Union Trust & Savings Bank v. Idaho Smelting & Refining Co.

135 P. 822, 24 Idaho 735, 1913 Ida. LEXIS 179
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 3, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 135 P. 822 (Union Trust & Savings Bank v. Idaho Smelting & Refining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Union Trust & Savings Bank v. Idaho Smelting & Refining Co., 135 P. 822, 24 Idaho 735, 1913 Ida. LEXIS 179 (Idaho 1913).

Opinion

AILSHIE, C. J.

This is an appeal from a judgment entered on the pleadings and an order denying intervenor’s motion to vacate and set aside the judgment and permit the intervenor to file an amended complaint in intervention.

[741]*741The essential facts are substantially as follows: The Union Trust & Savings Bank of Spokane commenced an action against the Idaho Smelting & Refining Co. to foreclose a trust deed executed by the Idaho Smelting & Refining Co. on January 25, 1908, for the security of a bond issue of $500,000. The defendant defaulted, and its default was entered on November 14, 1912. After the entry of default, the intervenor herein, Title Guaranty & Surety Co., obtained an order permitting it to intervene in the action, and on the same day, November 18, 1912, filed its complaint in intervention. The intervenor alleged its existence as a corporation under the laws of the state of Pennsylvania and its compliance with the foreign corporation laws of the state of Idaho and its right to do business within the state. It denies certain allegations of the complaint, and then alleges that on the first day of January, 1908, the Panhandle Smelting Co., a corporation doing business in the state of Idaho, was indebted to C. M. Fasset Co., Inc., and that it was also at the same time indebted to the Traders ’ State Bank, and that at the same time the Panhandle Smelting Co. was insolvent; “that on or about the first day of February, 1908, the Panhandle Smelting Co., Ltd., a corporation aforesaid, sold, transferred and conveyed all of its assets to the Idaho Smelting & Refining Co., a corporation, which assumed and agreed to pay all the debts of the Panhandle Smelting Co., Ltd., and assume all its liabilities.” The foregoing allegation is followed by an allegation that on May 20, 1908, and for several months prior thereto, there was an action pending in the district court in and for Bonner county in which C. M. Fasset Co., Inc., was plaintiff and the Panhandle Smelting Co., a corporation, was defendant, and that the plaintiff in that action sued out a writ of attachment against the defendant therein and that the defendant, the Panhandle Smelting Co., in order to obtain a release and discharge of the attachment secured this intervenor to give a bond for the release of attachment, and that thereafter C. M. Fasset Co. procured a judgment against the Panhandle Smelting Co. for the sum of $347.55, which judgments and interest and penalties inter-venor was thereafter obliged to pay, and did pay, and took [742]*742from the C. M. Fasset Co. an assignment of its judgment. It is also alleged that upon July 24, 1908, there was pending in the district court in and for Bonner county, an .action wherein the Traders’ State Bank, a corporation, was plaintiff and Panhandle Smelting Co., Ltd., and Idaho Smelting & Refining Co. and J. Herbert Anderson were defendants, and that an attachment was sued out in that action, and the defendants procured this intervenor to execute and deliver to the plaintiffs a bond for the release and discharge of such attachment, and that such bond was accordingly given, and the property attached was released and discharged, and that thereafter a judgment was recovered in favor of the plaintiff, the Traders’ State Bank, for the sum of $4,109.88, and that thereafter the Traders-’ State Bank brought an action against the intervenor on the bond which it had executed for the release of the attachment and secured a judgment against the intervenor for $3,950.70, which judgment intervenor thereafter paid, together with interests and costs. Intervenor thereupon alleges that it is entitled to be substituted and subrogated to all the rights of the Traders’ State Bank and C. M. Fasset Co. under these several judgments, and to have its claim and remedy under such judgment against the Idaho Smelting & Refining Co., and to have such judgments paid out of the property which was transferred by the Panhandle Smelting Co. to the Idaho Smelting & Refining Co., which property was subsequently mortgaged to the plaintiff in this action. By paragraph 12 of the complaint in intervention it is alleged that the “Idaho Smelting & Refining Co., on or about the 22d day of January, 1908, executed and delivered to Union Trust Co. of Spokane, as trustee, a trust deed, or mortgage, upon all its property, real and personal, to secure the payment of bonds to be issued by it in a sum aggregating five hundred thousand dollars, which bonds this intervenor is informed and believes and therefore alleges, were to be sold, and the proceeds applied to the payment of all indebtedness, and balance used in the company business, but instead of selling said bonds, a large amount thereof unknown to this intervenor were issued to and kept by J. Herbert Anderson, George S. Brook, E. [743]*743Nicholson, H. Wallenberger, John Moeine, S. W. Geobo, C. L. Greenough, and W. D. Greenough, and Fidelity Natl. Bank of Spokane, Wash., a corporation, without any present consideration other than antecedent indebtedness, and thereby intending to secure to themselves a preference over other creditors of the insolvent corporation, Panhandle Smelting Co., and to exclude from participation all other creditors, including C. M. Fasset Co., Inc., and Traders’ State Bank, and this intervenor.” Intervenor thereupon prays that the trust deed and bonds set up in plaintiff’s complaint be set aside and held for naught as against the intervenor, and that an accounting be had of the assets and property of the said defendant, Idaho Smelting & Refining Co., and its indebtedness to all parties and for all purposes be determined and fixed; that this intervenor be substituted to all the rights of C. M. Fasset Co., Inc., a corporation, and Traders’ State Bank under their respective judgments and under their attachments, and to all their rights, and that a sale of the properties and assets of the Idaho Smelting & Refining Co. be ordered, and that the order of preference, if any should be accorded among creditors, be determined, and that the proceeds from the sale be distributed in accordance with the right of preference.

The trial court held that this complaint in intervention was not sufficient to entitle intervenor to any relief whatever. The trial judge in his order sustaining a motion for judgment on the pleadings sets forth his reasons for sustaining the motion as follows:

“That said motion of the plaintiff be and the same is hereby sustained because the answer and complaint in intervention of the intervenor contains no allegations of insolvency of the Idaho Smelting & Refining Co., and because the same contains no allegation of fraud, actual or constructive, and because the same contains no allegations of effort on the part of the intervenor to exhaust its legal remedies or that such remedies ¡would be fruitless, and because the same contains no allegations of intervenor’s inability to collect its judgment by pursuing its legal remedies, and because the facts alleged in the said answer and complaint in intervention fail to show a right [744]*744on the part of intervenor to intervene, and such facts are not sufficient to constitute a defense to plaintiff’s action or a right of action in behalf of intervenor. ’ ’

Counsel for appellant have not devoted much time to the discussion of the questions involved in the court’s ruling which he sets forth as his reasons for sustaining the motion for judgment on the pleadings. The appellant, however, has placed its chief reliance upon the proposition that the bond issue in this ease was in violation of sec. 9, art.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
135 P. 822, 24 Idaho 735, 1913 Ida. LEXIS 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-trust-savings-bank-v-idaho-smelting-refining-co-idaho-1913.