Tell City Nat. Bank v. Wischer, Trustee

168 N.E. 595, 90 Ind. App. 161, 1929 Ind. App. LEXIS 300
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 30, 1929
DocketNo. 13,437.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 168 N.E. 595 (Tell City Nat. Bank v. Wischer, Trustee) 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
Tell City Nat. Bank v. Wischer, Trustee, 168 N.E. 595, 90 Ind. App. 161, 1929 Ind. App. LEXIS 300 (Ind. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinions

Nichols, J.

Action by appellant, commenced by filing its verified claim in three paragraphs against the estate of Frank I. Odell and Henry Odell, individually and as partners doing business under the firm name of Sunnycrest Orchard Company, Assigned, for money loaned such insolvents prior to the date on which they made an assignment of all their property for the benefit of their creditors, and seeking to have a certain written assignment and transfer of personal property and two certain warehouse receipts alleged to have been assigned to and held by appellant declared first and prior liens on the proceeds of property covered by said assignment and warehouse receipts remaining in the hands of said trustee, and asking an order of court requiring said trustee to pay the proceeds of said sale so in his hands in payment of the amounts due appellant upon its said assignments and in discharge of its liens so existing upon said fund.

Appellant’s claim was allowed by the trustee of the estate, but such allowance was objected to by appellees as labor claimants and, on objection to such allowance, such claim was transferred to the civil trial docket as a separate cause. Appellees, othei; than the trustee, answered by denial and by a second paragraph, in substance, that they were hired and employed by Frank I. Odell, who was at the time the resident manager of the Sunny-crest Orchard Company, and said company at the time said claimants were so hired was owned by Frank I. and Henry N. Odell, doing business under the firm *163 name of Sunnycrest Orchard Company, and that said labor was performed at the instance of Frank I. Odell for the Sunnycrest Orchard Company for its benefit, and that the work and labor performed, to wit: picking, harvesting and storing of apples, and other work performed about said company’s farm by said laborers and claimants at the Sunnycrest orchards and at other places are valued by said laborers and claimants at amounts set respectively opposite each of the names of the 28 appellees; that said labor performed for said Sunnycrest Orchard Company was performed within a period of six months immediately preceding the assignment by the Odells, individually and as partners as aforesaid; that appellee trustee now holds in his hands $-as trustee of said estate to be paid to creditors and prior lienholders according to their priority and right; that appellant asks the court to make an order requiring the trustee of said estate, to pay off its liens as shown in its petition, and shows to the court that it advanced money to the Odells, individually and as partners, that said money was advanced to the Odells upon the execution of promissory notes, which were secured respectively by the assignments of property as shown in its petition, which property consisted of-bushels of apples held in storage by the Tell City Creamery Company, and that, for the reason that appellant holds said assignments and warehouse receipts, it claims that its liens should have priority over all other liens, including all liens held by appellees as laborers; that appellees’ labor was performed immediately preceding, and within the six months preceding, the said assignment for the benefit of creditors, and that appellees are prior lienholders and hold liens that should be paid off before those held by appellant are paid; that appellees, as such lienholders, are entitled under the law to have as much as $50 each paid before any liens held *164 by appellant are paid; that appellees’ claims for labor performed are fair and just, and that no part thereof is for usurious interest; that at the time of said transfer of property, appellant well knew that the Odells were in failing circumstances and that said labor had been performed by said laborers and was not paid for, and that said labor was the picking and harvesting of said apple crop and that said apples were placed in storage in the said.Tell City Creamery Company, and well knew, at the time it accepted the transfer of said warehouse receipts, that the labor required to produce said property had never been paid for, and such labor consisted of picking and sorting said apples and in taking care thereof, and general farm work upon said farm.

Appellant’s demurrer to the second paragraph of answer was overruled by the court, to which ruling appellant excepted, and elected to stand on said ruling of the court on its demurrer, and thereon the court rendered judgment on the pleadings against appellant, from which this appeal, appellant assigning as error the court’s ruling on its demurrer to the second paragraph of answer.

This paragraph of answer was addressed to the whole complaint. It was good as to the first paragraph, which alleged only the assignment of the property without any averment of warehouse receipts or the assignment thereof or the delivery of the property. But the answer must be good as to each of the paragraphs of complaint in order to withstand appellant’s demurrer. Falmouth, etc., Turnpike Co. v. Shawhan (1886), 107 Ind. 47, 5 N. E. 408; Petty v. Trustees of the Church of Christ (1884), 95 Ind. 278; McLead v. Aetna Life Ins. Co. (1886), 107 Ind. 394, 8 N. E. 230.

The question which we yet must consider is as to whether the answer is sufficient as to the second and third paragraphs of complaint. It is to be observed *165 that there is no challenge of the validity of the warehouse receipts set out in these paragraphs, and held to secure the loans to the Odells evidenced by the notes set out therein. The only question then, is as to the priority of claims as between appellant and appellees. Section 9343 Burns 1926 provides, so far as here involved, that, when the property of any firm engaged in agricultural or other business or employment shall be put into the hands of any assignee, then, and in all such cases, the debts owing to laborers or employees shall be treated as preferred debts and shall be first paid in full, and if there be not sufficient to pay them in full, then the same shall be paid to them pro rata, after paying costs.

It is under this section of the statute that appellees claim that they have prior liens to that of appellant on the funds in the hands of the assignee growing out of the sale of the apples mentioned in the petition. They justify their claim principally on the authority of Bell v. Hiner (1896), 16 Ind. App. 184, 44 N. E. 576, and Small v. Hammes (1901), 156 Ind. 556, 60 N. E. 342, which cases hold that laborers are given a lien on the property of their employer superior to a chattel mortgage or other liens, and appellees well contend that the same principle would apply against warehouse receipts as prior liens as applies against chattel mortgages as such, but, in the Bell case, Justice Reinhard rendered a forceful dissenting opinion, concurred in by Justice Ross, in which he stated that in his view there was no intention from anything that appears in the statute itself that the laborer was to acquire a lien at all except a mere claim on the assets entitling him to preference over general creditors, much less one of such superior character as to reach back and become paramount to all other liens, of whatever nature, that were created before the performance of the labor *166

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Bluebook (online)
168 N.E. 595, 90 Ind. App. 161, 1929 Ind. App. LEXIS 300, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tell-city-nat-bank-v-wischer-trustee-indctapp-1929.