202 F. 609 | 6th Cir. | 1913
The Ironton Door & Manufacturing Company was incorporated in 1900 under the laws of the state of Ohio, and began business in March, 1901. On September 7, 1904, on the petition of certain of its creditors, filed in the court of common pleas of Lawrence county, Ohio, and .upon the ground that it was unable to pay its debts as they matured or to carry on its business, that court appointed Edmund S. Culbertson its receiver to take charge of the affairs of the corporation. He continued to operate and conduct its business under the order of that court until October 27, 1904, when the corporation was adjudged a bankrupt by the District Court of the United States for the Southern District of Ohio, which court appointed as its receiver W. G. Ward. On November 18, 1904, Ward was elected and qualified as the trustee of the bankrupt.
To Ward, as receiver, Culbertson turned over the estate of the bankrupt. Before he did so the state court ascertained and adjudged that under its orders its receiver, with the consent of the First National Bank of Ironton, Ohio, which we shall hereinafter speak of as the “Bank,” had consumed for the benefit of the bankrupt’s business and estate certain of the lumber which had come to his hands but which was claimed by the Bank as having been pledged to it. The value of the lumber thus used was $195.84, and this sum was adjudged by the state court to be a valid and preferred claim against the estate when it directed Culbertson, its receiver, to turn over the assets to Ward. This lumber was used for the benefit of the estate before the adjudication in bankruptcy, and for that and other reasons not necessary to be stated in detail both the referee and the court below held that the Bank should be reimbursed by the trustee for the value of this lumber which had been pledged to it by the bankrupt, and which had been used for the benefit of .the bankrupt’s estate. The Bank’s claim therefor was accordingly allowed.
In December, 1904, upon the application of Ward, trustee, and after full hearing, the referee made an order directing him to work up certain lumber and material on the bankrupt’s premises, which lumber and material were claimed by the Bank as having been pledged to it. The order of the referee provided that this should all be done without prejudice to the rights of the Bank, and the value of the lumber and material was directed to be deposited as a special fund which was to stand in place of the lumber and be appropriated according to the rights of the parties as they might afterwards be determined.
There were two policies of insurance, each for $700, issued to the bankrupt upon certain parts of its lumber. These policies were delivered by the bankrupt to the Bank, which held them until after the loss occurred. Thereafter they were placed by the Bank in the hands of Ward while he was receiver in the way and for the purpose presently to be shown more in detail, and upon each of them he collected $693 — a total of $1,386 — and that sum also remains in the trustee’s hands to be disposed of by this litigation.
Without making formal proofs of its claims for these three sums, or any of them, on April 30, 1906, the Bank filed its petition in the bankruptcy proceeding and prayed the referee for an order directing the trustee to pay all of them to it. The trustee and C. Crane & Co., the latter being one of the bankrupt’s creditors, contested the right of the Bank to the order prayed for, and much testimony was heard upon the issues raised. After very full consideration the referee made an order substantially as prayed for by the Bank. Due proceedings were taken by which the questions involved were brought before the court below, with the result that each of the sums, we have mentioned was adjudged to be due the Bank and payment to it was directed. The case was then brought here.
It appears that between December 18, 1902, and September 6, 1904, in pursuance of agreements presently to be more fully stated, the Bank, from time to time, loaned and advanced to the bankrupt large sums, to secure the payment of which it contends there were pledged to it numerous piles of lumber and certain policies of insurance thereon, and the principal question to be determined is whether this contention of the Bank is well founded. On September 6, 1904, much of the lumber covered by the insurance and by the alleged pledges to the Bank was destroyed by fire. On certain policies of insurance issued to the bankrupt but held by the Bank the latter collected $18,-500 and applied it toward the payment of that much of the indebtedness due to it from the bankrupt. This latter sum is not directly involved in the present litigation, but the right of the Bank to retain it was much discussed at the argument. •
Stating it as briefly as may be consistent with clearness, the arrangement between the bankrupt and the Bank was substantially this: The bankrupt was to execute to the Bank its notes for the money the Bank might loan or advance to the bankrupt from time to time, and payment of these notes was to be secured in both of two ways. One of them was to be by policies of insurance to be obtained by the bankrupt on certain lumber on its yard for its full value, each of the policies to have put upon it a clause or indorsement that the loss thereunder, if any, should be paid to the Bank as its interest might appear. These policies were to be delivered to the Bank. All of this was done except that the clause providing that payment should be made to the Bank as its interest might appear, unintentionally upon the part of the bankrupt and without the Bank’s consent or knowledge,
Upon the facts as we find them from’the record we have reached the conclusion that there was, in respect to each pile of the lumber so numbered and tagged, including that used by Culbertson, a delivery of possession to the Bank, and that all the pledges of lumber were thus validated. Many authorities might be cited, but the recent decision of the Supreme Court in Sexton, Trustee in Bankruptcy, v. Kessler, 225 U. S. 90, 32 Sup. Ct. 657, 56 L. Ed. 995, and that of this court in Re Cincinnati Iron Store Co., 167 Fed. 486, 93 C. C. A. 122, so clearly support our conclusion that no others need be mentioned. True, Casey v. Cavaroc, 96 U. S. 467, 24 L. Ed. 779, was much relied upon by counsel for appellant; but, as the court held upon the testimony in that case that possession had not in fact been given, we need give it no further consideration, especially as the distinction is 'very clear between it and Sexton v. Kessler and In re Cincinnati Iron Store Co., just referred to.
3. What we have said in regard to the lumber renders it unnecessary to say anything in regard to the policies of insurance upon which the bank collected the $18,500, except that the conclusion to be drawn from the facts respecting those policies and their delivery to the Rank is quite as apparent as that drawn from the facts respecting the lumber. )
5. Appellant’s counsel very strenuously urged upon our attention the case of York Manufacturing Co. v. Cassell, 201 U. S. 344, 26 Sup. Ct. 481, 50 L. Ed. 782. We need only say that that case is in no respect like the one before us. The question there was whether the manufacturing company had a lien upon certain machinery it had supplied under a contract of conditional sale to another who had posses
We do not deem itmecessary to notice in detail numerous other assignments of error, as those involved in what we have said are decisive of the case.
It results that the judgment of the court below should be, and it is in all respects, affirmed, with costs to the appellee.