Citation Numbers: 87 Fla. 436, 100 So. 362
Judges: Browne, Ellis, Taylor, Terrel, West, Whitfield
Filed Date: 5/7/1924
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The First National Bank of Brooksville, Florida, filed its bill against Petteway Land Company, .a corporation, and Petteway Land Company and G. C; Schuler, Co-partners doing business as Tooke Lake Naval Stores Company, praying for the appointment of a receiver to take charge of the assets of the said defendants and preserve them for the best interests of all concerned until the further order' of the Court. The only ground urged for appointment of a receiver is insolvency on the
February 3, 1923, Armour Fertilizer Works, one of the creditors of defendants, filed and served notice on complainant and defendants, that it would on February 10, 1923, or as soon thereafter as could be heard, apply to the court for ‘ ‘ an order vacating and setting aside ’ ’ the order confirming said sale. February 21, 1923, Armour Fertilizer Works presented to the Court its petition for leave to intervene and? become a party defendant and “file such pleadings as it may be advised”. On the date presented the court made its order granting the petition to intervene “for the purpose of contesting and moving to restrict order of February 21st, 1923, ’ ’ same being .the order confirming sale.
From the foregoing decrees denying the petition to intervene except for the purpose of moving to vacate the sale of the receiver, and for no other purpose, refusing to consider the motion to vacate the appointment of the receiver and hear argument thereon, refusing to consider the demurrer to the bill of'complaint and allow argument thereon and denying the petition to set aside the sale by the receiver to E. J. Willis, Armour Fertilizer Works prosecutes this appeal in its behalf against the complainant and defendants in the original bill.
Six errors are assigned, the firt, second .and third of which are predicated on the order of the Chancellor granting the petition of appellant to intervene solely for the purpose of moving to vacate the sale by the receiver, refusing to consider the motion of appellant to vacate the appointment of the receiver, and refusing to consider the demurrer of appellant to the original bill of complaint.
The bill of complaint alleges .that defendants are insolvent, that they have assets amounting to $39,100.00 and liabilities amounting to $31,921.03, said assets being in land, stock and farming implements, and liabilities being
Under this statement of facts, was the court warranted in treating the bill and answer as a bill in the nature of a creditors’ bill and appointing the receiver, and should the appointment have been vacated on the motion of appellant here ?
I Bills brought by creditors of estates of deceased persons for the purpose of administering the estate are denominated in the English Chancery and in some of the courts of this country as Creditors Bills. Such bills have also been used for the purpose of distributing a trust fund or the proceeds thereof, to set aside fraudulent conveyances or remove encumbrances interfering with an exception at law and have been resorted to by creditors of insolvent corporations. In its more general application, however, a creditors bill is one brought by a creditor who has secured judgment at law and has in vain attempted at law to obtain satisfaction, and who sues in equity for the purpose of reaching property which cannot be reached by execution at law. The nature, purpose and scope of such a bill is to bring into exercise the equitable powers of the court to enforce the satisfaction of a judgment by means of an equitable execution because execution at law cannot be had. Petttibone v. Toledo C. & St. L. R. Co., 148 Mass. 411, 19 N. E. Rep. 337; Venable v. Rickenberg, 152 Mass.
The prevailing rule seems to be that before a creditor can resort to his remedy by creditors bill he must first secure judgment at law and exhaust all means afforded by the law to recover on such judgment. Scott v. Neely, 140 U. S. 106, 11 Sup. Ct. Rep. 712; Taylor v. Bowker, 111 U. S. 110, 4 Sup. Ct. Rep. 397; Newman v. Willetts, 52 Ill. 98; Lawson v. Grubb, 44 Ga. 466.
