Stepp v. McAdams

88 F.2d 925, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 3282
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedMarch 15, 1937
DocketNo. 8369
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 88 F.2d 925 (Stepp v. McAdams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stepp v. McAdams, 88 F.2d 925, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 3282 (9th Cir. 1937).

Opinion

GARRECHT, Circuit Judge.

The claim of the appellant is based up-' on a contract entered into between him and the Elmer Company, Ltd., on November 25, 1929. In that contract, the appellant agreed to furnish and sharpen bits and to do welding work in connection with the company’s oil well drilling operations.

Pertinent provisions of the contract follow:

“3. Second Party [the appellant] agrees that he will keep full and correct records as to the bits furnished and welding done and charges to be made on each specific well, all of which records shall be open to the inspection of first party at any time, and all of such charges shall be the same as are made by second party to others for whom second party is performing similar service.
“4. It is specifically agreed by and between the parties hereto that second party shall be paid for the services rendered and to be rendered in connection with the drilling of said oil wells, as hereinafter set forth and in no other manner:
“(a) As to Jameson Well No. 2. For all bits furnished and welding done in connection with the drilling of Jameson Well No. 2, first party shall pay and second party shall receive that proportion of the value of Fifty per cent. (50%) of the first oil produced from said well that the total charges of second .party for furnishing the bits and welding for said well shall bear to the total cost of first party for the drilling of said well.”

With reference to other specified wells, the contract contains provisions identi[927]*927cal or similar to that of paragraph 4(a), supra.

It was stipulated at the hearing before the special master that the Elmer Company had secured no permit from the Commissioner of Corporations of the State of California authorizing the execution of the contract.

The special master reported that by virtue of the contract, the appellant had an equitable lien against the proceeds of the wells, and found that the contract did not create or assign a “security” as defined by the California Corporate Securities Act (Calif.Stat.1929, p. 1251).

The court below sustained the exceptions of the appellee to the special master’s report, and made an order disallowing the appellant’s claim to a preferred status against the assets of the receivership. The court, however, recognized the appellant as a general creditor foj; $35,361.38.

The court also held that the special master was correct in determining that an equitable lien had been created in favor of the appellant by virtue of the contract of November 25, 1929, but ruled that “where creditors’ rights have intervened as in this receivership, the failure to obtain the permit required by the Corporate Securities Act relegates the claimant to the status of a general creditor with all others who are on such parity with him.”

From the order just referred to, the present appeal has been taken.

On. November 16, 1936, after the transcript of record herein was filed, the appellant presented to this court a petition for leave to file a petition for an order to show cause, and a petition for an order to show cause, directed to the appellee and to the Guaranty Liquidating Corporation, commanding them to show catise why the latter company should not be made an appellee herein, and be directed to pay the full amount of the appellant’s claim. From the brief accompanying the papers filed by the appellant, it appears that the Guaranty Liquidating Corporation, by an order made by the court below on May 5, 1936, received a net amount of $115,483.89 in cash and all other assets of the Elmer Company, Ltd., and that the Guaranty Company’s claim and all other claims of the Elmer Company’s creditors except that of the appellant herein, “were paid and satisfied, leaving claimant Howard W. Stepp the only creditor whose claim is unpaid.”

The appellant also states that, in view of the fact that the Guaranty Company “agreed to pay the claim of said Howard W. Stepp in whatever amount it should be finally allowed and approved,” “the alleged error” of the court below as to the appellant’s status as creditor “no longer should affect” his rights to payment.

Once the appellant’s creditor status is fixed by this tribunal, however, the details regarding the fund from which payment is to be made is a matter that the court below, already acquainted with the complicated affairs of the Elmer Company, is well able to determine. While we-undoubtedly have the power to bring in the Guaranty Liquidating Corporation as a party appellee, we believe that the exercise of a sound judicial discretion points the other way.

Accordingly, on November 23, 1936, we denied the appellant’s petition that the Guaranty Liquidating Corporation be made a party appellee, etc.

Although the appellee did not file a cross-appeal, he is now contending that the appellant should be relegated to a status inferior to that even of general creditor. There are several reasons why the state of the record prevents the appellee from maintaining that position, which in reality constitutes an attack upon the decree of the court below.

In the first place, no cross-appeal has been filed. Morley Construction Company v. Maryland Casualty Company, 57 S.Ct. 325, 81 L.Ed. -, decided on February 1, 1937, and the many cases there cited; O’Brien’s Manual of Federal Appellate Procedure, p. 99; Id., 1936 Cum.Supp., p. 85.

Second, in the court below the appellee repeatedly prayed that the appellant be given the precise status that was accorded to the latter in the decree, namely, that of general creditor.

Finally, during the hearing before the special master, the attorneys for the appellee “stated that they had no objection to the allowance of the claim of Howard W. Stepp as a general claim,” for $35,361.-38, the sum that the appellant is here asking.

Accordingly, in the present appeal we are commencing from the postulate that the appellant is at least a general creditor, for the amount stated. The only question that we will here consider, on the merits, [928]*928is whether or not the appellant is a preferred creditor, by virtue of the contract of November 25, 1929.

The appellant claims that under the terms of the contract he is entitled to “an equitable lien against the proceeds of the first production [of oil] if, as and when the same comes into being.”

Nowhere in the record or in the briefs are we able to find any reference to the question of whether or not there was any recordation of the contract; or whether or not the other creditors of the Elmer Company were prior in point of time; or whether such creditors, if subsequent, had actual notice of the contract between the appellant and the company. Since it is the appellant’s primary duty to submit a complete record, the presumption arising from the failure to make a proper showing must be one unfavorable to the contentions of the appellant.

The law frowns upon secret charges against property. It is well established that equitable liens will not be enforced against creditors without notice, either actual or constructive.

In the leading case of Walker v. Brown, 165 U.S. 654, 664, 17 S.Ct. 453, 457, 41 L.Ed. 865, Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
88 F.2d 925, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 3282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stepp-v-mcadams-ca9-1937.