In re Brockton Ideal Shoe Co.

194 F. 233 | S.D.N.Y. | 1912

HAND, District Judge.

The order asked for may be very satisfactory in this instance, but the practice is capable of great abuse. The ancillary receiver wishes to sell out the whole stock of shoes here in New York, because it costs something to keep 'them and they are winter goods. I do not believe the act ever contemplated any such thing. If the creditors could be got together, all of them, and their wishes considered, I should not stand on the formality of a trustee, if the case originated here.

But, even if those facts existed here, it is the District Court of Massachusetts that will have jurisdiction of such sales after a trustee has been appointed. There has already been an adjudication, and for all substantial purposes of administration the Massachusetts court ought to be regarded as already in charge. The New York receiver has nothing to do but collect the assets and wait for a trustee. If *234the Massachusetts receivers think the matter of pressing importance, they can go to their own court for instructions. If Judge Dodge, or the referee, thinks it wise and proper to sell, I will gladly cooperate b'y ordering a sale upon an application here of the ancillary receiver showing that fact. That will be the nearest approach possible to the result, if a trustee were in fact appointed, and it ought to take only a short time. No such pressing necessity appears as justifies anything further.