Seligmann v. Mills

25 F.2d 807, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 3075
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedApril 2, 1928
DocketNo. 7820
StatusPublished

This text of 25 F.2d 807 (Seligmann v. Mills) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Seligmann v. Mills, 25 F.2d 807, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 3075 (8th Cir. 1928).

Opinion

WALTER H. SANBORN, Circuit Judge.

The Perfection Tire & Rubber Company, a corporation of the state of Delaware, the owner of a manufacturing plant, real.and personal property in Iowa, of the value of several hundred thousand dollars, in December, 1921, made a mortgage deed of trust to the Corporation Trust Company, domiciled in the state of New York to secure the payment of an issue of its bonds to the amount of $1,500,000. The Nemours Trading Corporation was also a corporation of the state of Delaware. About April, 1922, the tire company made, signed, and delivered to Nemours 38 contracts, called notes, of like tenor and effect, except that one of the notes was payable on May 1,1922, and one and only one of the other 37 was payable on the 1st day of each of the succeeding 37 months. Each of these notes contained an agreement of the tire company to pay Nemours $25,000 and interest on a day certain named in it; that as collateral security for the payment of all these notes the tire company pledged its bonds and mortgage on its property at Ft. Madison, Iowa, by virtue of an escrow agreement between the tire company and the Corporation Trust Company; that the tire company gave the' payee of the notes and its assigns authority to collect and to otherwise convert the security therefor, and to sell'the said property securing the payment of these notes, or 'any substitute therefor, on the maturity and default in payment of any of these notes, and to apply the proceeds of such sale to the payment of the defaulted note, arid of any and all other notes executed simultane[808]*808ously with the note defaulted, and, if necessary, to seize and sell any securities for the payment of any of these notes and to apply the proceeds to their payment.

Each of these notes contained the agreement that, upon default in the payment of any one of them upon the date of its maturity, all of them which by their terms matured thereafter should become due, and the collateral held as security for each and all of said notes might be sold by the payee, converted into money, and the proceeds thereof applied to the payment of all the notes still unpaid.

To secure the payment of these 38 notes the tire company about April, 1922, had, pursuant to an escrow agreement, made and delivered to the Corporation Trust Company its bonds, of the faee value of $1,500,000, secured by a mortgage on its property in Iowa. The escrow agreement provided that, in case the tire company defaulted in the payment of any of the 38 notes, these bonds should be delivered by the Corporation Trust Company to Nemours. The tire company defaulted on July 1, 1922, in the payment of $10,000 of the $25,000 note dug on that day, and thereupon automatically the 36 unpaid notes of later dates became due, and, pursuant to the terms of the escrow agreement, were delivered by the Corporation Trust Company to Nemours.

Subsequent to July 1, 1922, and prior to October 3, 1922, Nemours,. which was' still in possession of these notes in the state of Delaware, delivered to the Corporation Trust Company in New York City the notes payable July 1, 1922, August 1,1922, September 1,1922, and October 1,1922, as evidence pursuant to the terms of the trust agreement of the default of the tire company in the payment of these notes, and hence of the default in the payment of all the notes. The remaining 32 notes were, and have since been, in the possession of Nemours and its successor in interest. The remaining bonds, pursuant to an agreement that upon the default of any of the notes the bonds held by the Corporation Trust Company should be delivered to Nemours, were delivered to it, and still remain in its possession, or in the possession of its successor in interest. The face value of these remaihing bonds was $1,302,500.

On November 8, 1922, presumably in a suit in equity for the impounding, seizure, and application of all its property to the payment of its debts, a proper court in the state of Delaware, the domicile of the tire company and of Nemours, appointed a receiver of all the property of the tire company in the state of Delaware. On the 17th day of November, 1922, ancillary receivers were appointed for the Perfection Tire & Rubber Company by the United States District Court for the Southern District of Iowa, in which district was the principal place of business of that company. Thereupon, pursuant to an order of the court below made on November 13, 1923, all this property was sold by these receivers free of all liens and incumbrances, and those liens and incumbrances were imposed upon the proceeds of the sale, which, after expenses and payments theretofore made from it, amounted on February 1,1926, to about $190,000.

The owner of each dollar of that part of this fund applicable to the payment of the debt evidenced by the 36 notes is entitled to receive out of this fund the same percentage of his dollar of debt as the owner of every other dollar of that debt. The appellee, who has succeeded to the rights and equities of Nemours, claims, and the court below has decided, that he is the owner of the entire debt secured by the 36 notes, and to all that portion of the fund in court applicable to the entire debt evidenced by those notes. The appellant, Rudolph A. Seligmann, claims that he is entitled to that part of the fund in court applicable to the payment of that part of the debt of the tire company evidenced by the four notes in the possession of the Corporation Trust Company. He claims this portion of the fund by virtue of a judgment which Irving W- Frankel procured against Nemours for $16,664.88 on March 7, 1923, in the Supreme Court of New York County, New York, and supplementary proceedings to an execution on that judgment, wherein he was appointed by order of that court receiver of “all of the rights, powers, title, property, and interest, legal or equitable, whether in possession or in action, which the Nemours Trading Corporation, judgment debtor herein, has or may have against the said Corporation Trust Company, or which the said Nemours Trading Corporation has or may have in any and all property held or controlled by the Corporation Trust Company at the commencement of these special proceedings, and that the said receiver be invested with full power to sue, recover, and reduce to judgment all claims of any kind whatsoever and against any person whomsoever that the said Nemours Trading Corporation has or may have in relation to any property in the possession or control of the said Corporation Trust Company.”

The first and controlling issue in this case is whether or not Seligmann, the receiver in the Frankel case, has or ever had any cause [809]*809of action or right that he was entitled successfully to present to the court below. The Frankel case was in reality a proceeding in rem. The Nemours Trading Corporation, the defendant, was a corporation of Delaware. It had no domicile in New York, and was not present there. No service of any summons or writ or notice to answer or defend against Frankel’s complaint was ever served on or given to it at its domicile in Delaware. The jurisdiction, if any, of the court in New York was entirely in rem, and the res in that proceeding was that part of the debt of the tire Company to Nemours evidenced by the four notes in possession of the Corporation Trust Company in the city of Now York. That debt was a single debt, evidenced by 36 notes, each of the same tenor and effect, save that the dates of the maturities of the 36 notes differed. On October 3,1922, for the sole purpose of evidencing the default of the tire company in the payment of the portion of the debt evidenced by the four notes, Nemours sent those notes to the trust company.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 F.2d 807, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 3075, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seligmann-v-mills-ca8-1928.