Guimarin & Co. v. Southern Life & Trust Co.
Guimarin & Co. v. Southern Life & Trust Co.
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
It appears from the record that the Carolina Construction Company, of Greensboro, N. C., had a contract to build two Y. M. C. A. buildings, one in Charleston and one in Columbia, S. C. That pending a completion of these contracts, the Construction Company failed and a receiver for it was appointed by the Honorable James E. Boyd, Judge of the Federal Court for the AVestern District of North Carolina.
It is alleged that the Construction Company had a contract with the respondents to do the plumbing in said buildings, but the company failed before the respondents started' on their work and the respondents declined to carry out their *15 contracts; that the receiver, the appellant, then undertook to pay for the work to be done and by reason of this promise, the respondents did the work. The respondent relies upon the contract with the receiver who, they allege, undertook to complete the contracts of its insolvent with these respondents.
It is alleged that the receiver refused to pay for the work. The respondents attached the funds in the hands of the Charleston and Columbia associations, for the payment of their debt. The defendant appeared for the purpose of moving to dismiss the attachment only, on the ground: 1. That the State Court has no jurisdiction to attach a fund belonging to a foreign receiver. 2. That the funds are held subject to the order of the United States Court for the District of South Carolina and not subject to attachment by the State- Courts. Judge Prince refused the motion, holding that the funds were subject to attachment and that the District Court for South Carolina had taken no action in the matter. From this order the defendant appealed and argues two questions.
I. “First. Should the South Carolina Court permit through an action at law and an attachment, the funds belonging to the receiver appointed by the United States Court in North Carolina and which he was seeking to recover in the proceeding in the District Court for South Carolina, to be held under an attachment issued in a proceeding pending in the State Court although there was no appointment of an ancillary receiver ?”
Appellant, in its argument, says:
In Rogers v. Riley, 80 Fed. 759, the Court declares that this rule “(receiver has no extra territorial jurisdiction),” is subject to a well established exception which ’allows a receiver to sue extra territorially “where there are no domestic creditors and where it is not against the public policy' of the State in which the suit is brought.”
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Judge Prince held: “It does not appear from the papers submitted to me that any ancillary receiver had ever been appointed in this State.” Unless we are bound by some high and controlling authority, we would not hold that the distinguished Federal Judge underestimated the powers of his own appointee or that he made a useless order. It certainly does riot lie in the mouth of the appointee to say so.
This proposition cannot be sustained.
II. “Second. Should a creditor of a contractor entitled to a lien under section 4152, volume I, Civil Code, be allowed to obtain a lien prior to all other material men and laborers upon the fund in the hands of the contractor or to which he is entitled and which he is seeking to recover?”
It appears in the record that although Judge Boyd, of the Western District of North Carolina, had directed the application for an ancillary receiver in the Federal Court of South Carolina, yet this had not been done, but in case the ancillary receiver should thereafter be appointed, it was the purpose of the receiver to take the fund out of the jurisdiction of the Courts for South Carolina, both Federal and State, and require the domestic creditors to go into the foreign jurisdiction to recover his claim.
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The exceptions are overruled and the order appealed from affirmed.
Footnote.—See note on rights acquired by attachment after bankruptcy of principal debtor in 18 Am. & Eng. Ann. Cas. 382; Foreign receiver, 23 L. R. A. 52; Effect of bankruptcy of owner on title to land in foreign country in 21 Am. & Eng. Ann. Cas. 1040.
Reference
- Status
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- Syllabus
- Bankruptcy. Foreign Receivers. Attachment. 1. Receivers—Foreign Receivers—Attachment op Funds.—A North Carolina corporation having construction contracts -in South Carolina became insolvent, and a receiver was appointed by the Federal Court in North Carolina. Plaintiffs, who had subcontracts, performed them at the request of the receiver. No. ancillary receiver was appointed for South Carolina. Held, that as plaintiffs were domestic creditors, they could attach funds due the insolvent corporation from local debtors, as there was no ancillary receiver in the State, and the foreign receiver could not sue. 2. Receivers — Receivership •— Effect of — Attachment.— Where an ancillary receiver, if appointed, would only take the property outside the State for administration, the local creditors may attach funds due the nonresident insolvent from local debtors. 3. Receivers—Powers of—Continuance of Work.—Where a construction company became insolvent, and a receiver was appointed, he may continue the work, and persons furnishing labor or material after his appointment are entitled to be paid in full before company’s creditors receive dividends; hence it was improper for the x-eceiver to distx-ibute funds equitably or equally between his creditors and those of the company. 4. Receivers.—Creditors of a receiver in the administration of a bankrupt estate must be paid in full before distribution of assets amongst creditors of the bankx-upt.