People v. American Loan & Trust Co.

39 Misc. 647, 80 N.Y.S. 627
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 39 Misc. 647 (People v. American Loan & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. American Loan & Trust Co., 39 Misc. 647, 80 N.Y.S. 627 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1903).

Opinion

Fitzgerald, J.

This is an application for a final order of distribution of the balance remaining in the hands of the receiver appointed in an action dissolving the defendant corporation, as found by the report of a referee taking and stating the receiver’s account, and which balance, pursuant to the terms of an order of this court previously made herein, confirming the report of said referee, is retained by the said receiver. A similar application was made to this court some months ago, with the result that the final report of the referee was confirmed, and the accounts of the receiver allowed as therein taken and stated, but the actual distribution of the fund with which the receiver was charged by the said report, and by the .order of this court made thereon, was stayed until the decision, by the Court of Appeals, of appeals allowed by the Appellate Division from its order modifying, and affirming as modified, the order of the Special Term which had modified and confirmed, as modified, the second report of the referee taking and stating the receiver’s account. The Court of Appeals, to which the matter was presented by permission of the Appellate Division, on certified questions involving the allowance of interest on the claims of preferred creditors of the defendant corporation, and on the dividend to be paid a specific claimant (Wickes, as receiver, etc.), has since rendered its decision upon the appeals allowed and heard. The receiver, therefore, makes this application for the order of final distribution, upon what he states to be the record, consisting of the order of the Special Term, above referred to, confirming the final report of the referee; the opinion and order of the Court of Appeals upon the appeals above referred to; the Appellate Division’s order making the order of the Court of Appeals the order of this court; the original order of reference; the first report of the referee and the order of this court confirming the same; the second report of the referee, the exceptions of various creditors thereto, and the order of this court in part, confirming and in part modifying said report; the order of the Appellate Division modifying in part and in part affirming the order last referred to; the referee’s final report, and the notices of appearances and demand served by contesting unpreferred" [650]*650creditors who, upon the' motion for final distribution of the fund, for the first time appeared by attorney. ■ On the other hand the application is opposed by many unpreferred creditors, who object to the distribution (provided for in paragraph 3 of the proposed order accompanying the notice of motion and now submitted), by which the sum in'the hands of the receiver, which would have gone to the preferred creditors of the defendant corporation by way of interest under the terms of the referee’s second report, is divided proportionately among those four unpreferred creditors who were ascertained by the order of the Appellate Division as having alone excepted to the said report; and who desire, for the reasons set forth in their many opposing affidavits, that the funds in the hands of the receiver be deposited in court, or that the payment thereof to creditors be stayed, or that the ' actual distribution thereof be otherwise postponed until the rights of such opposing unpreferred creditors may be fully and finally determined. The direction in the proposed order and the actual distribution in accordance therewith, to which objection is so vigorously made, is identical with that made by the Appellate Division in its order modifying and affirming, as modified, the order of the Special Term modifying and confirming, as modified, the second report of the referee on the receiver’s accounting; and the award by the appellate court of the fund in question to the unpreferred creditors who had filed proper, specific and timely exceptions to that report, and who were represented upon the appeal from the order modifying, and as modified, confirming that report, to the entire exclusion of all other unpreferred creditors, was based upon the facts, referred to by the appellate court in its opinion, that the other unpreferred creditors have not pressed their claims nor put themselves in an attitude to receive the benefit of the ruling now made or to review that of the referee.” Row, however, that an actual and final distribution is about to be made, the unpreferred creditors, to whose failure or omissions the appellate. court called attention in the language above quoted, appear in opposition, contending in the affidavits now presented^ that if they never excepted to the findings of the referee’s second report, it was solely because they had never received notice of the filing thereof, and if they were not represented on the appeal from the order made upon the motion for the confirmation of that report, it was solely because they never were served with notice of such appeal; they, therefore, [651]*651now insist that their time to file exceptions to said report has never been limited because it has never begun to run by the service upon them of notice of filing, and that the order made upon appeal did not bind them because they had no notice of and were not parties to the proceedings on appeal; and they, therefore, oppose the distribution of the fund until, by the filing, hearing and determination of their exceptions, they may be included in the class of unpreferred creditors, to whom the appellate court has awarded the fund in question. In addition to these many creditors, another, Hawkes, as executrix, contends in opposing affidavits, that, like the unpreferred creditors to whom the Appellate Division awarded the fund, she filed proper and timely exceptions to the referee’s second report and was represented upon the appeal from the order made, upon the motion for the confirmation of that, report, but. was excluded from participation in the said fund by the order of the Appellate Division, 'and could not have her rights therein heard and determined by the Court of Appeals upon the appeal to that court above referred to; and she asks that, pending the determination of an appeal which she intends to take from the final order of distribution, and to which she claims to be entitled as a matter of right, and upon which a full and final adjudication of the reciprocal rights and liabilities of all the parties, with respect to the fund in question, may be made, the actual distribution be stayed, or, by the deposit of the fund in court or otherwise postponed. In support of these contentions she submits affidavits reciting the above facts, and referring to and incorporating practically the entire record of the proceedings had in this action. The hearing of the counsel for the excluded unpreferred creditors, and the reception and consideration, upon this application, of their opposing affidavits and papers, were opposed, by the unpreferred creditors to whom the fund in question was awarded, upon the grounds that the application is made exclusively upon the judicial record, and that this court is limited, in finally disposing of the fund, to the entry of an order in accordance with the directions of the orders of the Appellate Division and of the Court of Appeals. I am mindful of the fact that these opposing affidavits were received only upon the understanding that, if they were to be considered, the receiver and the successful unpreferred creditors should have an opportunity to examine them and to reply if desirable. First deciding the preliminary question thus raised, [652]*652I think it proper to note the.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 Misc. 647, 80 N.Y.S. 627, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-american-loan-trust-co-nysupct-1903.