Tenth National Bank v. Smith Construction Co.

89 A. 76, 242 Pa. 269, 1913 Pa. LEXIS 878
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 13, 1913
DocketAppeals, Nos. 324 and 70
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 89 A. 76 (Tenth National Bank v. Smith Construction Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tenth National Bank v. Smith Construction Co., 89 A. 76, 242 Pa. 269, 1913 Pa. LEXIS 878 (Pa. 1913).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Mosohziskbr,

The Smith Construction Company was a corporation [273]*273under the laws of New Jersey with a principal office in Philadelphia, engaged largely in building railroads and in public contracts. On January 27,1905, upon the com'plaint of a creditor, William R. Richards, its president, was appointed receiver by the court below; he was granted permission to continue work under contracts in course of performance, in the hope that profits might be derived therefrom, but these operations proved a failure and large losses resulted. At the suggestion of a committee of creditors, appointed to supervise the conduct of the business by the receiver, the affairs of the company were wound up. The receiver filed accounts which were referred to an auditor. The action of the court below upon the report of the auditor is before us on two appeals, one by the receiver and the other by his surety; both of these appeals will be disposed of in this opinion.

The magnitude of the work involved in the audit will be appreciated when it is understood that 130 meetings were held and 1,850 printed pages of testimony taken. The auditor’s report covers 530 printed pages, and in it he finds a multitude of specific facts in addition to answering many requests; he discusses the testimony, clearly states his reasons for all conclusions reached, and makes various surcharges against the receiver, amounting to $41,310.09. The court below practically set aside the entire report of the auditor and decreed that the receiver should pay $250,409.

The auditor endeavored to surcharge upon the basis of actual values, ’wherever he found the receiver had failed to account or had improperly accounted for assets of the estate and for all credits claimed which he conceived to be insufficiently vouched. The court below acted upon the theory that the estate was solvent when it went into the hands of the receiver, that the account was incomplete, that it had not been properly vouched, and that it was impossible to state an account with sufficient exactness. The amount the accountant was. [274]*274ordered to pay was peremptorily fixed at the total of all the claims against the company and the receiver, plus counsel fees and the expenses of the audit. While the court does not directly order specific surcharges, yet in collateral justification of the amount fixed in the final decree, it briefly discusses a number of separate items which in its opinion are proper subjects for surcharge, and these aggregate more than the gross sum decreed against the receiver.

Counsel for the appellants state in their printed argument, “The court below disposed of the case upon the basis of general conclusions without making specific findings of fact and without passing specifically upon more than one of the 531 exceptions to the auditor’s findings”; and this statement is substantially correct, particularly is it correct as to all the important underlying facts. The method thus pursued has added greatly to our labors on appeal; but we have examined the record and the testimony with the utmost care, and cannot concur in the general condemnation of the audit contained in the opinion of the learned court below. A detailed discussion of all aspects of the various points involved would unduly extend this opinion; our examination has satisfied us, however, that as a rule the auditor had evidence upon which to base his findings and that his conclusions were justified in most instances; later on we shall treat separately of the cases where we do not deem this to be so.

The one instance above referred to where the court below formally passed “specifically” upon a finding of the auditor, involved the financial condition of the Smith Company at the time of the receivership. The auditor found as a fact that the corporation was insolvent on January 27, 1905, when the receiver was appointed, and the evidence before him justified this finding; hence the court erred when it decided otherwise. It is true that statements were made by Richards and his counsel at that time which indicated their belief in the [275]*275solvency of the company; but such statements concerning the financial condition of hopelessly insolvent concerns are not unusual, and the auditor could not permit them to outweigh the evidence which proved insolvency.

Although the court expresses the view that an account could not be stated, yet the auditor not only found that it was possible, but actually stated one, and he refers specifically to evidence in support of the various items contained therein. In addition to the separate treatment of numerous disputed items, the auditor devoted sixteen printed pages of his report to a satisfying demonstration of the reasonable possibility of arriving at a correct accounting under the proofs before him, despite the absence of certain books and papers, and neither the court below nor the appellees refer to any positive testimony or point out the absence of proofs that reasonably refute his position in this respect.

The court below states that the auditor, instead of making the receiver sustain his account, required the creditors to establish inaccuracies therein. While certain expressions in the report, taken by themselves, might suggest this attitude, yet, when the record is viewed as a whole, it is plain that the auditor assumed no such position; on the contrary, in several important instances he surcharged the receiver or refused credits claimed by him upon the express ground that the accountant had not proved the accuracy of the item in question or that the proofs left the point in doubt. If the depositions were unduly extended, this cannot be laid at the door of the auditor. It appears that many of the receiver’s papers were turned over to counsel for the creditors, and that they agreed to designate the items which they desired to dispute. In carrying out this program counsel produced testimony to attack certain items when they might have followed the simple course of calling upon the receiver to sustain them. Under the circumstances, we do not feel that the auditor can be condemned for receiving all the testimony brought be[276]*276fore him; particularly that adduced by the creditors, whose avowed policy it was to bring as. much evidence against the receiver as possible.

The record shows that the auditor not only had the aid of a great mass of testimony, but that much documentary evidence was produced,, in the way of books and papers, all of which he considered in reaching the conclusion that the account had been sufficiently vouched to warrant him in passing thereon. A close study convinces us that this conclusion was right and that the court below should have dealt with the different phases of the case upon that basis; but in place of following this course, and passing separately upon the many exceptions filed to the report of the auditor, and thus pointing out wherein it thought he had erred in his facts, the court simply discusses testimony or comments on the lack of evidence or the quality of the proofs, and in most instances satisfies itself by stating conclusions differing from those of the auditor, which conclusions, as a rule, are wholly unsupported by the underlying findings of fact.

The accounts show heavy losses incurred by the receiver in carrying on the business, and probably it would have been better had there been no attempt to finish the work the Smith Company was engaged upon; that, however, was not the consensus of opinion at the time.

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Bluebook (online)
89 A. 76, 242 Pa. 269, 1913 Pa. LEXIS 878, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tenth-national-bank-v-smith-construction-co-pa-1913.