228 P. 503 | Wyo. | 1924
This is an action brought on January 26, 1922, by the Continental Oil Co., a Colorado corporation, against the American Co-operative Association, a corporation of Wisconsin, and J. W. Clark. The petition alleges that in the year 1919 plaintiff sold and delivered to said Wisconsin corporation goods, wares and merchandise of the value of $817.10; that said Wisconsin corporation was engaged in the general mercantile business at Yan Tassell, Niobrara County, Wyoming; that subsequently said Wisconsin corporation sold its said store and general mercantile business, including all goods, wares and merchandise in connection therewith, to defendant J. W. Clark, who is now in possession thereof; and that said saie to Clark was made, without complying with the bulk-sales law of this state. Plaintiff asks a judgment against said Wisconsin corporation for the value of said goods, and that said defendant Clark be declared a receiver and held accountable to plaintiff for the goods, wares and merchandise bought of said Wisconsin corporation as aforesaid. A summons was issued; in said
No answer was filed to the “disclosures” and no motion or pleading of any kind directed against them. On May
“is estopped from proceeding at law in this action against the American Co-operative Association and is estopped from levying upon and selling in satisfaction of any judgment that may he entered herein any of the property, either real or personal, that has been attached in the hands and possession of J. W. Clark under and by virtue of his contract to purchase, and the court finds that there is no liability of J. W. Clark, as garnishee herein, to the plaintiff, and it is ordered and the judgment of this court is that the said J. W. Clark be and he is hereby' discharged and released from any further liability as garnishee defendant in this action; and the Writ of Attachment served and by virtue of which the plaintiff attempted to hold said property in the possession of the said J. W. Clark is hereby released and dissolved as to said Clark and said property.”
On June 21, 1922 the court entered a judgment in favor of the plaintiff against said American Co-operative Association for the amount claimed in the petition, and holding said O. I. Stenger as garnishee of said defendant. From the order and judgment entered on May 26, 1922, as aforesaid, the plaintiff has appealed.
1. We are met at the threshold of this case with a number of objections in connection with the procedure taken in this case-. No other defense was interposed by the defendant Clark except as hereinbefore mentioned, and it is claimed that his “disclosures” do not constitute an answer to the petition herein, and that hence it stands admitted in the case that said Clark should be held as trustee to the extent of the value of the personal property which he bought, as alleged, of the Wisconsin corporation; further, that in order for the defendant Clark to have any claim upon the
2. It is claimed that the appointment of the receivers of the Wisconsin corporation by the court in Wisconsin has no extra-territorial effect; that the title of the property situated in this state did not vest in the receivers by virtue of the order of said Wisconsin court, and that hence said receivers were not able to convey any of said property to said defendant Clark as against the rights of this attaching plaintiff. It is doubtless true that common-law or court receivers, such as the receivers in this case appear to have been, acquire no right by virtue of their appointment to sue in this state except only as they may be permitted by the courts in this state to do so under the principle of comity, and that a court has no power to appoint a receiver of property outside of its own jurisdiction. Tardy’s Smith on Receivers, Section 712. But we are living in a commercial age. Freedom in business relations between the citizens of the various states is for the best interest of all. And the constant tendency of the courts is or ought to be towards a more liberal policy in recognizing a receiver’s right to the possession of the property embraced by the decree appointing him, although situated without the jurisdiction of the court making the appointment. Lewis v. American Naval Stores Co., (C. C.) 119 Fed. 391, 397. A receiver, therefore, appointed in one state, though he has no title to property located in another state simply by virtue of his appointment, may by comity be permitted to take or recover the possession of property in another state, provided no citizen or suitor of the latter state is thereby prejudiced or ignored, and no public policy of the latter state is violated. Fletcher, Cyc. of Corp., Section 5836. The appointment of a receiver of its own force gives him the right to take possession of the property, although it confers upon
“When property in another state has actually been reduced to his possession, he can stand upon his possessory title and defend his rights against all others who cannot prove! a better title. It is only when he is compelled to resort to the courts to obtain possession of assets that he must rely upon that principle of comity upon which alone his title rests. ’ ’
