Walter M. Ballard Co. v. Peyser

90 F.2d 414, 67 App. D.C. 169, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 3836
CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedApril 12, 1937
DocketNo. 6740
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 90 F.2d 414 (Walter M. Ballard Co. v. Peyser) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walter M. Ballard Co. v. Peyser, 90 F.2d 414, 67 App. D.C. 169, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 3836 (D.D.C. 1937).

Opinion

ROBB, Associate Justice.

Appeals from (1) an order in the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia (now District Court of the United States for the District of Columbia) dismissing the petition of appellant (intervener below) to enjoin the sale of a note held by appellees as receivers of Wardman Real Estate Properties, Inc. (defendant below), and secured by a chattel trust, and (2) from the order confirming the sale of the note.

The material facts are substantially as follows: In 1931 appellant Ballard Company held a conditional sale lien on furniture located in the Hay-Adams House, a hotel in this District, which lien was superior to a chattel trust lien on the same furniture held by the Wardman Real Estate Properties, Inc. (hereinafter called the Real Estate Company). On May 2d of that year the two companies entered into a written agreement “pertaining to disposition of liens” held by the Ballard Company, and “in order to adjust the difference and claims of the respective parties.”

The “agreed valuation of the furniture” was fixed by the contract at $50,000, and the [416]*416interest of the Ballard Company therein was determined to be 12 per cent., namely $6,000, which amount the Real Estate Company agreed to pay and did pay immediately. It was further agreed that the Real Estate Company should take such steps as it “may be advised to sell, repossess or otherwise dispose of the furniture,” and that in the event the Real Estate Company “should sell or otherwise dispose of said furniture * * * by sale, public or private, release of liens or otherwise, so that the said furniture * * * shall be acquired by any person * * * for a sum in excess of Fifty Thousand Dollars,” the Real Estate Company would pay the Ballard Company “a further sum equivalent to 12% of such sum in excess” of $50,000, after deducting expenses; and that should the Real Estate Company “receive any sum on account of the said obligation secured by the aforesaid liens in excess of” $50,000, it would pay to the Ballard Company "a further sum equivalent to 12% of such excess.” Finally, it was agreed that the Ballard Company would “execute such assignment or assignments, release or releases” of its “liens under said conditional bills of sale as may. be necessary” and as the Real Estate Company “may desire” to perfect its right and title.

The maker of the chattel trust note held by the Real Estate Company assigned to that company the right to rent the furniture, the rental to be applied on the indebtedness represented by the note.

On July 28, 1931, appellees qualified in the court below as receivers for the Real Estate Company in equity cause No.. 53,-180, Compton v. Wardman Real Estate Properties, Inc., and on April 19, 1933, the Ballard Company filed its petition to intervene therein, setting out the terms of the contract of May 2, 1931, which petition was granted on May 19, 1933.

On October 25, 1935, the receivers petitioned for authority to dispose of the receivership assets. Notice of this petition was not served on the intervener Ballard Company.

On November 15, 1935, the court appointed appraisers to report on the value of the assets, including “Unit 6. Lien of Receivers represented by note secured by chattel deed of trust on furniture and equipment in Hay-Adams House,” and authorized the receivers, after the filing of the appraisers’ report, to sell the units at public sale.

On December 23, 1935, the appraisers filed their report, Unit 6 being appraised at $17,600.

Thereupon the receivers advertised the sale of the units at public auction to be held at 3 p. m. on January 23, 1936.

On January 20, 1936, the Ballard Company “had actual notice of the proposed sale,” and on January 23d, at 2:15 p. m. it filed a petition averring that it had not been advised of any of the proceedings authorizing' the sale of the note; that its attention had been called to the matter “only within the last day or two”; that the sale of the note would be a direct violation of the contract of May 2, 1931; that “the receivers cannot realize a true value or the greatest amount from said furniture and equipment if they are permitted to sell the said note and not make any effort to dispose of the furniture and the equipment itself”; and that it would be damaged thereby. The petition prayed for an order temporarily enjoining the sale of the note as well as a permanent injunction, and further prayed that the receivers be required to sell the furniture under the chattel deed of trust. The Ballard Company, however, did not press its prayer for a temporary restraining order by formally applying for such order in advance of the sale. The receivers proceeded with the sale.

Thereafter, on January 31st, the receivers reported that on the sale of Unit 6 (the note here involved) “there was spirited bidding by four separate bidders at prices starting at $5,000 and ending at $16,100, the highest bid offered for said Unit. All of the units cried were sold to the highest bidder, subject, however, to confirmation by the court after Order Nisi.”

Following the sale, the receivers on February 11th, answered the petition for injunction; denied that the sale of the note would violate the contract, and averred that the rentals of the furniture aggregating $33,925 had been paid to the receivers; that the receivers had offered to appear in court on any request which the Ballard Company “might wish to make for restraining order prior to three o’clock p. m., the time set for said sale; but counsel for the receivers were advised by counsel for the Walter M. Ballard Company that no application for a restraining order would be presented.” The answer further averred that the receivers thereupon proceeded with the sale of the note “in view of the fact that the sale of -said note had been advertised for more than [417]*417thirty days, and that there were, to the knowledge of the receivers, at least four separate bidders ready to compete for the purchase of said note by bidding at said sale.” The answer also averred that in their opinion “the best net price for the interest of the receivers and of the petitioner in the furniture * * * can be obtained by a sale of the note * * * rather than by a foreclosure and sale of said furniture and equipment itself”; that the receivers wished to realize “the highest possible price for the interest of the receivership estate in said equipment and furniture” and to that end they had suggested to the Ballard Company that if dissatisfied with the price obtained for the note ($16,100), the Ballard Company should offer to the court a higher price for the note so that if the original sale price be deemed inadequate the sale might be set aside and the-note sold for a higher price to the Ballard Company or such other person as might bid therefor; that the Ballard Company declined to make any bid for the note and the receivers had been unable to obtain any bid therefor higher than $16,100 — the sum bid at the receivers’ sale; that if the sale of the note be set aside and foreclosure ordered in lieu thereof, the net sum realized from the foreclosure sale may be substantially less than the sum already bid for the note, $16,100, which “bears a fairly close relation to the appraised value of $17,600.”

On February 14th, an order nisi was entered confirming the sale unless cause to the contrary be shown before March 16, 1936.

On February 17, 1936, the court, after hearing on the petition to enjoin the sale of the note and the answer thereto, denied the injunction and dismissed the petition, the order reciting: “The Walter M.

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Bluebook (online)
90 F.2d 414, 67 App. D.C. 169, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 3836, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walter-m-ballard-co-v-peyser-dcd-1937.