103 P.2d 798 | Kan. | 1940
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was a workmen’s compensation case. The appeal is by the workman.
The business of the employer, a mining company, was in the hands of a receiver. From the judgment of the district court which wound up the receivership and in which judgment the district court refused to direct the receiver to make further payments on claimant’s award in preference to the costs and expenses of administering the receivership, this workman appeals.
The instant judgment was rendered in the receivership case of R. A. Malm v. The Home Riverside Coal Mines Company, a corporation.
On November 6, 1933, prior to the receivership, claimant obtained a compensation award for 415 weeks at $14.40 per week, for
The cash on hand after winding up the receivership was wholly insufficient to cover various state and federal taxes, the wages due to laborers employed by the receiver, for the purpose of dismantling the property, and other costs and expenses incurred by the receiver in the administration of his trust. State and federal taxes. assessed to the receivership, as well as numerous other claims, were prorated. Miners and other employees received only about eleven percent of the wages at which they were employed by the receiver. The cash on hand consisted of proceeds resulting from the salvaging of the employer’s properties and business. The trial court made findings of fact touching various claims. Concerning the claim of the appellant, the court found:
“18. The court further finds that the claim of John Novakowski is not entitled to be paid out of any of the above fund, as none of said fund represents income, and for the further reason that the said John Novakowski knew that said mine was being operated by said receiver under the orders and directions of this court and that he failed to avail himself of the different provisions of law providing for the enforcement of the payment of said claim.”
The receiver was, of course, an arm of the court. In reality the court was operating the mining business and administering the property during the continuance of the receivership. Expenditures incurred by the court during the receivership are in reality costs of administration. They constitute expenditures which are necessary
It therefore follows that until costs of administration are fully paid there is no fund for the payment of the insolvent’s debts. (Kennebec Box Co. v. O. S. Richards Corporation, supra.)
Appellant relies upon the ease of Bowen v. Hockley, 71 F. 2d 781. The opinion in that case has received our careful consideration. In that case, however, the question arose in connection with the refusal of the receiver to continue compensation payments out of income during the period the business was a going concern. In the instant case, that is not exactly the situation. On oral argument we were advised the receiver did not discontinue payments to appellant until the income became insufficient to pay the wages of miners and other employees. Nor does the record disclose the trial court erred in finding that none of the funds in his hands at the time of final distribution constituted income. Furthermore, the last motion to have the payments resumed was filed by appellant on March 27, 1938. That was one year and seven months prior to the final order of distribution. That motion was never pursued by appellant. The trial court was given no opportunity to pass upon it. The result is, no ruling was had on that motion and the merit of the motion, at the time it was filed, is not here for review. The receiver ceased operating entirely May 2, 1939. The only appeal is from the order made to wind up the corporation and to distribute the fund on hand, which represented proceeds from the sale of the remaining property of the mining company. That order was made January 12, 1940. That was not the situation in the Bowen case. In that case the court carefully, guarded its decision by saying:
*422 “Whether upon the winding up of the corporation and the distribution of assets such claims can be given priority in the absence of statute, is a question which we need not consider. The question here is whether they are payable from income earned by the business while it is being preserved and carried on as a going concern by the court.” (p. 783.)
It may also be well to note that in the instant case no funds remained for distribution among stockholders. The question of an equitable distribution between the claims of stockholders of the employer corporation, and the claim of appellant is, therefore, not presented. The funds on hand are insufficient to pay the wages of miners employed by the receiver to dismantle the property, and the claims of other creditors which accrued during the receivership. If appellant is paid in full, the proportionate share of miners and other employees will be still further reduced. Under the circumstances confronting the trial court, we cannot well say the court erred in the judgment it rendered.
The judgment is affirmed.