121 Iowa 230 | Iowa | 1903
In 1893, in a proper proceeding, a receiver was. appointed for tbe Union Stock Yards .State Bank, who proceeded under tbe orders of tbe court to collect the assets of the bank for the purpose of distributing them among its creditors. One H. P. Ohesly, receiver of a corporation known as the Union Stock Yards Company, filed a claim wif'h the receiver of the bank in the sum of $3,248.42, which claim wa- subsequently assigned to the-Sioux Oit.v Stock Yards Company, which is tbe intervener in the proceeding now before us. On the application of intervener, the court, on the 18th of July, .1898, decreed its claim to be a preferred claim, and ordered it paid as such out of any funds of the estate of the bank which might come into the receiver’s hands. In the meantime other preferred claims had been allowed and paid out of the general assets of the bank, and, as the assets after tbe payment of these preferred claims were not sufficient to pay the claims of general creditors, a fifty per cent, assessment on stockholders on account of their double liability was made (see State v. Union Stock Yards State Bank, 103 Iowa, 549), the proceeds 'of which, coming into the hands of the receiver from 1895 down to tbe date of UK-trial in the lower court, amounted to about $26,000, of which the receiver at the time of the trial had on hand $5,673.65. At that time the receiver had on hand only $10, 'derived from the general assets of the bank. The present controversy arises on an application of the intervener, the Sioux City Stock Yards Company, to have the total amount in the hands of the receiver, all of which, as already stated (with tbe exception of $10), had been derived from assessments on stockholders, applied to the payment of intervener’s preferred claim. This application was re
Moreover,.if general assets of the bank were used in tbe satisfaction of other preferred claims which should have been applied pro rata on tbe claims of such preferred creditors and intervener, then, to the extent to which such other preferred creditors may still be entitled, if at all, to share as general creditors in the proceeds of tbe stockholders’ double liability, the amount coining; to such other preferred creditors might no doubt be used for tbe purpose of equalizing payments as between such other preferred creditors and the intervener. The difficulty in applying any such rules of distribution in this case seems to be that tbe general assets of the bank, so far as they were used in the extinguishment of the claims of creditors, were entirely exhausted in the payment of preferred claims established before that of the intervener was recognized as entitled.+o preference, and that such other preferred claims have, as we understand the record, been fully paid, so that the other preferred creditors now have
But th.e final and substantial claim of counsel for inter-vener is that a considerable portion of the amount of the general assets of the bank, which would have been applica-3. same. hie to the payment of intervener’s preferred claim, was used in the expenses of the administration c f the receivership, that these expenses have been incurred very largely in. the collection of the assessment on stockholders on account of their double liability, and that to the extent to which the general assets applicable to the payment of intervener’s preferred claim have been used in the collection of the assessment on stockholders the proceeds of the stockholders’ double liability should be now applied to the satisfaction of intervener’s claim in preference to the claims of general creditors. This contention we think to be sound and in accordance with equitable princijiles. The difficulty is that we have no means on this record of determining to what extent the expenses of the administration of the receivership, so far as they have already been allowed and paid out of the general assets, have been Occasioned by the collection of the stockholders’ assessment. We think it clearly appears, however, that some considerable portion of the expenses of administ.ration incurred iu the collection of the assessment on stockholders has been included in the expenses of the receivership allowed out of the general assets. It appears that out of $26,585.17 derived from various sources as general assets of the bank the sum of $13,249.60 has been paid'out to preferred creditors, and the balance has been entirely exhausted (save $10 of that fund, now in the hands of the receiver) in the expenses of administration. On the other hand, out of $26,019.08 derived, from assessments on the stockholders the snm of $4,280.95 has been used in the payment of preferred claims (other than the claim of