York Manufacturing Co. v. Hoblitzell National Bank

84 A. 559, 118 Md. 505, 1912 Md. LEXIS 40
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 10, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 84 A. 559 (York Manufacturing Co. v. Hoblitzell National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
York Manufacturing Co. v. Hoblitzell National Bank, 84 A. 559, 118 Md. 505, 1912 Md. LEXIS 40 (Md. 1912).

Opinion

Briscoe, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

There are four appeals in this record from an order of Circuit Court No. 2 of .Baltimore City overruling exceptions to the final ratification of the auditor’s distribution account “B” filed in the case, and finally ratifying said account. As the claims of the respective appellants involve substantially the same questions and were argued together, it will be unnecessary to file separate opinions.

On the 25th of March, 1908, Edgar Zielian was appointed receiver of the Baltimore Plate Ice Company. That company had executed a mortgage to secure an issue of $125,-000.00 of first mortgage bonds, and, as will be seen by refer *507 enee to the case of Zielian v. Baltimore Plate Ice Co., 115 Md. 658, it Avas supposed that there were only $24,000.00 of those bonds outstanding. On July 16, 3908, the Court passed an order authorizing Zielian to issite receiver’s certificates to the extent of $30,000.00 as a first lien upon all the property, assets and machinery of the company, and by order of Rovember 18th, 1908, he was authorized to issue receiver’s notes to the extent of $26,300.00, which were to'be a second lien on that property and machinery. Those orders were passed with the consent of what was supposed to be all of the bondholders and creditors of the company, but it has since developed that some other bonds were outsanding which were held by parties not shown to have given their consent to the receiver’s certificates and notes. The auditor distributed to a bond held by the Aldine Manufacturing Company, amounting with interest to $1,145.00, and to bonds held by the Hoblitzell Rational Bank amounting with interest to $8,550.00 — allowing a dividend to each of them of a fraction over 69 per cent. The dividends to the bondholders only left a net balance in the hands of the receivers for distribution of $32,359.18.

The receiver, Zielian, issued more than the $30,000.00 of receiver’s certificates and more noles than the $26,300.00 authorized by the Court. On the 2nd of September, 3909, Messrs. O’Farrall, Trundle and Bonsai were at the instance of creditors appointed co-receivers. On the 11th of Rovember, 1909, the receivers sold all the property of the company for $34,500.00, and these appellants filed exceptions to the sale, claiming that they had furnished Zielian, who was then sole receiver, certain machinery, etc., which had gone into the plant and which they still owned and that the receivers should not have sold it. The exceptions resulted in agreements of the appellants with the receivers, which were ratified by orders of the Court, by which the receivers were authorized to withhold from the money in their hands the several sums named to represent the value and take the place of the machinery, etc., sold and delivered by the respectÍATe ap *508 pellants to Zielian, and to pay over said sums to the respective parties should it be determined that but for the sale on the 11th day of Rovember, 1909, they would have been entitled either to a return of the machinery, etc., or be paid the amounts shown to be due them. The orders were of course subject to the rights of creditors to dispute the claims. The exceptions to the sale filed hy the appellants were then' dismissed, in accordance with the terms of the agreements above referred to.

It is conceded — at least not denied — that the Hoblitzell Rational Bank and the Aldine. Manufacturing Company were entitled to have distributions on the bonds held by them, as they appeared to have been bona, fide holders of them without being parties to or having notice of the agreement to permit the receivers certificates and notes to he issued and have priority over the bonds, secured by the mortgage, and it will not be necessary to discuss that question. As there is over $12,000.00 to be distributed and the claims of the four appellants amount to much less than that sum, they are really not specially interested in the distribution to those bonds, and there are no exceptions before us other than those of the four appellants. As the balance in hand for distribution only pays the holders of the receiver’s certificates a little over 41 per cent, of their claims, those holders alone are the parties who are particularly interested, for their distributive shares would he reduced by the extent that the claims of the appellants, or either of them, might be allowed-

We are of the opinion that the lower Court was clearly right in overruling the exceptions of the appellants to the audit. It is to be regretted that parties dealing with a receiver should sustain losses on sales made to him, but as the records of the Court are open for the inspection of all parties having such dealings, the equities would he with those who acted in accordance with the authority of the Court, rather than with those who furnished machinery, materials, etc., in a way not authorized by the Court. The object in authorizing the receiver’s certificates and notes was to enable the *509 receiver to purchase the necessary machinery, materials, etc., for the plant, and it would be very inequitable to give parties who chose to deal with the receiver without obtaining the sanction of the Court priority over those who dealt with him as the Court expressly authorized,, and with the consent of those who were believed to be all of the existing creditors. We speak of the “receiver,” in the singular, because the co-receivers had not been appointed when the dealings of the appellants took place.

The appellants contend that the Court should protect their claims because the sales were made to the receiver appointed by it, but it must be remembered that this is not a controversy between creditors of the company who became such before the receiver was appointed and those who sold to the receiver, but. all of the claims to be affected by this distribution are held by parties who were dealing with the receiver. Even if there be any question about the right of the two bondholders above mentioned to have their claims paid, to reject them would not help the appellants, as there would not then be sufficient to pay the whole of the receiver’s certificates in full. It is therefore not material to determine whether the mortgage lien attached to the property acquired by the receiver, and not by the company.

Brit the contention is also made that inasmuch as Zielian had exhausted the power given him by the Court to give notes for the purpose of buying machinery, etc., before he gave those to the appellants, he had no authority to purchase the property from them, and as the property of the appellants went into the plant, and to that extent enhanced its value, the Court should return to them the values of the property as fixed by the agreements above referred to. It is rather an unusual position for creditors to base their right to be paid in full out of an insolvent estate on the ground that the receiver had no power to make the contracts which he made with them — notwithstanding the fact that if the creditors had taken the trouble to inquire they could have ascertained exactly what powers had been conferred on him. *510

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Bluebook (online)
84 A. 559, 118 Md. 505, 1912 Md. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/york-manufacturing-co-v-hoblitzell-national-bank-md-1912.