119 P. 705 | Idaho | 1911
The plaintiff applied to this court for an alternative writ of prohibition against Hon. E. A. Walters, a judge of the fourth judicial district, and O. E. Cannon, a receiver appointed by and acting under the direction of the judge of said court, to prohibit and restrain further proceedings under an order of sale made and entered by the judge of said court. At the suit of a creditor of the Great Western Beet Sugar Co. a receiver was appointed to take charge of the property and business of the corporation, who thereafter qualified and took charge of its property and continued to conduct the business under the direction of the court.
Various phases of that question have been considered by this court in the following cases: Idaho Fruit Lands Co. v. Great Western Beet Sugar Co. et al., 17 Ida. 273, 105 Pac. 562; S. C., 18 Ida. 1, 107 Pac. 989; Hewitt v. Great Western Beet Sugar Co., 20 Ida. 235, 118 Pac. 296.
“In the Matter of the Receivership of THE GREAT WESTERN BEET SUGAR CO.
“To O. E. Cannon, Receiver:
“The undersigned, attorneys for parties plaintiff and defendant in that certain action in the District Court of the Fourth Judicial District of the State of Idaho, in and for Elmore County, wherein Henry Hewitt, Jr., was plaintiff, and the Great Western Beet Sugar Co. et ah, were defendants, present herewith a copy of the decree made and entered in said action for your approval, and request that said parties plaintiff and defendant, each of them respectively, be accepted and admitted by you as creditors, mortgagees and lien holders of said Great Western Beet Sugar Co., and in the order of priority as in said decree set forth.
“Dated October 17, 1911.
“ J. G. WATTS.
“J. M. OWEN.
“D. B. GREEN.
“E. M. WOLFE.
“W. C. HOWIE.
“dan McLaughlin and
“PAGE & ENGLERT.
“J. L. NIDAY-
“B.'T. GRIFFITH.
“IRA E. BARBER.
“CHAS. F. KOELSCH.
“CAVANAH & BLAKE.
“A. F. SOLISS by O. O. HAGA.
“RICHARDS & HAGA.
“K. I. PERKY.
“WYMAN & WYMAN,
“For BESSIE STOETZEL.”
1. The order adjudged all indebtedness and expense of all kinds incurred by O. E. Cannon, as receiver, and by his predecessor, one Norman Isachson, aggregating upward of $43,000, to be a first and prior lien on the property covered by the mortgage of the plaintiff herein, and that the same should be paid before the payment of the plaintiff or any of the other liens or claims adjudged and decreed by the foreclosure judgment ;
2. The order directed that no bid should be received or accepted by the receiver for a less sum than $56,546.79;
3. It was ordered and directed that the receiver after making the sale should pay all receiver’s certificates, together with the interest thereon at the rate of 10% per annum from the date of their issuance;
4. It was ordered and directed that the sale should be made without the right of redemption, and that no redemption should be allowed after the acceptance of the bid and the confirmation of the sale by the judge of the court and that a deed absolute should thereupon be made to the purchaser.
We will consider the foregoing questions in the order in which they are above stated.
For discussions of the right and power of courts to order receiver’s sales without the right of redemption, see the follow
It is unnecessary, however, for us to determine that question in this case, and we reserve our judgment thereon, for the reason that the facts of this case remove it from the contingency above suggested. Here in some way the receiver was either brought in or voluntarily came into plaintiff’s foreclosure proceeding, -and instead of the plaintiff’s decree directing that the sheriff sell the property to make the amount of plaintiff’s debt and costs, it directs that the receiver sell the property and it likewise directs that the receiver first retain the cost of the sale, and, secondly, the amount of the receiver’s certificates, and then pay the liens and claims that are prior to the plaintiff before applying any of the proceeds to the payment of plaintiff’s mortgage debt. It also directs that the sale be made without right of redemption and that a deed absolute be given. This judgment and decree has become final -and the plaintiff prosecuted no appeal from these objectionable features of his decree. Pursuing this course of action and acquiescence on the part of plaintiff a step further, we find that he and all of the defendants who obtained relief on their cross-bills in the foreclosure proceedings took their decree over into the receivership case and filed it there and obtained an order from the court allowing the samé preferences in the receiver’s sale of the property as had been ordered under the foreclosure decree, and they'there filed their judgments and claims with the receiver and asked that the same be allowed and that they be accepted as creditors of the
The demurrer to the complaint is sustained, the writ is quashed and the action is dismissed. Costs awarded to defendants.