49 A. 124 | N.H. | 1900
The defendants were incorporated in this state in 1881, and were authorized, among other things, to carry on the business of a building and loan association. Laws 1881, c. 233. Upon petition of the plaintiffs, David A. Taggart was appointed assignee of their property and effects, March 18, 1896, under the provisions of section 15, chapter 162, Public Statutes. He accepted the trust and has substantially converted all the assets in his possession into cash. The defendants did business in twenty-four states, and ancillary receivers were appointed in sixteen of them. These receivers have also substantially converted the assets received by them into cash. Some of them are ready and willing to remit their balances of cash above expenses, etc., to the assignee; some have refused to remit; and some are undecided whether they will remit or not.
The assignee has on hand a sufficient sum of money to pay the expenses of administration in this state and the debts that have been proved here, and leave a balance for distribution among shareholders. The shareholders number over 20,000. More than 3,000 of them reside in New York. The defendants deposited $100,000 with the New York superintendent of banks, in compliance with the provisions of the banking law of the state, in order to secure the privilege of doing business there. An ancillary receiver in that state was appointed in an action brought by the attorney-general in behalf of the people, for the sequestration and preservation of the assets and property of the defendants in the state, and for an equitable distribution of the same among the persons entitled thereto. Taggart appeared in the action and claimed that the funds collected by the receiver should be paid to him for distribution. The receiver has realized about $69,000 from the sale of real estate located there, and from collections upon mortgages and other obligations due from parties in that state, sent to him by the assignee under authority given by this court. He also has received from the superintendent of banks the $100,000 above mentioned. For convenience, the first named sum is hereinafter designated as the general fund, and the last named as the special fund. Creditors residing in New York have claims amounting to nearly $117,000; and the aggregate par value of the shares of shareholders residing there is upwards of $200,000. The court of that *559 state has adjudged that the receiver pay to Taggart the general fund less costs, etc., upon his giving an undertaking with sufficient sureties, in a sum double the amount so paid, to pay the New York creditors and shareholders the same rates of dividend that are awarded to other creditors and shareholders throughout the country, without deduction on account of payments to the former of dividends from the special fund; or, in default of so doing, to return the general fund to the New York receiver. As to the special fund, the court decreed that after deducting costs, etc., it should be applied first to the payment of the balance, if any, due New York creditors, and then to the payment of New York shareholders in proportion to their respective claims until paid in full, and finally, if any balance was left, to pay it to the assignee.
1. One question raised relates to the effect of the decision in the New York case, People v. Association,
It has been decided by the United States supreme court that a judgment in a state court against a person appointed receiver ancillary to an appointment by a court of another state, binds only the property that is in his custody as receiver within the state in which the judgment is rendered. Reynolds v. Stockton,
This court, then, is bound by the New York decision so far as it relates to the property within the limits of that state, and no further. The appearance of the assignee in the action did not enlarge its binding effect here, for the reason, if for no other, that the issue alleged, heard, and decided in the action related solely to the rights of the parties in the property located in that state.
The decision as to the general fund was that all the creditors of *560
the corporation, wherever residing, are entitled to have it distributed among them "upon principles of perfect equality." Upon this point the court say, citing Blake v. McClung,
The defendant corporation was incorporated in this state; this was its corporate home. Creditors and shareholders of the corporation, when they became such, wherever the transaction took place, impliedly agreed that in case of insolvency the final settlement of the corporation's affairs should be made in this state and be governed by the laws of the state. Canada Southern R'y v. Gebhard,
2. There is a special fund in New Jersey, but the facts in relation to it are not reported. If what has been said regarding the New York fund does not dispose of the questions pertaining to the New Jersey fund, the latter must be considered upon a new case.
3. Another question reserved relates to the rights of unsecured shareholders who reside, or have proved claims, in states where there are ancillary receivers who have not transferred the money in their possession to the assignee for distribution.
The statute provides that the remainder of the proceeds of the property, after the payment of the expenses of the assignment and the "debts, claims, and obligations owing by the institution," shall be "divided among the stockholders according to their interests." P.S., c. 162, s. 20. The principle that "equity is equality" is here recognized. The division contemplated is one made "upon principles of perfect equality." Blake v. McClung,
Case discharged.
PARSONS and PEASLEE, JJ., did not sit: the others concurred. *564