute making personal taxes a lien but it is contended first, that the state, as an incident of governmental sovereignty has a paramount right to preference over creditors of every kind, and, alternatively, that the state’s right to such preference is necessarily implied as the meaning and effect of Sections 8339 and 11138, General Code, when construed together, as being in pari materia. There appears to be eminent authority in support of these contentions. In Hamilton v. Beggs Co., 171 Fed. Rep. 157, Judge Sater held that personal property taxes were entitled to priority of payment as against the claims of general creditors, basing his decision however upon his construction of what was then Section 3206-a of the Revised Statutes, now appearing substantially unchanged as Section 8339, General Code. In Mortgage Co. v. Syfert, 24 N. P. (N. S.) 157, the Common Pleas Court of Franklin county similarly directed the receiver to pay the personal taxes in preference to the claims of general creditors, apparently basing this conclusion upon these two statutes, and holding that thereby the legislature either “recognized the common law prerogative or its equivalent, as expressed in the statutes referred to, or thereby declared a priority to be followed for the administration of estates by receivers and assignees.” In the recent case of Steele v. Elthor Drug Co., 38 O. L. R., 268, (decided by the Court of Appeals of Mahoning county on June 14, 1933) the syllabus is as follows:

“The claim of the state for payment of the taxes and penalties on personal property in the hands of the receiver, being an exercise of the sovereign right to claim support, has priority over the claims of all classes of creditors.”

Bearing in mind that this court has no rule similar to the Supreme Court rule making the syllabus the law, it will be found upon carefuf examination of this opinion that [468]*468all that the court is called upon to decide or did decide was that a claim for personal taxes assessed prior to the receivership was entitled to priority over both wage claims and claims of general creditors. The priority of this tax over the wage claims might reasonably be based upon the court’s implied approval of Judge Sater’s opinion in Hamilton v. Beggs, 171 Fed.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Gibson v. Warden
81 U.S. 244 (Supreme Court, 1872)
City of Richmond v. Bird
249 U.S. 174 (Supreme Court, 1919)
Lyon v. Guthard
17 N.W. 839 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1883)
Bailey v. Fuqua
24 Miss. 497 (Court of Appeals of Mississippi, 1852)
St. Marys Machine Co. v. National Supply Co.
67 N.E. 1055 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1903)
Anderson v. State
23 Miss. 459 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1852)
Hamilton v. David C. Beggs Co.
171 F. 157 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern Ohio, 1909)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
32 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 464, 1933 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1816, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ohio-casualty-ins-v-freshwater-construction-co-ohctcomplcuyaho-1933.