Sullivan v. James Leo Co.

1 A.2d 400, 124 N.J. Eq. 317, 1938 N.J. LEXIS 725
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedSeptember 16, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 1 A.2d 400 (Sullivan v. James Leo Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sullivan v. James Leo Co., 1 A.2d 400, 124 N.J. Eq. 317, 1938 N.J. LEXIS 725 (N.J. 1938).

Opinion

Two questions require decision in this cause.

1. Are the fees of the receivers, of their counsel and costs of administration entitled to priority to the proceeds resulting from the sale, by the receivers, of certain of the property and assets of the insolvent defendant corporation, or are the taxes due to the city of Jersey City thereon entitled to priority when, as here, those taxes were assessed and became due during the administration of the insolvent corporation by the receivers but subsequent to the time when the court of chancery had already impressed the property to be sold with a prior lien for the fees of the receivers, their counsel and costs of administration?

2. Was the order of the court, authorizing the sale free from liens, including municipal taxes, as it is claimed, improvidently made?

The facts which give rise to these questions are not in dispute. James Leo Co., a corporation of this state, was engaged in the business of manufacturing paper boxes in Jersey City. At the instance of stockholders and creditors, who alleged that the business was being operated at a great loss and to their prejudice, the company was, on August 6th, 1930, adjudged insolvent. Respondents were appointed statutory receivers. They promptly qualified and took immediate possession of the business and holdings of the company. With leave of the *Page 320 court, they operated the business. Notwithstanding their best efforts (their ability is unquestioned) they, too, soon learned that the business could not be operated without great loss. Whereupon, they set out to find a buyer.

The receivers bargained for and received a bid for the greater portion of the holdings of the insolvent corporation, as a going concern. This bid was made by the president and two stockholders of the insolvent corporation, representing six hundred and ten shares or sixty-one per cent. of its issued and outstanding capital stock. These holdings consisted chiefly of the real property known as the main factory building and the mill building immediately adjoining; all machinery, furniture, equipment, merchandise on hand, accounts receivable, c. The purchase price was to be a sum equal to the sum necessary fully to pay and satisfy all debts of the insolvent corporation, and all liens upon its property, as of November 17th, 1930. This sum totaled $74,938.34.

It was made up as follows:

Due on first mortgage on part of the factory property ...   $36,800.00
Due Jersey City for taxes for 1929 and 1930, including
  taxes on personalty for 1930 ..........................    11,391.40
Due for wages and commissions ...........................     1,181.44
Due on notes ............................................     8,262.44
Due on accounts payable .................................    17,302.64
                                                           ___________
    Total ...............................................   $74,938.34
To pay these claims the buyers proposed to advance $71,000 in cash; permit the receivers to set aside accounts receivable to the extent of $10,000 and to use so much thereof as was necessary to make up the difference. In addition thereto, the buyers offered to deliver up to the receivers their six hundred and ten shares of stock and further consented to a fee of $20,000 for the receivers, their counsel and administration costs. This sum, so they agreed, was to be made a charge or lien upon the remaining property and assets of the insolvent corporation.

The receivers formally presented this bid to the court. They strongly recommended the approval thereof. In support *Page 321 of their recommendation they pointed out, inter alia, that neither the insolvent corporation before the receivership, nor they, as receivers, had been able to operate without heavy losses; that the mortgagee was threatening foreclosure because of defaults in principal, interest, and taxes; that the purchase price was sufficient (exclusive of their fees and those of their counsel and costs of administration) to pay all indebtedness of (including liens against) the insolvent corporation; that the remaining property and assets in their hands (inventoried and appraised for $105,000) had, in their opinion, an equity for the remaining thirty-nine per cent. of the stockholders which was "relatively as high as the equity of the stockholders representing sixty-one per cent. of the capital stock * * *" in the property and assets which they agreed to purchase.

Accordingly, the court, on November 17th, 1930, approved the offer of purchase; authorized and ordered the receivers to consummate the sale. In so doing, however, the court ordered, in pursuance of the agreement between the buyers and the receivers, that the fees of the receivers, of their counsel, and costs of administration be made a paramount charge and lien upon the remaining property and assets in the hands of the receivers to the amount of $20,000 as the buyers' share of the said fees and costs. The sale was consummated and all the debts and liens of the insolvent corporation as of November 17th, 1930, save fees and costs of administration, were fully paid and satisfied.

Since that day the receivers have continued in possession of the remaining property and assets because of their inability to sell same any sooner. Finally, however, they did procure a bid of $12,000, free of all liens, for the property remaining in their hands. They formally presented that bid, on June 21st, 1937, to the court for its approval. In their petition they stated, generally, that they had received from rentals for the property proposed to be sold, including other sources (they received an advance of $800 from one of the receivers), the sum of $4,652.33; that they had expended the sum of $4,293.37 for the payment of insurance premiums, repairs, improvements, c., and which expenses they characterized as *Page 322 necessary for the preservation of the res. But during all this time (1931 to 1937, inclusive) the receivers paid nothing to the city of Jersey City on account of the taxes ($10,926.73) due it. The receivers again recommended to the court that the offer be accepted and that the sale be free of all liens. The court on August 4th, 1937, approved the sale and ordered that it be free from liens with exceptions not here material.

The city of Jersey City appealed from that order. But it did not further prosecute the appeal because the receivers notified the city of Jersey City that they would apply to the court for an order modifying the order of August 4th, 1937, so as to eliminate therefrom the provisions that the proposed sale be free from all liens. The receivers made such an application. In their petition to the court they clearly stated the sharp issue between the city of Jersey City and themselves on the question of the priority of their respective claims. They stressed the binding force of the order of November 17th, 1930, which gave them priority; and prayed that the court adjudicate that their claim was prior to the claim of the city of Jersey City; that the court permit them to sell the property free of liens, and that the proceeds of the sale be disbursed by the court pursuant to such determination.

The court, on February 18th, 1938, made the order modifying the order of August 4th, 1937. The modified order now provides, substantially, that the fees of the receivers, of their counsel, and costs of administration are a paramount lien upon the property ordered sold; that these fees and costs are especially a prior lien to the taxes due to the city of Jersey City for the years of 1931 to 1937, inclusive, since same accrued subsequent to the order of the court of November 17th, 1930, by which they were made a prior lien on the same property.

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Bluebook (online)
1 A.2d 400, 124 N.J. Eq. 317, 1938 N.J. LEXIS 725, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sullivan-v-james-leo-co-nj-1938.