193 A.D. 732 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1920
The only question involved in this appeal is whether notice was required to be given of the application to any person other than the receiver. The action was brought against Charles W. Morse and others for an accounting of the moneys ' received from the operation of the steamship Minneapolis or from the defendant Minneapolis Steamship Company, Inc., by the defendants Steamship Operating Company, Inc., United States Steamship Company, Charles W. Morse, Benjamin W. Morse, Mark L. Gilbert and American Canadian Cor
It was further provided that said receiver deposit all sums which might be received by him as such receiver in the Empire Trust Company, subject to the order of this court.
The receiver came into possession of this fund of $24,750,’ which he received only after an order directing the Steamship Operating Company, Inc., to pay the same to him had been affirmed by this court. (See 190 App. Div. 934.)
The Equitable Trust Company of New York was not a
The fund thus summarily directed to be paid over to the trust company came into possession of the receiver as the result of the efforts of the plaintiff herein, upon whose initiative the receiver himself was appointed. The receivership was incidental to the main relief asked for in the complaint, and was part of the prayer for relief therein. The fund was created as the result of part of the operations for which plaintiff seeks an accounting. All the parties to this action who had appeared therein were interested in the custody and proper disposition of this fund. Certainly no one who was a stranger to the litigation should be permitted to gain possession of the fund without notice to the parties who had appeared therein, as well as to the plaintiff through whose vigilance and efforts it had been secured.
The order of June 22, 1920, will be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and the motion to direct the payment by the receiver will be denied, with ten dollars costs. The order of July 2, 1920, in so far as it denies the motion to vacate the previous order will be reversed', with ten dollars costs and disbursements. Leave is given to the Equitable Trust Company of New York to renew its motion for the payment to it by the receiver of the sums in question, upon the payment of said costs and upon giving notice of motion to plaintiff and to all the. defendants who have appeared in this action.
Clarke, P. J., Smith, Page and Greenbaum, JJ., concur.
Order of June 22, 1920, reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion to direct payment by receiver denied, with ten dollars costs; order of July 2, 1920, so far