Miller v. Kansas City Brick & Stone Co.
Miller v. Kansas City Brick & Stone Co.
Opinion of the Court
This cause is submitted to us on the Abstract of Record and appellants’ brief; no other briefs have been filed.
Defendant, Kansas City Brick & Stone Company, by order of the court below passed into the hands of a receiver; after paying some of the company’s larger preferred creditors, there were not sufficient available assets on hand with which to pay the remaining unpaid preferred. creditors and unpaid general creditors. The general creditors whose claims were allowed (among them these appellants) numbered thirty-six (36), and their claims amounted to over thirty-one thousand ($31,000) dollars.
The court below made an assessment against the stockholders of the company upon their unpaid stock subscriptions and liabilities in the sum of forty-five thousand ($45,000) dollars, and the receiver, by direction of the court below, instituted suit against one Robert Nesch upon his unpaid stockholder’s liability to said company. This suit resulted, on July 3, 1913, in a judgment being obtained against Nesch in the sum of forty-five thousand ($45,000) dollars; execution was issued and in due time a nulla bona return was made thereon.
On December 9, 1913, Robert Nesch, the judgment debtor, presented to the court below a written offer of compromise offering to pay the sum of thirteen thousand, five hundred ($13,500) dollars in cash in full satisfaction of the judgment against him. Thereupon all parties in interest, including all creditors, were given written notice thereof. Independent Power Company, Peteler Car Company, Clara I. Mansfield, and National
After tbe acceptance of said compromise, and upon tbe knowledge of said private adjustments and payments to said four creditors coming to tbe attention of tbe court, tbe receiver filed a motion requiring tbe said four creditors to make an accounting of tbe money privately received, as aforesaid, by them from tbe said Eobert Nescb. And, thereafter, tbe court did require said four creditors to account for such money.
At the time the court confirmed the compromise offer of thirteen thousand, five hundred ($13,500) dollars in settlement of the forty-five thousand ($45,000) dollars judgment held by the estate against Nesch, the court, the receiver, and the other thirty-two general creditors were all of the impression that said sum of thirteen thousand, five hundred ($13,500) dollars was all the money that could be obtained by settlement from Nesch. Afterwards it appears that Nesch was willing to pay a greater sum in settlement of said judgment, in that he paid directly to the said four general creditors the sum of four thousand, six hundred and nine and 3/100 ($4609.03) dollars. As we have seen, this money was paid out by Nesch in addition to the thirteen thousand, five hundred ($13,500) dollars which was paid openly and under the order of compromise made by the court. Had these facts been communicated to the court at the time he confirmed the compromise settlement it is not improbable that it would have resulted in the receiver being able to settle said judgment for a greater amount, but, instead, all these four general creditors acted upon the assumption that they might sell their assent to the approval of the compromise settlement for four thousand, six hundred and nine and. 3/100 ($4609.03) dollars, and thus keep all the additional price, which was in effect offered by Nesch, to the exclusion of the other thirty-two genera] creditors who were allowed to stand by and see the compromise settlement approved, in the belief that, thirteen thou
The court required the said four general creditors to reduce the amount of their respective claims by the amount they respectively received from the said Robert Nesch, and upon the balance left ordered the receiver to pay to each of them, together with the other thirty-two general creditors, a pro rata dividend.
This now being an equity case, the court has full power to adjust all equities arising among the creditors. We do not believe under the facts in this case that a proper method of distribution was made by the court below. The procuring by the said four general creditors of money from the judgment debtor Nesch, secretly and privately, without the consent or knowledge of the court, or of the receiver, or of the other general creditors, and in consideration of the withdrawal of their objections to the compromise settlement, was improper. [Gottschalk v. Kircher, 109 Mo. l. c. 184; Filburn v. Ivers, 92 Mo. 388; Pomeroy v. Benton, 57 Mo. 531.] In fact, it gave them an unlawful preference over the remaining general creditors.
A receivership is for the benefit of all creditors and, after all parties are in court, should one or more unfairly and secretly obtain something of value from a debtor to the estate, he cannot longer participate in the receivership proceeding and enjoy the same pro rata distribution as the other creditors, unless he give up the proceeds of the unfair and surreptitious advantage he has gained over them.' It is not enough that he be permitted to retain the proceeds of such an advantáge and that the same be treated as a payment upon his claim for that would be giving to him an undue preference to which he is not entitled, and would be putting a premium on wrong doing. It must be regarded that he has secured such advantage for the benefit of all the creditors. [Comstock v. McDonald, 136 Mich. 489.]
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.