And in Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence, 4th Ed., Volume 4, page 3896, Section 1674, it is said :
“If the receiver has obtained possession, his possession should be protected. His possession is in the nature of a property right, and is held so to be almost universally.-’ ’
See also Lett v. Kirkpatrick, Receiver, 15 Pa. Co. Ct. 212. Whether or not this rule should apply to give him any rights over a local creditor need not be determined. But it is clear that a receiver who has obtained possession of property in this state has a possessory title which he should be able to defend against all other creditors having no better right thereto. The defendant Clark, in this case, alleges in his so-called disclosure that he has purchased the property mentioned from the receivers. He is in privity of contract with them. The property having been delivered to him by the receivers, implies that they had previously taken possession thereof. In any event, Clark is in possession, and being in privity of contract with the receivers, it would seem clear that he has a right thereto which he should be able to defend against all parties having no better title, and
3. According to the allegations contained in the disclosures, plaintiff filed its claim with the receivers in Wisconsin prior to the commencement of the attachment herein, and such claim was allowed. In the case of In the Matter of the State Bank of Buffalo, 10 Page (N. Y.) 378, 382, it is said:
“Creditors who are not nominal parties to the suit may make themselves such parties in fact by coming in and presenting their claims to the master under the, decree and by submitting themselves to the jurisdiction of the court, for the settlement and adjustment of their respective claims upon' the fund, as directed by the decree or order under which such claims are presented. A creditor who comes in and makes his claim under such decree is quasi a party to the suit, and is entitled to the benefit of the decree as such party. And he may be restrained from proceeding at law for the recovery of his debt, after he has made his election to proceed in this court for the recovery of his debt under the decree.”
And in Herman on Estoppel, Section 1056, that author states the rule to be:
“When a citizen of one State makes himself a party to the proceedings uf his debtor, instituted in another State, to obtain the benefit of the bankrupt or insolvent law, and receives a dividend from the assignee of the bankrupt or insolvent, he abandons the extra territorial immunity which he might otherwise claim from the operation of those laws. ’ ’
It would of course make no difference in so far as the effect of filing a claim is concerned, whether such- claim is filed with a receiver, appointed by the court for the purpose
“The contestants, before they commenced their proceedings at law, by filing and proving' their claims in the mat’ter of the assignment of T. I. Gilbert & Co., as well as of Gilbert & Hallenger, had thus made themselves parties to the proceedings in the matter of the assignment of T. I. Gilbert & Co., and were in effect suitors before the court in relation to its execution. They had thus conclusively admitted the validity of the assignment and the jurisdiction of the court to make all proper and necessary orders for its execution. Upon general principles the court had a right to control their, conduct, as suitors, in relation to the proceedings, and to grant, if need be, an order to restrain them from carrying on an independent proceeding, at law or otherwise, the effect of which would be to embarrass or defeat its power to direct and control the administration of the estate. Having thus become parties to the proceeding, they were barred, and are estopped, from taking any action which would defeat its purpose, or prevent its proper execution under the direction of the court. ’ ’
And in the case of Olson v. O’Brien, 46 Minn. 87, 91, 48 N. W. 453, 454, the court said:
“Whatever may be the legal status of creditors who have not availed themselves, in any manner, of the assignment*446 or the benefits to be derived therefrom, the plaintiff, by-making proof of his claim, delivering it to the assignee, and thereafter, although notified of the fact of its allowance, permitting it to stand as a proved-up claim against the estate, has, in law, accepted the instrument, and barred himself from disputing its validity, or from taking any action which will defeat its purpose as a transfer of the property in question to the assignee. ’ ’
