This action was brought in the District Court for the Southern District of New York in August, 1962, by the Trustees in Reorganization of Swan-Finch Oil Corporation, Keta Gas and Oil Company,
Meanwhile, in January, 1963, Herbert Birrell, still in Canada, transferred title to a Nevada corporation, Empire Associates, Inc., wholly owned by him; in February Empire entered into a contract to sell the property to Peter Jakobson Corporation (hereafter the Corporation). The contract provided for a closing “when title to the property is quieted and clear,” except for certain mortgages, and any receiver was removed. The Corporation promised to use its best efforts to these ends; Empire undertook to cooperate and Herbert Birrell agreed to appear as a witness. When the attorneys for the Corporation informed the district judge of the contract, he enjoined its recording. Jakobson and the Corporation then sought to intervene, the former in his status as lessee, which he claimed not to have been validly terminated, the latter to protect its position as “contract-vendee.” Denial of both applications led to this appeal.
We must first consider the question of our jurisdiction despite the failure of the parties to do so. Where the sole ground urged for reversal of an order denying permissive intervention is abuse of the trial judge’s discretion, we would be reluctant to permit the fragmentation and delay that would result from allowing such orders to be appealed, at least so long as the applicant has “other adequate means of asserting his rights.” See Cresta Blanca Wine Co. v. Eastern Wine Corp.,
The Corporation’s application ought also to have been granted. The Corporation’s interest as contract vendee of property over which the court had assumed control could be “adversely affected” by this proceeding. It was thus entitled to intervene as of right under Rule 24(a) (3). See Gaines v. Clark,
Reversed.
Notes
. The judge’s opinion suggests that the validity of the receiver’s termination is res judicata as a result of a previous order of the district court and an “affirmance” by a single judge of this Court without opinion. An affidavit of Jakobson’s describes the nature of these proceedings quite differently. Since counsel for the Trustees has not favored us with an appendix save for reprinting his memorandum in the district court, and a passage from this rather substantiates appellant’s contention, we do not regard the issue as thus foreclosed.
