189 Iowa 874 | Iowa | 1920
I. On April 18, 1916, Armstrong gave his notes, aggregating $1,500, to the Mercantile Company, in payment for shares of stock in said company. The company
On permission of the court, Armstrong, on November 29, 1916, intervened in the receivership suit. As said, he asked that his judgment be established as a preferred claim against the estate of the company, and that it be allowed, and ordered paid in full by the receiver.
*878 “And this decree is not an adjudication of the rights, if any, of plaintiff against K. T. Lamb, receiver of the Iowa Mercantile Company, nor against the creditors of said company, or of the rights of said receiver or said creditors against the plaintiff.”
III. The record does not establish the trial court held “that the mere appointment of a receiver of the Iowa Mercantile Company because of mismánagement, fraud, and insolvency, prior to intervener’s notice of rescission,, and action in court to force a rescission, barred intervener’s right of cancellation, rescission, and recovery, on the grounds of the admitted fraud, misrepresentations, and despite his diligence in discovering the same.”
, a. The money paid by. Armstrong bought merchandise for the company, and the receiver now holds the money received for this merchandise, and this has increased the funds in his hands as receiver, to the extent of the intervener’s judgment.
b. There is no evidence that the assets are insufficient to pay all claims, including that of intervener; therefore, there is no evidence that anyone will be injured if the preference is allowed.
c. Neither the receiver or the creditors have pleaded an estoppel, or pleaded that any debts had been contracted after Armstrong made his subscription; and neither receiver or creditors have opposed the allowance in full.
The appellees respond that they are not bound to shoAv that full alloAvance Avill do no harm; and that it is for appellant to shoAv that alloAvance of his claim will not preju
The general position of appellee is summed up thus: Where a creditor seeks to repudiate or rescind his contract for the stock of an insolvent company which is in the hands of a receiver, he has the burden of both alleging and proving that no rights of creditors intervened between the date he became á stockholder and the date of the appointment of the receiver. We need not decide whether there be such evidence, nor some of the other questions suggested; for all authority agrees that claimant who seeks a preference based on a trust has the burden of proving that what is in possession of the receiver has been accreted by the money or property of claimant. One who has been fraudulently deprived of his property, and seeks to establish a trust against the defendant and defendant’s general creditors, must actually point out his property which is the subject of the trust, or actually show that his property has passed into other identified property, and is preserved in that form in the hands of defendant. Farnsworth v. Muscatine P. & P. I. Co., 177 Iowa 21. To like effect are State v. Bank of Commerce, 61 Neb. 181 (85 N. W. 43); City of Lincoln v.
We are of opinion that the provisions in the articles of incorporation which regulate wliat and how much may' be bought on credit, and provisions restricting the going in debt in excess of the amount of cash on hand, are immaterial to any issue to be decided on this appeal. And it may be said in passing that, if these restrictions were exceeded, it was1 done by the directors of the Mercantile Company, who were the agents of Armstrong.
We think Armstrong was at least a general creditor. With no objection made to the time and manner in which he asserted his claim, he is to be treated as a general creditor, who had claimed in proper time and form. It follows the district court should not have dismissed his interven
The appellee resists this by saying that all these matters are a part of the court records and files in this action, in which appellant has intervened; that the trial court took judicial notice of all of them, and considered them without formal introduction; and that they are all proper and material for present consideration.
In view of the conclusions we reach, this motion involves really nothing but the cost of printing of appellee’s amendment. And because of our said conclusion appellee has all the costs to pay, no useful purpose would be served by striking the amendment, assuming that there is any ground for striking it.
The appellee moves to strike from appellant’s abstract page 1 to and including line 13 on page 22, with the exception of Article 9 on page 13, which is lines 14 to 29 on page 13; and the motion is grounded on the claim that these matters are wholly unnecessary to a full understanding of the questions presented by appellant, and are in contravention of Eule 30. This motion, too,, is denied.