Ringling Trust & Savings Bank v. Whitfield Estates, Inc.

32 F.2d 92, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 3707
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 15, 1929
DocketNo. 5399
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 32 F.2d 92 (Ringling Trust & Savings Bank v. Whitfield Estates, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ringling Trust & Savings Bank v. Whitfield Estates, Inc., 32 F.2d 92, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 3707 (5th Cir. 1929).

Opinion

DAWKINS, District Judge.

This is an appeal from a verdict and decree rejecting the demand that defendant be adjudged an involuntary bankrupt. The transaction out of which the alleged acts of bankruptcy arose was a trust deed executed, within four months preceding filing of the petition, in favor of one of the defendants’ creditors, Adair Realty & Trust Company, which petitioners charge was done with the intent (1) to hinder and delay unsecured creditors; and (2) with the intent, while insolvent, to prefer the said Adair Realty & Trust Company to the extent of $1,600,000.

Originally there were three petitioners, to wit, Ringling Trust & Savings Bank, Southern Construction Engineers, Inc., and Cragin-Smith Advertising Company, whose bill was filed on March 23,1927, and on April 22d following a fourth petitioner, Gardner-Noble Company, was allowed to intervene, and an amendment on behalf of all was permitted, in which the said acts of bankruptcy were reiterated in more detail. It was further alleged that “all of the creditors, * * * at the time of the filing of the original petition, were less than 12 in number.” On May 6, 1927, Cragin-Smith Advertising Company was allowed to withdraw as a petitioning creditor. On August 6th defendant answered, admitting that Ringling Trust & Savings Bank was a creditor, but specifically denying that the other petitioners were such. It further denied that the unsecured creditors were less than 12, and set out a list of some 40 individuals and firms, with addresses, which it alleged were unsecured creditors, averred that the trust deed assailed was for the purpose of securing bonds in the sum of $1,600,000, representing bona fide obligations of the defendant, and further denied that the transfer was for the purpose of defrauding or preferring any creditor. It prayed that the issues be submitted to a jury.

The ease was tried before a jury, and, after all the evidence was in, the court "below, upon motion" of the defendant, directed a [93]*93verdict in its favor, finding it “not guilty of the acts of bankruptcy alleged in tbe amended petition.” A decree in accordance with this finding was entered, and this appeal was asked by the Ringling Trust & Savings Bank, Southern Construction Engineers, Gardner-Noble Company, and L. B. Whitfield, intervener. Subsequently L. B. Whitfield petitioned a severance and withdrew from the appeal. (We find in the record an answer by the defendant to the intervention of Whitfield, but no petition for that purpose by him, or order allowing the same by tbe court below.)

Motion to Dismiss.

On May 5, 1928, petitioners filed their motion of appeal in the following form:

“Como now the petitioning creditors, Ringling Trust & Savings Bank, a corporation, Southern Construction Engineers, Inc., a corporation, Gardner-Noble Company, a corporation, and L. B. Whitfield, intervening creditor, and enter their appeal from the final judgment of this honorable court, rendered in the above cause on May 5, A. D., 1928, to the United States Circuit Court of Appeals for the Fifth Judicial Circuit, returnable before said court at New Orleans, in the state of Louisiana, on June 4, A. D. 1928. The said Whitfield Estates, Inc., a corporation, and Messrs. Cooper, Knight, Adair, Cooper & Osborne, its attorneys of record, will please take notice of said appeal, the same being taken under the provision of the Act of Congress approved January 31, A. D. 1928, entitled ‘An act in reference to writs of error.’ ”

At the same time they filed a motion for writ of error, as follows:

“Come now the petitioning creditors, Ringling Trust & Savings Bank, a corporation, Southern Construction Engineers, Inc., a corporation, Gardner-Noble Company, a corporation, and L. B. Whitfield, intervening creditor in the above-stated cause, by their respective attorneys, and feeling themselves aggrieved by the final judgment of this honorable court entered against them in favor of the said Whitfield Estates, Inc., on the 5th day of May, A. D. 1928, hereby pray that a writ of error may be allowed them from the United States Circuit Court of Appeals for the Fifth Cireuit, to the District Court of the United States for the Southern District of Florida, and be made returnable according to law and the practice of the court. And the said petitioners respectively present herewith their assignment of errors and prayer for reversal.”

Accompanying this motion were nine assignments of error, which will be considered hereafter. Petitioners also filed their “petition for reversal” in the following words:

“Come now the petitioning creditors, Ringling Trust & Savings Bank, a corporation, Southern Engineers, Inc., a corporation, Gardner-Noble Company, a corporation, and L. B. Whitfield, intervening creditor, and pray for a reversal of the judgment of the District Court of the United States for the Southern District of Florida, in a certain matter therein pending in bankruptcy, in the matter of Whitfield Estates, Inc., bankrupt, which judgment was entered on the verdict of a jury on May 5, 1928, in said District Court.”

On the same day the court signed and there was filed the following:

“This 5th day of May, 1928, came the plaintiff, the Ringling Bank & Trust Company, by its attorney, and filed herein and presented to the court its petition, praying for the allowance of a writ of error and assignments of error intended to be urged by it, praying also that a transcript of the record and papers upon which the judgment herein was rendered, duly authenticated, may he sent to the United States Cireuit Court of Appeals for the Fifth Judicial Circuit and that such other and further proceedings may be had as may be proper in the premises. In consideration whereof, the court does allow the writ of error upon the defendant giving bond according to law in the sum of thirty thousand dollars ($30,000), which shall operate as a supersedeas bond.”

A writ of error was immediately issued, addressed to tbe judge below, which bears the indorsement: “The within writ of error was this day served by filing the original with the clerk of said District Court, and also filing in said clerk’s office a duly certified copy of same for the adverse party, and transmitting herewith the original record and proceedings as herein commanded.” In the order allowing severance and withdrawal by L. B. Whitfield, “summons or other notice” of the appeal was waived. Citation on the writ of error was addressed to the defendant Whitfield Estates, which, together with return thereon, read as follows:

“To Whitfield Estates, Inc., a Corporation:
“You are hereby cited and admonished to be and appear at the United States Circuit Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, to be held at the city of New Orleans in the state of Louisiana, thirty days from date hereof, pursuant to a writ of error filed in the clerk’s office of the District Court of the United [94]*94States for the Southern District of Florida, at Tampa, Florida, wherein Ringling Trust & Savings Bank, a corporation, Southern Construction Engineer's, Inc., a corporation, and Gardner-Noble Company, a corporation, petitiqning creditors, are plaintiffs in error, and you are the defendant in error, to show cause, if any there be, why the judgment in the said writ of error mentioned should not be corrected, and speedy justice done to the parties in that behalf.

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Bluebook (online)
32 F.2d 92, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 3707, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ringling-trust-savings-bank-v-whitfield-estates-inc-ca5-1929.