Ware v. R. E. Crummer & Co.

128 F.2d 114, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 3525
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMay 5, 1942
DocketNo. 10195
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 128 F.2d 114 (Ware v. R. E. Crummer & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ware v. R. E. Crummer & Co., 128 F.2d 114, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 3525 (5th Cir. 1942).

Opinion

HUTCHESON, Circuit Judge.

The order appealed from was entered in the composition proceedings1 the City of Avon Park had filed on August IS, 1938.2 By it appellants were, on December 1, 1941, summarily ordered to replace in the interest and sinking fund of the city, the sum of $65,715.20, which had been collected by a tax3 for the establishment of the sinking fund for the payment of principal and interest on the City of Avon Park, Florida, refunding bonds, issue of 1937. This order was issued under these circumstances. After the issuance on December 31, 1940, of the mandate of the Supreme Court, the district judge, on March 24, 1941, ordered the City of Avon Park, through its mayor, the commissioners, and the clerk, and all other custodians of official city records, involving moneys received or paid out, and R. E. Crummer & Company, fiscal agent of the city to appear before -the court for the purpose of giving the court their respective views as to the further course the proceeding herein should take, and to submit verified statements4 showing the condition of debt service funds of the city. It was further ordered “that jurisdiction of the case be retained for the purpose of making such orders as may appear appropriate after the facts have been made available.”

Thereafter testimony was taken as to the status of the composition proceedings, as to whether another feasible plan could be submitted, and as to the withdrawal from the sinking fund, and use by the city council, for other purposes, of sums accumulated for the refunding bonds since the filing of the petition. The evidence showing that no feasible plan of composition could be proposed and carried out, and it showing too that the refunding plan having failed, the city council had withdrawn from the sinking fund, the moneys raised to service the refunding bonds under the plan, and had expended them in part for enlarging the facilities of the airport and in part for general municipal purposes, the district judge inquired what there was to be done. Whereupon Mr. Davis, representing the city, stated that the only thing the court could do, would be either to obtain an amended or modified plan of composition or dismiss the proceedings. “If there is not a plan offered by the city then the court can do nothing but dismiss the proceedings.” Mr. Pleus representing Crum-mer & Company then said, “The question before the court is whether or not this court is going to protect its jurisdiction in bankruptcy to the very limit it can go toward rehabilitating the fund which has been dissipated while this court had jurisdiction of the fund, and it is our opinion that the court in protecting its bankruptcy jurisdiction and powers, should require whoever took the funds to restore them.” Thereafter, on August 4, 1941, the district [116]*116judge issued a show cause order5 returnable September '15, 1941, to appellants, the present, city commissioners, the prior city commissioners, the contractor, for the airport and his surety, the Barnett Bank and the City of Avon Park.

Appearing to this order appellants and the city answered that upon the coming down of the mandate of the Supreme Court, the court had no further duty in the premises except. to dismiss the cause, and that unable to devise any plan to substitute for the one which was rejected, the commissioners and the city, in the exercise of its and their governmental powers, had deemed it right and' proper, the plan having failed, to expend the sums, which had been collected solely for the refunding bonds if the plan should be approved, and they did expend them in the interest of the city and its people. They further answered that the plan did not require or contemplate that they should be deposited in or with the court, and no order was at any time entered by the court with respect to them until after the plan had' failed and that the plan, not having gone beyond the interlocutory stage, they were never in the custody of the court but always in the custody of the city in its governmental capacity and in the management of its fiscal affairs. There was a further answer that all of the moneys in question had been expended either on the improvement of the airport or for the necessary operating expenses of the city, that the commissioners have never had and neither they nor the city have now, any of said moneys.

The Barnett Bank answered, denying that the funds were in custodia legis, denying that it at any time conspired with the city or its officials, and alleging that it had done nothing with the funds on deposit with it except to pay them over to the city on the check of its proper officers. The hearing concluded, the district judge, on December 1, 1941, entered the order appealed from. This order exonerated the bank from the charges of conspiracy and misapplication of funds, and discharged it from the rule, ordered the appellants to pay the $65,715.20, discharged all of the others cited except the prior city commissioner as to whom decision was. postponed, ando the.,City of Avon Park, as to whom no order was made.

Here appellants, urging that the moneys in question were not in custodia legis but were in the control of the city and its officers and that the plan for the issuing of [117]*117the refunding bonds having failed, they were lawfully expended under the authority of section 1,6 Chapter 15907, Acts of 1933, insist that the judgment against them should be reversed. Crummer & Company, on its part, urging that the diverted funds were in custodia legis, that the invoked statute is without application, and that the Barnett Bank, in permitting appellants to withdraw the funds from the sinking fund deposit, were liable as for conversion of them, insists that the judgment, as to appellants, should be affirmed and that on its cross appeal the judgment as to the Barnett Bank should be reversed.

We do not think so. In Leco Properties v. Crummer, 128 F.2d 110, this day decided, we have pointed out the nature and extent of, and the limitations upon, the jurisdiction of the court of bankruptcy in a municipal composition proceeding. Here, unlike there, the city not only is not consenting, after the failure of the plan, to the exercise of jurisdiction over its funds, but is resisting and denying that jurisdiction. Here, unlike there, instead of the order of the court distributing, with the consent of the city, moneys gathered into the debt service funds, since the filing of the petition and still there, the order of the court seeks to call the city and its duly elected officers to account as to, and to control the exercise of, the fiscal affairs and governmental functions of the city.

In the Bekins case, United States v. Bekins, 304 U.S. 27, 50, 58 S.Ct. 811, 815, 82 L.Ed.

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Bluebook (online)
128 F.2d 114, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 3525, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ware-v-r-e-crummer-co-ca5-1942.