The principle thus stated has been applied when affecting property situated in a state other than that in which the receiver or assignee has been appointed. Thus, in the case of Wilson v. Keels, 54 So. Car. 545, 32 S. E. 702, 71 A. S. R. 816 the court held that a resident creditor of South Carolina who voluntarily submitted himself to the jurisdiction of a foreign court by proving his claim in said court against a foreign insolvent and accepting dividends from its receiver is estopped from objecting that such foreign receiver obtain possession of assets of such insolvent in South Carolina for general distribution. In the case of Kendall et al v. McClure Coke Co., 182 Pa. 1; 37 Atl. 823, 61 A. S. R. 688 it was held that when a Pennsylvania creditor under a Pennsylvania assignment for creditors takes part in a consultation of creditors with the assignee, obtains leave of court to file exceptions to the assignee’s account, and presents and proves his claim, he will be estopped from denying the validity of the assignment as to lands in another state, and a court of equity in Pennsylvania will enjoin him from prosecuting a suit instituted in such other state to secure a preference over other creditors as to lands there situated, although the question of the validity of the assignment in such other state involves the law of the situs of the property. In that case the court said, among other things:
“We think it clear that if defendant were attempting to question the validity of the assignment under the laws of this state, it would be held to have estopped itself from*447 denying it, by its unequivocal acts affirming it. Why, if the same acts estopped the creditor here, should he not be estopped from denying it elsewhere ? If equity would close his mouth here, his mere removal to another jurisdiction does not open it to effect the same result; it is just as unconscionable to assert in Georgia the invalidity of the as.-signment as to assert it in Pennsylvania. But, it is argued by appellee, if the assignment in Pennsylvania cannot pass lands in other states, where the conveyance does not conform to the laws of the situs, then, by the assignment, the property is not subject to the claims of the general creditors, and the defendant, in levying his attachment upon it, impairs no right of any creditor under the assignment; and further, to restrain the attaching creditor is to, in effect, decide a question' of foreign law, which the weight of authority holds should be decided by the foreign courts. As before noticed, without inquiry as to whether under the laws of Florida and Georgia the title to the lands in those states passed to the assignee, for the purposes of this case, we assume it did not; but this creditor, by the most significant acts and assertions of record, averred it did pass, and then took all the benefit possible from affirming the validity of the assignment; whether it passed or not, it cannot now say it did not. ’ ’
In the case of Kirkendall v. Wetherly, 77 Nebr. 421, 109 N. W. 757, 9 L. R. A. (N. S.) 515, it was held that a credit- or by participating in an insolvency proceeding begun in a sister state by a voluntary deed of assignment insufficient in form to be effectual to convey real property situated in that state, may become estopped to impeach a purported title of a purchaser of said property acquired in good faith in the progress of such proceedings. The court, among other things, said:
“But voluntary participation may have important consequences. An instance is easily conceivable in which the bulk of the property belonging to an insolvent, and at*448 tempted to be assigned by him, is real estate lying ontside the state. Suppose that such had been the case in the present instance, and that the bank had obtained a dividend, say of 50 percent of its claim, from participation in the distribution of the proceeds of the sale of such foreign lands, could it afterwards impeach the title of the purchaser, and obtain satisfaction of the residue of its claim by a resale of the property? Counsel for the attachment plaintiff argue that the doctrine of estoppel, whatever its force in other cases, has no application in this instance, because of the fact that no dividend was declared or paid;' and cite Thompkins v. Adams, 41 Kan. 38, 20 Pac. 535, in support of this contention. But no such exception is made in this court in Greene v. Gross, supra, and we think such a one would be impracticable. It would permit a creditor to speculate and experiment with inconsistent remedies, pursuing one until he became dissatisfied with it, and then abandoning it for the other, or prosecuting one until he obtained partial satisfaction, and then resorting to the other for the recovery of the remainder of his claim. Such a course would be manifestly unjust both to other creditors of the insolvent and to a purchaser in good faith and for value, relying upon the sufficiency of the insolvency proceedings, in which the attachment plaintiff had participated. We are of the opinion that in such cases the rule of law relative to the election of remedies is applicable. ’ ’
See also Weil v. Bank, 76 Mo. App. 34; Long v. Girdwood, 150 Pa. 413; 24 Atl. 711, 23 L. R. A. 33; Bank v. Street, 57 N. J. Law 336; Bentley v. Whittemore, 19 N. J. Eq. 462, 469; 97 Am. Dec. 671; which, in effect, hold that without' reference to estoppel or election of remedies, true comity requires that no foreign creditors should be able to obtain any advantage in the state where the property is situated which he could not' obtain in the forum where the receivership is had. But see 34 Cyc. 492.
