Warwick v. Meridian Hotel Co.

170 So. 820, 177 Miss. 611
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 30, 1936
DocketNo. 32330.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 170 So. 820 (Warwick v. Meridian Hotel Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Warwick v. Meridian Hotel Co., 170 So. 820, 177 Miss. 611 (Mich. 1936).

Opinion

*627 McG-owen, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The Meridian Hotel Company, a corporation, and ap-pellee herein, filed its bill against R. E. Warwick and wife, Mrs. R. E. Warwick, and others, in the chancery court of the second district of Jones county on the 10th day of May, 1934.

The bill alleged that the complainant, the Meridian Hotel Company, a corporation, recovered a judgment at law for damages in the sum of three thousand dollars, and that the complainant was entitled to a decree against the defendants R. E. Warwick and his wife for that sum, together with interest and costs. The bill further alleged that R. E. Warwick and his wife were the owners of all the stock of the Fire Protection Company, a corporation, and that contrary to the by-laws and the law, Warwick, while the corporation was a going concern, had taken therefrom as his salary ten thousand four hundred dollars, and that Warwick and Mrs. R. E. Warwick had unlawfully diverted the funds belonging to the Fire Protection Company to their own personal benefit, and in the payment of their private debts owing to the other defendants herein who were charged with notice that such money belonged to the said Fire Protection Company; and alleged thereby that a trust in its favor should be set up in equity, and its claims should be made superior to certain securities and liens held on the property of Warwick and his wife by the various defendants herein; and prayed for a decree allowing complainant to recover as against Warwick and Mrs. R. Eu Warwick, and the other defendants, that its lien be prior in right to those held by the other defendants.

There was no effort to make the bill a general creditors’ bill. No other creditors were invited to come in, nor was the bill filed in behalf of any other creditors in a like situation.

A demurrer to the bill was filed by Warwick and his *628 wife, which was overruled. Answers were filed by the other defendants, in brief, denying liability or notice of the appropriation of the funds of the Fire Protection Company by Warwick and his wife.

Upon a final hearing the court granted the appellee, Meridian Hotel Company, the relief as prayed for to enforce its claim to a trust on the property pledged by the appellants Warwick and wife to at least two other creditors.

We are persuaded that it is our duty to reverse the decree of the chancellor, for the reason that we are of the opinion that the demurrer interposed by Warwick and his wife to the bill should have been sustained.

For some reason the following allegations are contained in the bill: ‘ ‘ That thereafter, on or about the 4th day of June, 1932, the said Fire Protection Company filed a petition in the United States District Court in and for the Eastern Division of the Southern District of the State of Mississippi to be adjudicated a bankrupt, and was thereafter duly adjudicated a bankrupt, as per Exhibit ‘A’ hereto, and said estate duly and properly administered, and all assets thereof liquidated, and closed on or about the —-- day of April, 1933, without any payment of dividends to creditors. ’ ’ It was further alleged that testimony Was given in connection with the bankrupt corporation by Warwick, as manager, that the said corporation, at the time of its closing, was without assets or property of any kind, and that no further business had been transacted since the petition for bankruptcy had been filed. The exhibit discloses that the Fire Protection Company was adjudicated a bankrupt on June 4, 1932.

The demurrer challenged the hill on two grounds:

“1. The cause of action, if any there is, subsists in the trustee in bankruptcy.
“2. Because complainant does not allege that the *629 trustee in bankruptcy has refused to bring a suit against these defendants. ’ ’

The allegation that the bankruptcy estate had been duly and properly administered, together with the fact that there had been an examination of the bankrupt corporation and the statement that there were creditors, is sufficient to indicate that there had been such a proceeding, and that all the things necessary had been performed by the bankruptcy court.

In the case of Allen & Co. v. Montgomery et ux., 48 Miss. 101, this court held: “Property conveyed by a bankrupt in fraud of his creditors, becomes vested by operation of law in his assignee for the benefit of his creditors, and he alone has the right to reach and subject it to the payment of debts;” and that “creditors cannot, in a state court, pending the administration of an insolvent’s estate in a bankrupt court, appropriate property fraudulently conveyed by the bankrupt, exclusively to their debts. ’ ’ The proceeding in the case supra is very similar to the instant one save for the one fact that the assignee in bankruptcy was discharged, as was the bankrupt, during the pendency of the suit in the state court to recover on behalf of a single creditor. In the opinion in that case, this court said: “But we think the bankruptcy of the debtor, F. A. Montgomery, presented an insurmountable obstacle in the complainants’ path.” The court further said: “The effect of bankruptcy, on suits pending in the state courts, is to stay or suspend them. They may, with the leave of the bankrupt court, be prosecuted to judgments for the single purpose, however, of determining the amount due. Final process to procure satisfaction cannot be issued and executed. To permit it, would involve the collection and conversion of the assets into money by the assignee and their distribution in inextricable confusion. If the suit of the creditor proceed to judgment on the suggestion of bankruptcy, the debtor must retire and the assignee be *630 brought in as defendant in his place.” And it states further: “Nor are we inclined to remand the cause as asked by counsel for appellees, if we should be of opinion that the assignee is a necessary party, in order that he might be made such in the chancery court. The district court of the United States sitting in bankruptcy has full and complete jurisdiction to administer the estate of the bankrupt. If the property pursued by the complainants in this suit may be subjected for the creditors, that court, which draws to it all the funds and has before it all the creditors, can mete out full redress, whatever doubt there may be as to the jurisdiction of the state court, at the suit of the assignee alone or with the creditors, to set aside a fraudulent disposition of property by the bankrupt debtor. . . . There is no doubt of the cognizance of the federal tribunal over the subject.”

By the Bankruptcy Act (section 70 [11 U. S. C. A., sec. 110]), the title to property upon an adjudication of bankruptcy becomes vested in the trustee named in that court, and the fact that an estate may have been closed does not relieve it of his jurisdiction. Such estate may be reopened whenever it appears that it was closed before being administered; and when the jurisdictional facts are shown, it is the duty of that court so to do; and the court, if the original proceeding has been discharged, may open another. Collier on Bankruptcy (13 Ed.), sec. 2, pp. 102-104.

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Bluebook (online)
170 So. 820, 177 Miss. 611, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warwick-v-meridian-hotel-co-miss-1936.