64 P.2d 16 | Kan. | 1937
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This is an appeal by creditors in a receivership from an order of the court overruling their motion for interest on their claims since the appointment of the receiver.
The A. J. Harwi Hardware Co., a corporation, with common and preferred stock, doing business at Wichita, became financially embarrassed, and on February 8, 1934, a receiver was appointed for it in an action brought by the Emerald Investment Company. On March 2, 1934, upon a proper application therefor, the court made an order pertaining to the giving of notices to creditors and the manner and the time of filing claims. This order provided in part
Numerous creditors filed claims with the receiver within the time and in the manner provided by the order of the court. All of those who asked for interest upon their claims asked for such interest only to February 8, 1934, the date the receiver was appointed. The claim of the Sheffield Steel Corporation was made up of a number of listed notes of the face value of $64,113.68, with interest computed on each note to February 8, 1934, in the aggregate of $1,-788.26, making its total claim of $65,981.25. This claim was properly verified or attested by its treasurer, H. R. Warren, at Kansas City, Mo., March 9, 1934, and sent to its attorneys at Wichita. Before filing the claim with the receiver, and without having specific authority to do so, the attorney wrote on the claim the words “and interest.” After the time for filing claims and making objections thereto had passed the respective claims were allowed, and, so far as these appellants are concerned, in the sums claimed, that is, with interest to the date of the appointment of the receiver. No objection was made by creditors, who are appellants here, to the sums in which their respective claims were allowed, nor to the fact that the order allowing them did not provide that the claims should draw interest after the appointment of the receiver.
The receiver conducted the hardware business under orders of the court, and appears to have done so efficiently. As funds accumulated partial payments were made upon claims allowed. On October 10, 1935, he was prepared to pay the balance unpaid on all claims allowed, and sent checks to the respective claimants, or their attorneys, for that purpose, marking the checks “payment in full.” On October 12, 1935, the receiver filed his report with the court showing the payment of all claims allowed and showing assets in his hands to the value of $60,944.63. Attorneys for the appellants objected to taking the receiver’s checks marked “payment in full,” contending they were entitled to interest since the appointment of the receiver. By an order of the court they were permitted to take the checks without prejudice to any rights they had to claim such interest. Then they moved the court for an order requiring the receiver to pay interest on their claims since his appointment. At the hearings on these motions, October 15 and December 3, 1935, it developed that six or eight months prior thereto the attorney for
The general rule in insolvency proceedings, such as receiverships, bankruptcy, assignments for benefit of creditors, and the like, is to allow interest on the claims of creditors only to a fixed date, as the date the court took charge of the assets. This is founded on the fact that in the great majority of such cases the assets of the estate are insufficient to pay the claims of all creditors in full. In such cases, to allow interest pending the insolvency proceedings to some creditors and not to others, or at different rates to different creditors, would result in an inequitable distribution among creditors of the assets which passed into the possession of the court. It would also complicate the procedure, tend to increase the expense, and delay closing the proceedings; hence, courts of equity in such cases quite uniformly decline to allow interest pending the insolvency proceedings. In the comparatively few insolvency proceedings in which the assets prove to be more than sufficient to pay all claims in full, including interest pending the proceedings, generally speaking, the creditors are entitled to interest on their claims until paid in full; provided, of course, their claims are of an interest-bearing character. Whether that is done, however, is governed by equitable principles;
There is no serious disagreement between counsel as to the rules above stated except appellants contend equitable principles no longer govern the matter when assets are more than sufficient to pay in full all claims. On this point we cannot agree with appellants. An. insolvency proceeding is governed in the main by equitable principles from the beginning to its close, although some questions which arise therein may be controlled by legal rights as distinct from general equitable principles. Even one who has a legal right may waive it, or lose it by failing to make proper or timely application therefor.
Applying these principles to the present claim of the Sheffield Steel Corporation, we first note the only claim it ever filed which was in harmony with the order of the court fixing the time of filing claims, and the form for their preparation, claimed n.o interest for any time after the receiver was appointed. Apparently its attorney thought the claim should be amended with respect to interest. Since the corporation’s treasurer verified its claim nearly two months before the final date for filing claims there was ample time to rewrite and reverify the claim. But this was not done. Obviously, either its attorney’s ideas were not conveyed to the corporation, or it declined to change the claim as previously prepared. Before filing the claim its attorney wrote upon it the somewhat ambiguous words “and interest.” It is not contended he .had specific authority from the corporation to do so. The claim was not re-verified. When the claim was allowed these added words were disregarded. It is not clear from the record whether this was done because the added words were unauthorized by the corporation, or because the claim, with these words added, was not in the form required by the court’s order, or because the court considered the merits of the question and refused to allow interest after the date the receiver was appointed.
The claim was allowed with interest only to the date the receiver was appointed. No objection was made to this order of allowance and no appeal was taken from it. It was permitted to stand as the final order of the court on the matter. As funds became avail
With respect to interest pending the receivership on the claims of the appellants, the Federal Enameling and Stamping Company
We find no reason to disturb the judgment of the trial court, and therefore it is affirmed.