The doctrine of election of remedies should not be applied so as to work an injustice. See Portner v. Tanner (Wyo.) 216 Pac. 1069. But, as said in Ballin v. Loele, 78 Wis. 404 ; 47 N. W. 516, 10 L. R. A. 742:
“That kind of diligence by which one creditor of an insolvent corporation secures to himself a prior right to its property, and an unequal advantage over the other creditors, is without merit, and more selfish than just. ’ ’ See Gilman v. Ketcham, 84 Wis. 60, 70, 54 N. W. 395, 23 L. R. A. 52, 36 Am. St. Rep. 899.
In the ease at bar, the plaintiff voluntarily submitted itself to the jurisdiction of the Wisconsin court by filing its claim, which was duly allowed. It thereby consented to be placed on the same footing with, and to derive the same advantage as, other creditors from the property which might come into the possession of the receivers, and we cannot see how it would be unjust to apply the doctrine of election of
4. If, however, we are wrong in applying the doctrine of election of remedies in this case, we still think that appellant is barred from claiming the possession of the property in the hands of Clark. And we might say in passing that the fact that the lower court gave plaintiff judgment against a party that made no defense and upheld a garnishment proceeding against Stenger, who, likewise, made no defense, thus recognizing the validity of the attachment proceeding in part, cannot aid the appellant here. We have shown that the Wisconsin court enjoined all creditors from enforcing their demands against the American Cooperative Association by any action at law or equity except in said court. In the eases cited supra, in which a claim was filed with the receiver subsequent to an attachment, there was no violation of an injunction as in the case at bar. Courts seem to be agreed that where a receiver of a corporation has been appointed by a court of competent jurisdiction in another state, a creditor who resides in that state, and is bound by the decree of its court appointing the receiver, cannot in an attachment or execution recover the assets of the corporation in another state. Fletcher, Cyc. Corp. Sec. 5840; 34 Cyc. 492; Bagby v. Railroad Co., 86 Pa. 291; In the Matter of Accounting of Waite, 99 N. Y. 433; 2 N. E. 440; Gilman v. Ketcham, 84 Wis. 60, 54 N. W. 395, 23 L. R. A. 52, 36 Am. St. Rep. 899. In Bagby v. R. R. Co., supra, the court said:
“Now it is clear that as to these plaintiffs who were citizens of Virginia, the appointment of a receiver was not extra territorial but was an act binding on them which the Virginia court would enforce as to them, had their action been brought in Virginia. Then, certainly, they have no*451 right after the appointment of a receiver by a court within their own state binding on them there, to attempt to avoid its effect by escaping from its jurisdiction and coming here to ask us to infringe the comity we owe to the acts of their own court within their jurisdiction. Instead of comity this would be unfriendliness, for they ask us to aid them in a violation of their own law. ’ ’
In the case of Bacon, Baldwin & Co. v. Jos. Horn & Co., 123 Pa. 452, 16 Atl. 794, 2 L. R. A. 355, the court said:
“The plaintiff came into this state to obtain an advantage by our law which they could not obtain by their own. They are seeking to nullify the law of their own state and ask the aid of our court to do so. This they cannot have. If for no other reason, it is forbidden by public policy and the comity which esists between the states. This comity will always be enforced when it does not conflict with the rights of our own citizens.”
In Farmers L. & T. Co. v. Telegraph Co., 148 N. Y. 315, 325, 42 N. E. 707, 31 L. R. A. 403, 51 Am. St. Rep. 690, the court held that one cannot be heard in a court of equity engaged in the administration of the proceeds of mortgaged property, to assert an alleged lien thereon having its. origin in a violation of an injunction and judgment of the court. It the case at bar the plaintiff, by filing its claim with the receivers appointed by the 'Wisconsin court, submitted itself to the jurisdiction of that court. The order of injunction issued by that court became binding upon it as well as upon the Wisconsin creditors that filed their claims. Plaintiff stands before this court as a confessed violator of that order, and asks this court to aid it in its violation. We cannot consent to do so. That would be not alone violative of the rule of comity, but would clearly be against public policy as well.
Affirmed.