State Ex Rel. Unemployment Compensation Board of Unemployment Compensation Division v. Burton

44 N.E.2d 506, 112 Ind. App. 268, 1942 Ind. App. LEXIS 44
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 10, 1942
DocketNo. 16,934.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 44 N.E.2d 506 (State Ex Rel. Unemployment Compensation Board of Unemployment Compensation Division v. Burton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Unemployment Compensation Board of Unemployment Compensation Division v. Burton, 44 N.E.2d 506, 112 Ind. App. 268, 1942 Ind. App. LEXIS 44 (Ind. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

Bedwell, J. —

By this appeal the appellant seeks to present the question of the power or right of a trial court to amend and correct, nunc pro tunc, a judgment that had been rendered in a receivership' proceeding, after the close of the term of the court at which the original judgment was entered.

The Nashville Coal Company, Inc., instituted an action in the Gibson Circuit Court against the New Liberty Coal Company, Inc., to recover a judgment on promissory notes and to foreclose a mortgage, and in such proceeding the appellees V. L. Burton and Russell R. Wright were appointed coreceivers of the New Liberty Coal Company, Inc.

During the pendency of the receivership proceeding, the appellee Will H. Smith, as Collector of Internal Revenue, District of Indiana, Department of Treasury of the United States of America, filed a claim for taxes due the United States of America pursuant to Titles VIII and IX of the Social Security Act' (Title 42, *271 § 1001 and § 1101, and Title 26, § 1400 United States Code Annotated), plus interest and penalties in the total sum of $1,979.04. This claim was afterwards amended; and in the amended claim it was set forth that the sum of $665.11 was due the claimant under Section 801 of Title VIII of the Social Security Act passed by the Federal Congress, because of deductions made by the New Liberty Coal Company, Inc., as employer, from wages due its employees.

The appellant also filed a claim in the receivership proceeding in which it was alleged that the New Liberty Coal Company, Inc., was justly indebted to it in the sum of $1,315.93 for unemployment compensation contributions that had been assessed pursuant to chapter 4 of the Acts of 1936, as amended by chapter 125 of the Acts of 1937 of the General Assembly of Indiana.

After the filing of such claims, and on October 5, 1939, the coreceivers filed a petition in the Gibson Circuit Court in which they prayed the direction and instruction of the court in reference to the disposition of the balance of money in their hands. In such petition they set forth that they had reduced all the assets of the New Liberty Coal Company, Inc., to cash; that they had a balance in their hands of $1,336.94, and that after payment of fees for services of the coreceivers and their attorneys and the court costs there would remain a balance of $786.94. They then set forth an itemized list of general claims in the amount of $1,471.23, of preferred claims in the amoupt of $13,379, which list includes the claims of appellant, and Will H. Smith, as Collector of Internal Revenue, and then prayed instructions with reference to the disposition of said balance of $786.94.

Thereafter, and on November 22, 1939, the court entered an order allowing, first the claim of the co- *272 receivers and their attorneys for their services, and next ordering the coreceivers to pay the costs of the action. The order then proceeded as follows: “and that said co-receivers should pay the sum of $665.11 due for Unemployment Compensation Insurance, as provided by law, as a priority over any and all other claims filed herein, save and except the fees due said co-receivers and said attorneys and the costs of this action ...” A judgment, which followed the terms thereof, was rendered upon such order.

After the making of such order, and on April 1, 1941, the coreceivers filed their final report setting forth their receipts and disbursements and praying the approval thereof, and their discharge from their trust and the release of their bond. In such final report they show the following item of disbursements:

“40. March 7, 1941, Collector of Internal Revenue, taxes $665.11”

On April 14,. 1941, the court below approved this final report, the judgment of approval reciting that the coreceivers had collected all the assets of the trust and had distributed all of said assets according and pursuant to the order of the court; that there were no objections or exceptions filed to the final report, and that creditors and all others interested were notified to appear on the 12th day of April, 1941, if they had any objection or exception.. This judgment approving such final report specified, “that the final report of the said co-receivers heretofore filed in this cause, be, and the same is now by the court fully approved, together with all payments made by said co-receivers, including their own fee, and that of their attorneys; that said co-receivers should be and they are now by the court discharged and released from their trust; and that the bond heretofore executed in this matter is released; *273 and the co-receivership is by the court declared fully and finally and .completely settled.”

Thereafter, and on September 30, 1941, the appellees Y. L. Burton and Russell R. Wright, as coreceivers of the New Liberty Coal Company, Inc., filed a verified petition to amend and correct the judgment entered on November 22, 1939, nunc pro tunc. In such petition they set forth that by inadvertence, neglect and misprison of the attorneys preparing the entry, order and judgment they had not properly entered the judgment as rendered by the court in that the order and decree provided that the coreceivers should pay the sum of $665.11, “due for Unemployment Compensation Insurance, as provided by law,” when such order and decree should have provided, “that said coreceivers should pay the sum of $665.11 due to. Will H. Smith, Collector of Internal Revenue, as deductions from the employees’ wages for old age benefits, as provided by law.”

The court entered an order on September 30, 1941, granting the coreceivers’ motion to amend and correct the judgment and entered a judgment by which the judgment of November 22, 1939, was amended, nunc pro tunc, as prayed.

The appellant excepted to the order of the court granting the motion to amend the judgment of November 22, 1939, nunc pro tunc, and seeks to appeal herein from the action of the trial court in overruling its exception and granting the motion of the coreceivers.

It does not' appear from the record that any steps were taken to set aside the judgment of the court below, entered on April 14, 1941, approving the final report of the coreceivers and discharging them, nor do the parties raise any question about the power of the court below to amend and correct the judgment of November 22, *274 1939, after a final judgment had been rendered by the court terminating the receivership proceedings and discharging the co-receivers.

But the appellee, Will H. Smith, as Collector of Internal Revenue, is contending that the judgment of November 22, 1939, was an interlocutory judgment which might be amended at any time either upon direct and summary proceedings instituted for that purpose or by the court upon its own motion. Such appellee further contends that the appellant failed to file any exceptions to the final report of the coreceivers and that they are bound thereby, and that having failed to appeal from the, final judgment, approving such final report, that they can raise no question by their attempted appeal from the nunc pro tunc judgment, which corrected the interlocutory judgment of November 22, 1939.

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Bluebook (online)
44 N.E.2d 506, 112 Ind. App. 268, 1942 Ind. App. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-unemployment-compensation-board-of-unemployment-compensation-indctapp-1942.