Pomeranz v. National Beet Harvester Co.

261 P. 861, 82 Colo. 482, 1927 Colo. LEXIS 494
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedNovember 14, 1927
DocketNo. 11,722.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 261 P. 861 (Pomeranz v. National Beet Harvester Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pomeranz v. National Beet Harvester Co., 261 P. 861, 82 Colo. 482, 1927 Colo. LEXIS 494 (Colo. 1927).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Campbell

delivered the opinion of the court.

In the suit of D. L. Daron v. The National Beet Harvester Company pending in the district court of Adams county, at plaintiff’s request, a receiver was appointed to take possession of defendant’s property and administer its assets, supposedly for the benefit of its creditors. The receiver Beck thereafter filed a petition in the receivership proceedings in which he alleged that Wolf Pomeranz of Prowers county, Colorado, had in his possession under claim of ownership certain beet pullers and parts, the property of the receiver, and which Pomeranz refused to deliver to him upon demand, and he, therefore, asked for an order of the court, which was granted, ordering Pomeranz to turn over the property to him by a certain day, with which order Pomeranz refused to comply. Thereupon the court, without notice or affording him an opportunity to be heard, adjudged Pomeranz guilty of contempt and issued an order for his arrest, under which writ the sheriff arrested him and put him in the county jail of Adams county, where he was confined for several days until he was subsequently released on bail. In Pomeranz’s application for a writ of prohibition in the Supreme Court to restrain the district court from further proceeding against him for the alleged contempt, we granted the same and discharged Pomeranz from the order on the ground that the district court acted wholly without jurisdiction. In the course of our opinion (People, ex rel. v. District Court, 74 Colo. 58, 218 Pac. 742) we said: “The receiver could get possession of the property only by suit against Pomeranz to recover the property, or by making him a party to the original suit, and having the receivership extended to the property. 34 Cyc. 213.” Another and separate action, growing out of the controversy between this re *484 ceiver and Pomeranz, wherein the latter sued the receiver and others for damages for false imprisonment under the invalid contempt judgment, reached this court and in reviewing the same we held that the receiver and his attorney were liable in damages for the commitment, and reversed the judgment, of the lower court which had dismissed the action. Pomeranz v. Class, 82 Colo. 173, 257 Pac. 1086. Counsel for the receiver now asserts that, acting upon our statement in the prohibition case above quoted, he filed in the receivership proceeding in the district court of Adams county a verified petition in which he asks that Pomeranz be made a party defendant in the main suit, setting forth the various proceedings therein up to the time of the filing of the petition, and asked that the court extend the receivership over the property claimed by Pomeranz, and that the same be adjudged to be a part of the assets of the receivership and subject to the jurisdiction of the Adams county district court in the receivership proceeding, and for a further order adjudging that the receiver be declared to be the owner of the beet pullers and that he have judgment against Pomeranz for the possession thereof, or if they cannot be delivered, for their value and exemplary damages for their unlawful detention. The court thereupon ordered that a summons be issued, and it was issued, directing Pomeranz to answer and in default of an answer that petitioner might apply to the court for the relief demanded. The summons on its face requires Pomeranz to appear in an action brought against him by Dar on, plaintiff in the receivership proceeding, and commands him to answer Daron’s complaint within the statutory time. It recites that the action is brought to extend the receivership over the beet pullers, and asks that the same be adjudged a part of the assets of such receiver, and that the petitioner be decreed to be the owner thereof and entitled to possession as of the date of the original demand, and that the court find the value of the property to be $1,212.75 and that if a manual de *485 livery of the same cannot he had that plaintiff have Judgment against Pomeranz for the value as aforesaid and for damages for unlawful detention.

Service of the summons was made upon the defendant in Prowers county, Colorado, where he resided and in which county was committed, if at all, the alleged tort, consisting of the conversion by Pomeranz of the property in dispute. Responding to the summons the defendant Pomeranz filed an application for a change of venue and supported the same with affidavits. The motion sets forth the nature of the action in which summons was issued and states the claims of the receiver, and that defendant claims title to the beet pullers by virtue of a sale made under a distraint warrant of the treasurer of Prowers county for taxes assessed against the Arkansas. Valley Supply Company, and the property sold thereunder to the defendant Pomeranz, and that after such purchase he sold these pullers and parts thereof which he thus purchased long prior to the filing of the so-called petition of the receiver to extend the receivership, and that such pullers and parts thereof were not in his possession at the time of, or since, the filing of such petition for such extension. The motion further states that the defendant was, at the time of the service upon him in Prowers county of the summons, and long theretofore had been, and still is, residing in Prowers county, Colorado, and that the cause of action set forth in the petition and summons arose, if at all, in Prowers county, Colorado, and not elsewhere. All other necessary facts are set forth in the motion, duly verified, that would, as the trial court found, entitle the defendant to a change of venue, if the action was an ordinary adverse action between the parties, and, as the defendant claims, entitled him to a change, irrespective of the nature or character of the attempted cause of action set up in the receiver’s petition. Other grounds of the motion, such as the prejudice of the presiding judge of the court which disqualifies him impartially to determine the controversy, *486 were set forth at considerable length, but in view of our conclusion that the change of venue should have been granted because Prowers county was the proper county for the trial, we do not consider them. Accompanying this motion for a change of venue the defendant filed a general demurrer to the receiver’s petition based upon the lack of jurisdiction of the Adams county court in this receivership action to litigate the issues.

The discussion has taken a wide range, much broader than is necessary. We shall not pass upon defendant’s contention that a receiver should not have been appointed in this case because, on the face of the record, the object of the applicant for the receivership was not to serve the creditors of the Harvester Company, but to protect the debtor company from threatened suits of its creditors and to serve private interests. If the attack here made by the defendant upon that order were properly presented in an appropriate way by a creditor, or stockholder, it might be that the judgment of the district court in appointing the receiver would be set aside. But in this proceeding, even though we have the power to determine the question, we would not do so because the real object and desire of the defendant is to have his rights. in the premises determined in this application of the receiver, but by the district court of Prowers county.

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

Related

First Nat. Bank of Seminole v. Henshaw
1934 OK 410 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1934)
Rossi v. Colorado Pulp & Paper Co.
299 P. 19 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1931)
Buchhalter v. Myers
276 P. 972 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1929)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
261 P. 861, 82 Colo. 482, 1927 Colo. LEXIS 494, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pomeranz-v-national-beet-harvester-co-colo-1927.