Nelson v. Jenkins
Nelson v. Jenkins
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
The judgment complained of was entered in the course of the administration of the estate of an insolvent, who had
In July, Nelson filed a petition in the court, setting up the existence of the mortgage and the debt, alleged the nonpayment of the notes, and asked an order directing the assignee to turn over sufficient of the goods described in the mortgage to pay or satisfy it, and asked alternative relief to be granted in case the assignee was selling the goods, to require him to pay 75 per cent of what money he might receive from the sale of the goods until the mortgage was satisfied, or, if enough had been received, to pay the amount of the debt,
Various proceedings were had subsequent to the filing of the petition, but they culminated in an answer which admitted the giving o£ the mortgage and the execution of the notes, set up the filing of the claim in the court, and then asserted the invalidity of the incumbrance as against creditors, because the mortgage was on a stock of merchandise, and gave the mortgagor possession, with the power of sale, and the right to appropriate a definite percentage of the results.
Motions to strike parts of the answer and a demurrer to it were disposed of, and the case was finally set for hearing, and tried to the court without a jury. Antecedent to the trial, the assignee filed a report in court, as was required by the statute, which stated the amount of the stock received, the sales made, and the disposition made of the proceeds. The report was attacked by the petitioner, its sufficiency, accuracy and legality were questioned, and apparently much testimony introduced respecting the action which the assignee had taken in the management of the affairs. On the hearing on this petition, the court, in June, 1894, entered a judgment which substantially found the petitioner’s claim valid, that it should be preferred to the claims of all other creditors, and should be first paid out of any moneys arising from the sale of goods, and passed on the account, determined the validity of some of the charges with which the assignee had credited himself, disallowed others, and directed the payment of the petitioner’s claim. To this judgment there was no exception taken by the petitioner, who is the plaintiff in error. Further proceedings under the petition were had in November, 1894, on a subsequent report filed by the assignee, and likewise in January, 1895, when his final report was filed, and an order was made discharging him.
It will be seen from this brief narration that the only judgment which settled and fixed the rights of the assignee and
If the case was presented to us in such shape that we could review it, it is quite possible we might agree with the petitioner, and hold that he was entitled to relief and an order of the court directing the assignee to pajr over the money which he had received, subject to no deductions except such as were absolutely incidental to the immediate public sale of the goods, and the transfer of the moneys to the creditor who was by the judgment of the court entitled to the preference. We are wholly unable, however, to ascertain whether the court proceeded properly, and whether what were allowed as expenses were or were not legitimate, as between the petitioning mortgage creditor, the assignee, and the creditors. The whole matter was heard on testimony which is not before this court.
There are two considerations which absolutely prevent us from deciding these matters. In the first place, there is no exception to the judgment saved in the bill of exceptions, which is essential in all cases when the trial is to the court, to give us the right to disturb the judgment because it is unsupported by the testimony. This has been repeatedly adjudged, and the question so often determined in both the appellate courts of the state that a citation of authorities is
Subsequent to the filing of the records and the submission of the case, the parties asked and obtained leave to withdraw the bills for the purposes of correction, and have attempted to supply these defects by amendments signed by the court with its seal affixed. These amendments cannot be considered, because there was no showing made to the lower court on which the court could rightfully make an order nuno pro tunc; the whole thing being rested practically on what the motions call the “inadvertence” of the parties to procure signatures to the bills, or an extension of time within which they might be presented. The signature was affixed long after the term without authority, and they may not be taken to evidence their proper allowance and settlement. Since this is true, the only question presented by the record which we have a right to consider is as 'to the rightfulness of the judgment originally entered, declaring the petitioner a preferred creditor, and entitled to be first paid, before any dividends should be paid to other creditors or any other disposition made of the proceeds. The judgment, as originally entered, secured to the petitioner his full rights if it had been properly carried out. He does not complain of the judgment. The rights of the parties were as fully and adequately determined by that judgment as they would have been by any other, and, since the plaintiff in error was unharmed by it', he is in no situation to complain of the entry.
Since nothing else is open to review, and no prejudicial error was committed, we are unable to disturb the judgment.; and, though we may be of the opinion he was harmed by
Affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.