Saccomano v. North Idaho Shingle Co.

252 P.2d 518, 73 Idaho 284, 1952 Ida. LEXIS 242
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 10, 1952
Docket7846
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 252 P.2d 518 (Saccomano v. North Idaho Shingle Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Saccomano v. North Idaho Shingle Co., 252 P.2d 518, 73 Idaho 284, 1952 Ida. LEXIS 242 (Idaho 1952).

Opinions

GIVENS, Chief Justice.

The North Idaho Shingle Company, Inc., an Idaho corporation, owning a quiescent shingle mill and its two-acre site in Section 1, Township 56 North, Range 5 West of the Boise Meridian, about four miles north of the town of Priest River in Bonner County, in March 1949, was in straitened financial difficulties.

Edmund T. Brigham of Newport, Washington, as attorney for the Company, apparently had endeavored to have the creditors defer action on their claims and consent to some sort of settlement of the affairs of the Company. Evidently such efforts were fruitless and thereupon, March 30, 1949, a meeting was held at the Davenport Hotel in Spokane, Washington, attended by the four appellants, Brigham, John A. Speer, lumber broker of Danville, Illinois, then secretary-treasurer and owner of 3/7 of the capital stock of the Company and formerly exercising a great deal of control over the Company, Herb Smith, National, Washington, vice president and former manager, the two in possession of and purportedly owners of the stock of all the other previous • stockholders who were connected with various lumber businesses in Illinois.

Of appellants, Philip Naccarato alone had been connected previously with the Company as bookkeeper, and according to Speer, for a short time in 1948, ostensible manager.

Frank Saccomano was in charge of the Luby Bay Lumber Co., another concern in no way connected with the North Idaho Shingle Co., and he testified Philip Naccarato was, subsequent to the meeting, in charge of the affairs of the Company for appellants so far as he was concerned. [287]*287Joseph E. Bombino lived in Spokane. Frank Naccarato apparently had a restaurant in Priest River.

Appellants and Smith testified in person before the learned trial court, Speer, by deposition. Speer’s testimony and the implications to be drawn from it and his position in the Company and interest in the controversy are exceedingly important; therefore, we are not bound by the findings of the trial court as to the meeting in Spokane and its concomitants, but are in as good a position as the learned trial court to evaluate and accord Speer’s testimony to the other evidence, oral and documentary. Hale v. McCammon Ditch Co., 72 Idaho 478, 244 P.2d 151; Burns v. Skogstad, 69 Idaho 227 at page 236, 206 P.2d 765; Shead v. Moore, 31 Wash. 283, 71 P. 1010; Empire Ranch & Cattle Co. v. Mason, 22 Colo.App. 612, 126 P. 1129; Empire Ranch & Cattle Co. v. Goodrich, 23 Colo.App. 385, 128 P. 473; Gianella v. Haffner, 93 Colo. 449, 26 P.2d 817; Davidson v. Enfield, 35 N.M. 580, 3 P.2d 979; Sanchez v. Torres, 38 N.M. 556, 37 P.2d 805; In re Jubala’s Estate, 40 N.M. 312, 59 P.2d 356; De Pee v. National Life & Accident Ins. Co., 144 Kan. 751, 62 P.2d 923; In re Swisher’s Estate, 153 Kan. 401, 110 P.2d 765; In re Kemper’s Estate, 157 Kan. 727, 145 P.2d 103; Auger v. Shideler, 23 Wash.2d 505, 161 P.2d 200; Reno County Community Hospital Ass’n v. Woodford’s Estate, 171 Kan. 97, 229 P.2d 730.

' Respondents by their amendment after the trial asserted that at this meeting, appellants bought the Company and all the stock therein and the court so found as between the parties; i. e., the corporation and Speer and Smith, but that such sale was void and fraudulent as to the creditors. Our solution appears hereafter.

Following the Spokane meeting,' appellants each put up $750 for which they received a thirty-day note secured by real and personal mortgages on the Company property, signed for the Company by Speer and Smith in their official capacities. Appellants signed as sureties on a Company note whereby it borrowed $2,540.06 from the Bonner County National Bank and the resultant $5,540.06 was forthwith paid to the Company and by it to the Federal and ultimately State Governments for income and unemployment compensation taxes, which were delinquent and enforcement of which was immediately impending.

June 7, 1949, appellants started foreclosure proceedings on the $3,000 note, and on a note given Speer by the Company to pay a previous judgment of Vic Henry (later the cause of action on this note was dismissed) and in connection therewith, one G. L. Gardner, cashier of the Bonner County National Bank, was appointed receiver. The Company at that time additionally owed a note of $11,788 to the Bank, secured by real and chattel mortgages on Company property, and unsecured claims [288]*288of $17,000 or upwards. Gardner took the oath of office as receiver, but otherwise never qualified or functioned, being excused from giving a bond because of the Bank’s interest through its mortgages. This omission was wrong. A receiver’s responsibility is personal, 75 C.J.S., Receivers, § 190, p. 837, and he represents generally all parties. 75 C.J.S., Receivers, § 325, p. 1000. The Bank was not the only creditor. How could it be held for derelictions of the receiver unless it was parti ceps criminis? Through Gardner’s efforts for it, its notes were paid by appellants, and perforce, it washed its hands of the whole matter. Gardner should have been required to give a bond. He persuaded appellants to buy the two notes due the Bank on the representation their second mortgage and their liability on the note they had signed as sureties, would he bettered. Thereupon, he left, and has ever since remained out of, the State.

Through an informal, oral, extra-judicial arrangement between Gardner and the attorney for the Bank, who was also attorney for appellants, appellants were placed in possession of the property and proceeded to operate it, after the court had expressly ordered at the time of the appointment of the receiver, that the plant should not be operated. Dalliba v. Winschell, 11 Idaho 364, 82 P. 107; 75 C.J.S., Receivers, § 183, p. 829.

Appellants continued in possession until January, 1951, by which time they had secured a decree in foreclosure and order of sale. Other creditors at that time filed claims, asked that the first receiver, Gardner, be ousted and another receiver be appointed. The sale was postponed. Thereupon, extended and extensive hearings were had; various pleadings and traverses were filed. At the conclusion of the testimony, the new receiver, who was appointed January 31, 1951, asked to have his pleadings amended to conform to the proof and, in substance, charged appellants with extensive conspiracy, fraud and concealment against the Company’s creditors and the court, in taking over and operating the property.

The court found and concluded with regard to the sale of the corporation as above noted, that appellants had been guilty of fraud, conspiracy and concealment; can-celled their mortgages on the theory that as owners of the Company, when they paid the Bank and took the two mortgages, they thereby paid the mortgages, and the one due them was liquidated; ordered the property sold and, if necessary, a personal deficiency entered against them up to $30,-000, and that they pay all costs of the receivership. The appeal is from that decree.

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Saccomano v. North Idaho Shingle Co.
252 P.2d 518 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1952)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
252 P.2d 518, 73 Idaho 284, 1952 Ida. LEXIS 242, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saccomano-v-north-idaho-shingle-co-idaho-1952.