70 N.J. Eq. 509 | New York Court of Chancery | 1905
The receiver, having sold the property of the defendant, an insolvent corporation, and reported the same to the court, obtained an order requiring all parties interested to show cause why the sale should not be confirmed, and upon the return of this order, creditors and stockholders have presented objections, which I am now to consider and dispose of. The objections, ten in number, may be segregated as follows: That the receiver
arbitrarily, without exercising reasonable discretion, and in abuse of his legal duty, refused to adjourn the sale upon the application of the creditors, and stockholders; that the price obtained was grossly inadequate, there being but a single bid, and no bidders present save the purchasers; that the leasehold interest of the defendant company included in the sale was in dispute, and the property sold uncertain in quality and quantity, of which prospective purchasers could not and did not have full knowledge; that the property was sold as a whole without offering the same in parcels. When the receiver was appointed the defendant corporation was carrying on a hotel business in leased premises, and its assets consisted of the leasehold right, furniture
The most serious reason, and upon which I understand these objectors mainly rclv, is the refusal of the receiver to adjourn the sale for two weeks, which they .claim, under the circumstances to be disclosed, convicts the receiver of a refusal to exercise such a discretion as the observance of his legal duty required. The result of the litigation referred to made it clearly manifest that, after the payment of prof erred. claims and the receiver’s
The application which it was proposed to make to the court finds its support in the sixty-ninth section of the General Corporation act (P. L. W&6 p. &00), which provided that whenever after the appointment of a receiver it appears
“that the debts of the corporation have been paid or provided for, and that there remains, or can be obtained by further contributions, sufficient capital to enable it to resume its business, the court of chancery may, in its discretion; a proper case being shown, direct the receiver to reconvey to the corporation all its property.”
It was not made to appear, either to the receiver or to the court, on the argument, that the debts had been paid or provided for, for I think it doubtful whether the words “provided for” are answered by the extension of the time of payment, but rather that the pajement should be provided for. There is, however, a more serious and to me insurmountable objection, in that it was not made to appear that there was any capital present, or obtainable by future contributions, to enable a resumption of this business with safety to the public and advantage to the stockholders. Such jurisdictional facts being absent, the purpose for which the adjournment was sought would have been fruitless, and I cannot discover in what manner these applicants would have been benefited by an adjournment. It was further objected that the leasehold interest was in dispute, but this objection lacks merit, because on the day of sale the right to sell the leasehold interest had been adjudicated, and the propriety of the adjudication is only questioned by one of these applicants, and the situation was known to all bidders, and if there was any failure to realize the utmost ¡Drice, it was due to the cloud put upon the title by the very parties now complaining. As to the other objection, that the property was sold as a whole, I see no reason to question the propriety of the receiver’s action. The value of the articles was naturally enhanced by the fact that in purchasing them the buyer was securing a business for which
• It is proper to add that the business was not one which this court ought to continue any longer than was necessary to properly advertise and dispose of it as a going concern, and it further appeared that it was being run by the receiver at a loss, a consideration which made it his duty to promptly dispose of it at a fair sale, and thus save the creditors from further loss.
I will recommend that the sale be confirmed.