186 Wis. 320 | Wis. | 1925
This case on appeal presents as its principal issue the order of payment of- taxes assessed agaiiist the property of an assignor who has executed a voluntary assignment, under the provisions of ch. 80 of the Statutes for the year 1919, for the benefit of his creditors. More particularly stated in its narrower aspect, the question is: Are such taxes a prior claim to the costs of administration, or vice versa?
Sec. 1698 of the 1919 Statutes provides for notice to creditors. Sec. 1699 provides that at the expiration of three months from the first publication of the notice provided for in sec. 1698 the assignee shall file with the clerk of the court proof of the publication and a list of the creditors to whom such notice was mailed, etc., and a list of the creditors from whom affidavits of claims have been received, etc. The statute then provides that, within thirty days after such list is filed, the assignee or any creditor may file written objections, and serve a copy thereof upon such creditor. The objections shall then be heard and the court shall malte such order upon the final hearing as shall be just.
Sec. 1700 of said Statutes is as follows:
“Every creditor of the assignor who shall not file such an affidavit of his claim within the time limited as aforesaid shall not participate in any dividends made before his claim is filed. . . . The assignee may pay, or the court may order a dividend to be paid, at any time, making such provision as shall be necessary for the protection of claims in dispute. But before making any dividend the assignee shall pay all taxes assessed upon the property assigned, which remain unpaid, and the compensation due all laborers, servants and employees for labor or personal services performed for the assignor within the six months next preceding the making of the assignment, the claims for which shall be paid by him next after the payment of unpaid taxes and assessments,*323 debts due the United States or this state, the expenses of the assignment and the execution of the trust.”
A reading of this statute makes it clear that taxes assessed upon the property assigned, the pay due to all laborers, etc., for labor for a period of six months next preceding the making of the assignment, debts due the United States or this state, and the expenses of the assignment, constitute claims against the assets in the hands of the assignee which are prior to the claims of general creditors.
Ch. 80 of the Statutes aforesaid prohibits preferences as to general creditors. In this respect a voluntary assignment for the benefit of creditors under the statutes differs materially from' a common-law assignment, under which preferences were authorized to be created. A common-law assignment without preference was ineffective as to such claims which constituted specific liens and claims in the nature of taxes due to the government or its subdivisions. So that sec. 1700, Stats., in referring to the priority of claims for taxes and other preferred claims, is largely declaratory of the common law. However, where the statute in any respect changes the rule or order existing-under the common law, such provisions must prevail. So that while the assignment statutes were primarily enacted for the benefit of general creditors and granted to them the basis of equality under the law, it was not the intention to affect such claims as had priority either pursuant to contract relations or by operation of law.
Sec. 1700, therefore, in so far as it provides for a distribution of the estate of the assignor in the hands of the as-signee, deals with two classes of claims: first, preferred claims; and second, claims of general creditors. Among the claims preferred are those for labor coming within the provisions of sec. 1700, but such claims shall be paid by the assignee after the payment of unpaid taxes and assessments, debts due the United States or this state, the expenses of
The proceeds derived from taxes are an essential to the maintenance of the government, and this consideration lies at the basis of the government’s priority. Such priority was inherent in the common law of England before we became independent. As is said in Central Trust Co. v. New York C. & N. R. Co. 110 N. Y. 250, 18 N. E. 92:
“There is great force in the claim that the state has succeeded to all the prerogatives of the British crown so far as they are essential to the efficient exercise of powers inherent in the nature of civil government, and that there is the same priority of right here, in respect to the payment of taxes, which existed at common law in favor of the public treasury.”
That taxes are a prior claim over the costs of administration in bankruptcy cases is manifested by the federal Bankruptcy Act. It is true that this federal act is more specific than our own statute upon the subject. The federal act in express language creates the order of priority, and at the head of the list are taxes legally due and owing to the United States, state, county, district, or municipality. Under the federal act it has been held that taxes due the United States must be paid, to the exclusion of the reasonable expenses of administration of a bankrupt’s estate. In re Weiss, 20 Am. Bankr. Rep. 247; In re Prince & Walter, 131 Fed. 546, 12 Am. Bankr. Rep. 675; In re Grignard L. Co. 158 Fed. 557, 19 Am. Bankr. Rep. 743; In re Weissmann, 178 Fed. 115; Sellers v. Bell, 94 Fed. 801, 2 Am. Bankr. Rep. 529. Cases holding to the contrary are referred to in a note to 31 L. R. A. n. s. 988. We believe, however, that the
In receiverships the weight of authority in this country appears to give the expenses of administration priority over taxes, as will appear in Bauer v. Wilkes-Barre L. Co. 274 Pa. St. 165, 117 Atl. 920, 24 A. L. R. 1171, and the cases therein cited and quoted from. See, also, note to the Bauer Case in 24 A. L. R. 1177. In the Bauer Case, however, it was held that the receiver’s compensation is not a claim or lien, but is a part of the costs in the proceeding, and that the statute does not fix state taxes as prior to costs. Our statute on receiverships is in harmony with the prevailing doctrine in this country that the costs of administration form a prior claim, in receiverships, to taxes. Sec. 2787a provides:
“Whenever a receiver shall be appointed by any court to manage, conduct, settle, adjust or close up any mercantile, manufacturing or other business such receiver shall immediately report to the court the amount due the employees and laborers in such business; and said court shall order its receiver to pay out of the first receipts of said business, after the payment of costs, debts due the United States or this state, taxes and assessments and the current expenses 'of carrying on or closing said business, the wages of such employees and laborers which accrued within three months immediately prior to his appointment.”
34 Cyc. 346 states the rule as to receivers as follows: “Generally, taxes constitute a claim upon the assets in the hands of a receiver superior to every other claim except costs.” See, also, 1 Clark, Receivers, p. 909, sec. 827.
