Stapylton v. Neeley

44 Fla. 212
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJanuary 15, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 44 Fla. 212 (Stapylton v. Neeley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stapylton v. Neeley, 44 Fla. 212 (Fla. 1902).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

This cause being reached for final adjudication was referred by the court to two of its commissioners;, Mess. Maxwell and Glen, for investigation, who report the same suggesting reversal.

[213]*213The appellee Jesse M. Neeley as assignee of John A. Rowell filed hist petition in chancery in the Circuit Court of Marion county on the twenty-sixth of October, 1897, as follows:

“In the Circuit Court of the Fifth Judicial Circuit of

Florida, in and for Marion County, in Chancery.

In the matter of the assignment of John A. Rowell.

To the Honorable W. A. Hocker, Judge of said court:

Jesse M. Neeley respectfully represents unto your Hon- or that he is the assignee of John A. Rowell, under deed of assignment executed by said Rowell to your petitioner, January 15th, 1897, and that he is now, and has been since said date in possession of all the assets conveyed to him by the said assignor. Your petitioner says that G. C. Stapylton, as Receiver of the Merchants National Bank of Ocala, Florida, has filed a claim in the sum of fifty-one hundred dollars against the assets in the hands of your petitioner, based upon an alleged assessment made by the Comptroller of the Currency, upon certain stock of the Merchants National Bank of Ocala, standing on the books of the said bank in the name of John A. Rowell, your petitioner’s assignor, at the' time said bank became. insolvent, and was placed by the Comptroller of the Currency in the hands of the said Receiver.

Your petitioner says in this behalf that the alleged assessment made by the Comptroller of the Currency was not made and did not become a debt if at all against the said J. A. Rowell until long subsequent to the execution of the said deed of assignment, and long after the expiration of the time limited by statute for presenting claims against your petitioner’s trust by domestic creditors,- that the said claim was presented to your peti[214]*214tioner by the said receiver, long after the expiration of said1 time.

Your pétitibnef further shows that no notice of such assessment has ever been given to the said J. A. Rowell, and that the only notice thereof was given directly to your petitioner, as assignee of the said Rowell.

Wherefore your petitioner says that the said claim.for fifty-one hundred dollars, upon said assessment of bank stock, ought not to be allowed as a valid claim against the said trust, and should not be admitted to participate in forms thereof equally with other claims or debts arising and presented to your petitioner as assignee within the time limited by law.

Your petitioner has served upon said G. C. Stapylton, as receiver, a copy of this petition, and notice of presentation of same, and prays the court to make an order, such as may be legal and proper in the premises, and direct your petitioner as such assignee as to his duty in the premises, and decree whether or not the said G. 0. Stapylton, receiver, is entitled to participate as a creditor in respect to said .claim! of fifty-one hundred dollars in the distribution of the funds in his hands as such assignee.

Jesse M. Neeley, Solicitor for J. M. Neeley, Assignee of John A. Rowell.”

The sole defendant G. O'. Stapylton, receiver, answered this petition combating the contention made therein that the claim, of the receiver founded on the liability of Rowell, the assignor, as a stockholder in the suspended National Bank as assessed by the Comptroller of the Currency of the United States, was not entitled to share with other creditors who had filed their claim® within the time prescribed by the .statute in the distribution of the [215]*215assets of Rowell in the hands of the petitioner as assignee for the benefit of Rowell’s creditors generally. The cause was heard in the court below upon the petition and answer and the following decree rendered therein on November 8th, 1897: •

“The above matter ¡came on to be beard before me pursuant to notice, and was argued by counsel for the respective parties, and upon consideration thereof, the court is of opinion, first, that at the time of assessment claim for fifty-one hundred dollars on account of stock assessment presented by the receiver was not a provable claim, and that under said claim he is not entitled to share equally with the other creditors of the estate of the assets in the hands of the assignee; ¡second:, that the claim mot having been filed within the time fixed, by the statute, the same, though not barred, is made subject, or junior, to the 'Claims of the creditors filed within said time and is not entitled to distribution until after said claimswhicb’ were filed in time have been paid. ' It -is therefore considered, ordered, adjudged and decreed by the court that the said claim of said receiver be disallowed;' and the assignee is directed mot to pay the same, or any part thereof, until after the claims which have' been filed within the statutory time have been paid. At Chambers, Ocala, Fla.. 8th November, 1897. W. A. Hocker, Judge.”

From this decree the appeal is taken.

This decree is erroneous, because the petition upon which it is founded does not present a ¡set of facts or circumstances that justified a court of equity in either entertaining the case as presented or in granting the relief prayed and adjudged. Had the petitioner as assignee filed a bill in proper form, making all persons parties who claim debts against the estate, alleging the assign[216]*216ment to'him for the. benefit of the creditors-.generally of the insolvent debtor Rowell, and that he had collected the assets of said estate and converted them into money and was now ready to make distribution of the same among the creditors lawfully entitled to share therein and that among the debts presented were one ór more as to whose lawful right to share in such distribution he was in reasonable doubt and embarrassment, giving the facts and circumstances connected with such claims that gave rise to such doubts and embarressment, and praying for the advice and1 direction of the court, in the premises, and as to the proper distribution and payment of the trust funds in his hands, it would have been proper for the court after due investigation of the matters alleged to have made a decree directing how and what distribution of the funds should be made, including lawful, and' excluding unlawful, claims from the distribution ordered. But the petition filed here does not show that the petitioning assignee has arrived at the point where he is ready to make distribution of any funds in his hand®', or that the assets in his hands are in proper shape for distribution, or that they ever will be. Neither does it give the names of any other creditors of said) estate, nor the amounts or particulars of their respective claimls. It presents the case of an assignee or trustee for the benefit of the creditors generally of an insolvent estate, pending his administration thereof, and before he is ready to make distribution of its assets among those entitled thereto, and without showing that there are any funds out of which anyone will ever be entitled to distribution, 'Coming prematurely to the court of chancery and demanding of it an adjudication as to the legality of am individual isolated claim presented against the trust estate in his hands, and as to its right at some indefinite time in the future to share in [217]*217funds that may or may not in the future come to. hie hands for distribution.

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Bluebook (online)
44 Fla. 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stapylton-v-neeley-fla-1902.