190 Pa. 230 | Pa. | 1899
Opinion by
Premises 707, 709 and 711, Chestnut street, and 34 South
The receiver conducted the business until December 6,1894, a period of about eleven months; he then petitioned the court for a peremptory order of sale, averring that, notwithstanding his best efforts in behalf of creditors and stockholders, the business was a losing one. The court made the order as prayed for, and sale of all the personal property on the premises was decreed accordingly. The gross sum realized was $3,803.16, and an auditor was appointed to distribute it. It appeared, that at the date of the incorporation of the hotel company the premises were in the occupancy of John Tracey, as tenant, who leased from two owners. Julia N. Tyndale had let to him all of 34 South Seventh street, which connected with the second floor of 707 Chestnut street, at an annual rental of $3,000, payable in monthly instalments of $250. With the consent of the owner, Tracey assigned this lease to the Washington Hotel Company, and then the lessor executed another lease to the same company in her own name, for the period of five years from September 1, 1895, at an annual rental of $3,500, payable in monthly instalments of $291.66. 709 and 711 belonged to the Hopkinson estate, and Tracey also held a lease of these from Edward Diehl, trustee for five years, with the right to an extension for a second five years from September 1, 1895, at an annual rental of $8,250, payable in monthly instalments of $687.50. This lease, Tracey, with the approval of the trustee, also assigned to the hotel company. All the rental due Mrs. Tyndale was paid, up to and including May, 1894; and all the rental due the Hopkinson estate was paid up to and including April, 1894. The trustee then reduced the rental payable to the Hopkinson estate fifty per cent, and the receiver paid it down to and including September, 1894, and afterwards paid $250 of the
It is not worth while discussing the question as to the jurisdiction of the court to authorize the continued possession of the hotel by its officer, the receiver. The courts can run bankrupt railroads, because the demands of the public absolutely require that they should be maintained as “ going concerns.” Whether there can be any sound judicial reason for continuing, the business of an insolvent hotel corporation is, to say the least, very doubtful. But, without regard to this point, there is no
The right of Mrs. Tyndale to distrain the goods on her premises, the day of the sale, for rent in arrears on that day, cannot be disputed; but as she could not in an orderly way exercise that right because of the manual possession of the goods by the court’s appointee, she necessarily has a lien on the fund raised by the sale of them under the order of the court. The value of the property, as before noticed, was $1,069.23. The
As to appellant’s claim to have distributed to her the entire amount received from subletting a part of her premises, we think the claim, if it had been promptly urged, would have been regarded as well founded in equity. But the Court below should have been asked to direct the receiver at the time to set apart the fund so received in payment of her rent. Although aware of the subletting, she took no steps to assert her equity; in consequence, the receiver mixed these rentals with the general fund, and used them in conducting the hotel business; during the time he received these very rentals he was paying to her monthly her rent; she may have already received a large part; it is now impossible to identify them, and therefore impossible to administer the alleged equity.
As to any hardship resulting to the receiver and his counsel from thus sustaining the appeal, it is one resulting from their own neglect in deferring their claims until this particular sum was left for distribution. There came into the receiver’s hands altogether, over $47,000; he only preferred this claim on the small balance of the proceeds of the personal property; this in large part belongs to the landlords, because the property was subject to distraint; the landlords did not request, nor did they need, the services of receiver or counsel.
It is directed that the decree be reversed, and that the record be remitted to the court below that a redistribution be made in accordance with this opinion.