In the Bauer Case, supra, it is also said:
“If the rule were otherwise, that á receiver’s compensation and counsel fees are not part of the costs and preferred for payment out of the fund in his hands, we would have in many instances this anomalous and unjust result: the fund*326 would be raised entirely by the efforts of the receiver and his counsel, without which there would be no fund at all, yet it would be completely swept away from them and into other pockets by reason of priority of claim, and they would go unrequited for their labors. Receivers in many instances, where the conservation of assets is vital, could not be raised up if this were the rule.”
From the foregoing the reason for the priority of the costs of administration in receiverships becomes clear. The receiver is the arm of the court. Pie is appointed by the court. Pie holds the property primarily for the court and administers the trust under the direction of the court. While the statutes of this state in some respects limit the powers of the receiver and provide for the appointment of receivers, nevertheless, under sub. (5) of sec. 2787, receivers may be appointed “as are now provided by law or may be in accordance with the existing practice except as otherwise provided in this chapter.” _ .
Where a receiver is appointed for an insolvent corporation, no definite time is fixed by the statute during which he may wind up the affairs of the business of which he has charge. The matter rests almost entirely in the sound discretion of a court of equity. On the other hand, the statutes of this state pertaining to voluntary assignments contemplate the earliest possible winding up of the affairs o.f the assignor by the assignee, and a definite time is fixed for such purpose. The entire procedure in an assignment is largely determined by the statute, and in order to be a valid assignment the statutory requirements must be complied with. It will thus appear that in the one instance we have the winding up of a business by a receiver under the direction of the court, and on the other hand a similar object pursued under the statutes pertaining to voluntary assignment.
The legislature in this state has seen fit in its statutes on voluntary assignments to deviate from the common-law
The town of ■Emery is the appellant herein, and it is argued by counsel for the assignee that under the provisions of sec. 1701 the town cannot appeal because it is not a creditor.' Sec. 1701 provides:
“Every assignee who shall accept the assignment of any property under the provisions of this chapter or who has heretofore accepted his trust and has not settled the same shall, within six months thereafter or within such further time, not exceeding one year, as the court or judge shall allow, file with the clerk a full and itemized statement, verified by his oath, of the property by him received, the manner of his dealing therewith, the amount of money realized*328 by him, the condition of the property and funds in his possession, the names and residences of the assignor’s creditors’ the dividends paid them, his receipts and disbursements, with his claim for compensation; . . . Upon filing such report such assignee may apply to the court, upon not less than twenty days’ notice thereof by mail to the respective creditors named therein, for a final settlement of such account; and at the time and place named the circuit court shall hear any objections made by any creditor, take such evidence as may be proper, and settle and adjust such accounts and the compensation and expenses of such as-signee, whether objection be made or not, as shall be just; and his order thereupon shall be conclusive upon all parties, including the sureties of the assignee; but the assignee or any creditor may cause a bill of exceptions to be settled and appeal from such order within six months from the entry thereof to the supreme court in the manner prescribed for appeals in civil actions. . . .”
By way of reiteration, let it be said that the statutes on voluntary assignments are designed for the benefit of general, unsecured creditors. It was such object that the legislature had in mind when it enacted sec. 1701, above quoted. Such statute deals with the assets of the estate and the claims of creditors, and instead of limiting the right of appeal in accordance with the general statutory provisions upon the subject of appeal, such appeal is confined to a period of six months. The town, to which the taxes are due, is not interested in claims of creditors, as its claim as to priority is supreme. Therefore, said section has no application to it, but its right of appeal is governed by the general statutes upon the subject.
It was held in Gallup v. Schmidt, 154 Ind. 196, 56 N. E. 443:
“A tax is not an ordinary debt. It is not founded upon contract, express or implied. It flows from the exercise of sovereign power, and is imposed without the consent of the debtor. It is enforceable summarily by distress and sale and without exemption or relief from váluation laws.”
The proceedings pursued by the town in the instant matter are in strict conformity with those outlined and approved in Marathon Co. v. Barnes, 86 Wis. 663, 667, 57 N. W. 961; Assignment of Riddell, 93 Wis. 564, 67 N. W. 1135; State v. Railway Cos. 128 Wis. 449, 501, 108 N. W. 594. So that, while the taxes involved have been heretofore "generally referred to as a prior claim, they are not a claim in the same sense as are claims of general creditors; they do not involve the element of debt as do claims of general creditors, 'but are imposed by the government to raise funds to defray its expenses. They lack the contractual element of general claims of creditors; therefore they need not be filed. “The assignee must, at his peril, inquire whether the property or fund in his hands is liable for assessments or levies of taxes. There is no hardship in this, because all such matters are of record in the county where made.” Huiscamp Bros. v. Albert, 60 Iowa, 421, 15 N. W. 264. From this it follows that the town’s right to appeal does not spring from the provisions of sec. 1701, but from the statutes on appeal in civil actions generally.
Counsel for the assignee raise a number of questions on this appeal which were not raised in or submitted to the court below. Among other points it is claimed that the town of Emery is not the real party in interest; that the claim under the statute for taxes belongs to the county. The only objections to the tax raised in the court below involve the question of priority, above treated in this opinion. It becomes clear, therefore, that under the rule, well established in this and other jurisdictions, the points now raised for the first time should not be considered by this court. Cappon v. O’Day, 165 Wis. 486, 490, 162 N. W. 655; State ex rel. Houghton v. Phelps, 171 Wis. 13, 176 N. W. 217; Will of Brandon, 164 Wis. 387, 390, 160 N. W. 177;
By the Court. — The judgment of the lower court is reversed, and the cause is remanded with directions fór further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.