While our statutes have not attempted to define the term creditor’s bill, the rule as above stated was undoubtedly effective here prior to the enactment of Section 3229 Revised- General Statutes of' Florida, 1920, which had the effect of relaxing the rule in this State, and is as follows: “Creditors” Bills. — May be filed in the courts of this State, having chancery jurisdiction, before the claims of indebtedness of the persons filing the same shall have been reduced to judgment, but no such bill shall be entertained by such court, unless the complainants therein shall have first instituted suits in the proper courts at law for the collection of their claims; and no final decree shall be entered upon such creditors’ bill until such claims shall have been reduced to judgment.”
Section 3229, Revised General Statutes, was originally Section 1 of Chapter 5137 Acts of 1903, the title of which was as follows: “An Act Authorizing the filing of Creditors’ Bills before the Creditors’ Claims Shall Have Been
The bill of complaint in the instant case does not show that complainant’s claim has been reduced to judgment or that suit has been instituted for that purpose, or in fact that any steps have been taken to secure such relief as the law affords. This being true, the showing required by Section 3229, Revised General Statutes, is not made to appear. If the bill of complaint had been a legal basis for a creditors’ bill, and in addition thereto sufficient showing had been made, it would have been proper for the court to appoint a receiver to take charge of and hold the property involved until final determination of the cause.
Appellee contends that the bill of complaint is not a creditors’ bill, and was not so treated by the court. The words of the court in his order appointing a receiver, dated May 12, 1922, clearly settles this question contrary to the contention -of appellees.
On the question of receivership in general it is timely to state in this connection that the power to appoint a receiver is one inherent in a court of equity, that it is a matter of discretion and not one of right, that as a rule the remedy is ancillary, and except in rare and unusual instances cannot be maintained in an action instituted alone for that purpose. State v. Union Nat. Bank, 145 Ind. 537, 44 N. E. Rep. 585; State ex rel. Merriam v. Ross, 122 Mo. 435, 25 S. W. Rep. 947; Slover v. Coal Creek Coal Co. 113 Tenn. 421, 82 S. W. Rep. 1131; Hartnett v.
It is axiomatic that consent of the parties to the litigation cannot confer power or authority on a court to appoint a receiver in a case where the pleadings do not state a cause for such appointment. Elliot v. Superior Court of State of California in and for San Bernardino County, 168 Cal. 727, 145 Pac. Rep. 101; Vila v. Grand Island Electric Light etc. Co., 68 Neb. 222, 97 N. W. 613, 4 Ann. Cas. 59, 63 L. R. A. 791. Mere insolvency of the i defendant unless made so by statute or coupled with some ' other reason, will not warrant the appointment of a re- ¡ ceiver. And there is no authority in this State as we find in many states which authorizes solely the appointment of a receiver at the instance of creditors to take charge of and wind up the affairs of an insolvent corporation. Blum v. Rowe, 98 Wash. 683, 168 Pac. Rep. 781, L. R. A. 1918 C 630.
Under all the facts presented by the record we are not therefore prepared to say that the election of the court to treat the pleadings as a bill in the nature of a creditors ’ bill instead of a plain receivership did not present the best means of dispatching a' difficult situation both as to law and good business. If however the means by creditors’ bill are to be employed in working out propositions like the one presented here, the plain specifications of the controlling statute must be observed. Such statutes are not always in line with practical business methods, and in many instances they may actually work a hardship on
Appellees charge the appellant with laches in that the bill was filed and receiver appointed May 12, 1922, while the petition to intervene was not filed till February 21, 1923. It is true that the record shows these facts to be true, -but it also shows that the application for and the order authorizing and confirming the sale were all made January 30, 1923, that appellant served notice February 3, 1923, that it would apply on February 10, or as soon thereafter as could be heard, for an order vacating and setting aside the order confirming the sale, and that the said application together with petition to intervene were actually submitted to the court February 21, 1923. • On the whole we think these facts made a showing of reasonable diligence on the part' of appellant.
For the reasons announced in this opinion the petition to intervene should have been granted without restriction. The decree of the Circuit Court is in consequence reversed, and the cause remanded.