Peckham v. Ronrico Corp.

211 F.2d 727, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 2616
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedApril 13, 1954
Docket4761
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 211 F.2d 727 (Peckham v. Ronrico Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peckham v. Ronrico Corp., 211 F.2d 727, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 2616 (1st Cir. 1954).

Opinion

WOODBURY, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from an order, D.C., 14 F.R.D. 181, denying a motion to intervene in a case previously considered by this court, 1948, 171 F.2d 653. Our prior opinion makes it unnecessary to restate the facts. It will suffice for present purposes only to summarize the proceedings.

In a eomplaint filed in the court below in May 1946, R. E. Peckham, a citizen of Indiana and the assignee of two unsatisfied judgments against Sol Meyer, deceased, one obtained in Indiana and the other obtained on that judgment in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida, seeks satisfaction of his judgments out of certain shares of stock in a Puerto Rican corporation, the defendant Ronrico Corporation, held by the Ferd S. Meyer Puerto Rican Trust, on the theory that those shares constitute assets of Sol Meyer’s estate available to his creditors. The defendants answered the complaint and then filed a motion for summary judgment which they supported by affidavits. In response the plaintiff filed what he called a verified answer, and also a counter affidavit, in reply to which the defendants filed further affidavits correcting conceded errors in their earlier ones and also changing their story in certain respects. The District Court, after giving the plaintiff an opportunity, of which he availed himself, to file further affidavits and to disclose the names of the persons whose depositions he wished to take and what, generally, he proposed to show thereby, finally on August 9, 1947, granted the defendants' motion for summary judgment on the pleadings and the affidavits without taking any oral testimony. D.C., 7 F.R.D. 324. On appeal this court reversed on the ground that conflicts between the plaintiff’s final affidavit filed by leave of court and the defendants’ affidavits, and! also conflicts between the two sets of affidavits filed by the defendants, made it impossible to say that there was no genuine issue as to any material fact. Consequently we vacated the judgment from which that appeal was taken andl remanded the case for further proceedings not inconsistent with our opinion.

Our mandate went down on February 1, 1949, and on March 9, following, the present motion to intervene accompanied; by an “Intervening Claim,” 1 so called, was filed in the court below. The moving party is the same R. E. Peckham who-is plaintiff in the original action. But he attempts to intervene in another capacity, that is to say, in the capacity of assignee in trust of an unsatisfied Florida judgment obtained in December 1932 against Sol Meyer’s son, the defendant Ferd (Ferdinand) S. Meyer.

Peckham rests his claim to intervene on statements made in the first set of affidavits filed by the defendants in sup *729 port of their motion for summary judgment. He says that the defendants in attempting to show by those affidavits that the shares of stock in Ronrico Corporation involved did not belong to Sol Meyer, as alleged in the complaint, inadvertently disclosed that a 80% interest in those shares had in fact belonged since the spring of 1933 to his son Ferd, and that Ferd had fraudulently concealed that interest from his creditors when he subsequently went through bankruptcy. 2 3 Furthermore he says that .Ferd “actively concealed” his fraud upon his creditors so that it did not become known to Peckham, or to his predecessors in title to the judgment, until the defendants filed their first set of affidavits in support of their motion for summary judgment on January 7, 1947. Wherefore Peckham contends that it cannot be said that his petition to intervene was untimely, for the so-called Second, Intervening Claim mentioned in footnote 1, wherein Peckham first made his present contention, but which was not acted upon because the District Court granted the defendant’s motion for summary judgment, was filed only about six months after the defendants’ first set of affidavits.

There is no present occasion to detail the complicated transactions between the members of the Meyer family and their friends and associates for the last twenty odd years alleged in the complaint and the intervening claim which Peckham says show the fraudulent concealment of assets of the Meyer family, and the alternate switching and concealing of those assets between the father Sol and the son Ferd and their agents, friends, relatives and associates for the purpose of concealing them alternately from Peckham as the judgment creditor by assignment of Sol described in the complaint, and from Peck-ham as the judgment creditor by assignment of Ferd described in the Intervening Claim. It will be enough to say that if the allegations in the Intervening Claim are established upon trial and those in the complaint are not, or are established only in part, then indeed a 30% interest in the Ronrico shares involved will not be available to satisfy Peckham as Sol’s judgment creditor, but will be available to satisfy him as Ferd’s judgment creditor. In this situation Peckham asserts that his presence in the case as an intervenor is necessary to prevent the loss which would result to him in his capacity of a judgment creditor of Ferd’s from a judgment for the defendants in the principal action on the ground that Sol’s creditors had no interest in the asset in dispute. Furthermore he says that his presence in the case as an intervenor will permit a fair division of the interest in the Ron-rico stock involved in the event that he is found entitled to recover in both of his capacities and the asset is, as alleged, insufficient to satisfy both his judgments in full.

The District Court, however, denied Peckham’s motion to intervene and he took this appeal. The defendants then moved in this court to dismiss the appeal on the ground that Peckham is not entitled to intervene as of right under section (a) of Rule 24, F.R.C.P., 28 U.S.C., but can do so only in the discretion of the court below under section (b) of the Rule, wherefore the order denying leave to intervene is interlocutory and hence not appealable under Title 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We postponed action on the motion to dismiss and directed argument on it at the hearing on the merits.

In the view we take of the case it will not be necessary to give separate consideration to the appellees’ motion to dismiss the appeal, for we are of the opinion that Peckham has established an absolute right to intervene under Rule *730 24(a) (3), and from this it follows that the order of this court below denying him that right' “has the degree of definitiveness. which supports an appeal therefrom.” Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Co., 1947, 331 U.S. 519, 524, 67 S.Ct. 1387, 1390, 91 L.Ed. 1646.

But before we take up the merits of this appeal we may as well consider a jurisdictional argument advanced by the appellees in support of the District Court’s order denying Peckham leave to intervene.

Process, apparently, was served locally upon the defendants named in the complaint who were either inhabitants of or were found within the District of Puerto Rico.

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Bluebook (online)
211 F.2d 727, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 2616, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peckham-v-ronrico-corp-ca1-1954.