176 Mass. 151 | Mass. | 1900
Pursuant to a prayer of the plaintiff the receivers were appointed on June 20, 1898. The decree defining their duties was assented to by all the parties to the cause, and the plaintiff alone now objects to the subsequent decree, ordering the receivers to make certain payments, and which is before us upon the report. By the decree of June 20, 1898, the receivers
The fund from which the receivers have been ordered to make these payments is made up of the proceeds of sales made by order of court. On September 20, 1897, the manufacturing company made a trust deed to the defendant Bascom, containing a power of sale. On January 19, 1899, a decree was entered by consent of all parties to the cause, and of all persons interested in the trust deed, directing Bascom and the receivers to sell all the property covered by the trust deed, and also any assets of the manufacturing company not so covered, the proceeds of the sales to be brought into court. A sale under the decree was made on March 1, 1899, and the proceeds, amounting to $72,062.83, were paid into court, and constitute the fund in question, less a sum of $500 which has been allowed to the receivers for expenses in certain litigation pending in Ohio. The report states that no separation of the amount received from the sale of property covered by the trust deed, and of the amount received from the sale of other assets, has been or can be made.
The plaintiff’s demand is for damages, not yet liquidated, for breach by the manufacturing company of a contract made by it on October 12,1891. The bill alleges that such breaches were committed in December, 1892, and in August, 1893, and that the manufacturing company owes the- plaintiff for these damages a sum not less than $20,000; and also that, in a suit now pending in the courts of New York, in favor of the plaintiff against another
A cross bill was filed by the manufacturing company on July 13.1898, and answers to the original bill were filed by that company and by the trustee Bascom on July 20, 1898. The answer of the plaintiff in the original bill to the cross bill was filed on October 13, 1898. The general result of these pleadings is that the right of the plaintiff in the original bill to recover any damages of the manufacturing company is denied. In this state of the pleadings, the decree of June 20, 1898, appointing the receivers and defining their duties and powers standing unmodified, the decree of January 19,1899, directing the sale of all the assets of the manufacturing company, was entered by consent of the plaintiff, and the order directing the payment by the receivers out of the fund raised by the sale, of the sums together amounting to aboht $26,000, was made.
In dealing with the question whether these payments were rightly ordered, we assume in favor of the plaintiff, without so deciding, that its right to have damages from the manufacturing company has been fixed by the alleged judgment of June 8,1898, in the New York court, and that such damages are so large that if the payments ordered shall be made the balance of the fund in court will be insufficient to pay the plaintiff’s damages ; and also that the trust deed in providing that the trustee should hold the property conveyed by it “ to pay all and every the existing indebtedness or liabilities of the ” manufacturing company applied as well to the plaintiff’s demand for damages as to other debts or liabilities, so that the commercial paper of the company would have no preference in the administration of the trust fund.
The plaintiff sought to have the assets of its debtor administered upon the footing that the commercial paper of the debtor and the expenses of administration should be met in full. It cannot now be allowed to change that footing and thereby to compel those who have assented to its scheme for its own relief to wait longer, or to run the chance of receiving less than their due. Decree of the Superior Court affirmed.