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Bd. of Educ. of City of Elizabeth in Union County v. Zink

COURT OF CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY
Jun 3, 1927
137 A. 713 (Ch. Div. 1927)

Opinion

06-03-1927

BOARD OF EDUCATION OF CITY OF ELIZABETH IN UNION COUNTY v. ZINK et al.

Arthur T. Vanderbilt, of Newark, for Liberty Trust Co. and John U. Weber. Riker & Riker, of Newark (Andrew Van Blarcom, of Newark), for Globe Indemnity Co. Donohue & O'Brien, of Newark, for Frank A. Morgan. Robert Carey, of Jersey City, for Fagan Iron Works.


(Syllabus by the Court.)

Interpleader by the Board of Education of the City of Elizabeth, in the County of Union, against Homer C. Zink, receiver of the Morgan Construction Company, and others. Proper distribution of fund in question decided.

Arthur T. Vanderbilt, of Newark, for Liberty Trust Co. and John U. Weber.

Riker & Riker, of Newark (Andrew Van Blarcom, of Newark), for Globe Indemnity Co.

Donohue & O'Brien, of Newark, for Frank A. Morgan.

Robert Carey, of Jersey City, for Fagan Iron Works.

BACKES, Vice Chancellor. The problems submitted involve the distribution of $37,698.94 paid into court by the board of education of Elizabeth under an interpleader decree.

The Morgan Construction Company contracted with the board of education to erect the Alexander Hamilton junior high school in Elizabeth, and gave the statutory bond (C. S. C. S. p. 1765) with the Globe Indemnity Company as surety for the performance of the contract, and for the payment of labor and material. Contemporaneously with the execution of the bond the indemnity company took an assignment from the Morgan Company of money that may be due upon default, if the Morgan Company should make default, in the performance of the contract. This assignment did not come to light until after the Morgan Company failed. The Liberty Trust Company financed the Morgan Company in its various building operations, including the Alexander Hamilton school, and, to secure loans of $21,500, took an assignment from the Morgan Company of the moneys to grow due on the contract. Notice of this assignment was filed with the board of education. During the course of construction the Morgan Company was petitioned into bankruptcy, and the federal court appointed a receiver, who, by direction of the court, undertook to finish the job, and who, by like direction, quit when it was found inexpedient to continue, and thereupon the board of education completed the contract, and, after deducting the cost of completion, there remained of the contract price the sum now in dispute. The claimants are the receiver, who spent $17,864.64 in the work and wants reimbursement, materialmen who filed liens under the Municipal Mechanic's Lien Act (3 Comp. St. 1910, p. 3290), after the receiver was appointed, the Globe Indemnity Company, and the Liberty Trust Company, which lay claim to the fund under their respective assignments. The indemnity company assignment is prior in point of time, but the Trust Company claims a superior equity because of priority of notice of its assignment to the board of education. The indemnity company denies, but the trust company concedes, the priority of the receiver's claim; both contend that the lien claims are invalid.

The lien claims filed after the appointment of the receiver do not attach to the fund. Mack Mfg. Co. v. Citizens' Const. Co., 85 N. J. Eq. 231, 96 A. 101, affirmed 86 N. J. Eq. 255, 98 A. 1086; Agnew Co. v. Paterson Board of Education, 83 N. J. Eq. 49, 89 A. 1046. These cases were decided upon the statute as it stood prior to the Act of 1918 (P. L. 1043). The new act does not alter the law of the cases.

As to the receiver's claim. Upon the appointment of the receiver, which was in the usual form, commanding him to take possession of the bankrupt's property and enjoining all interference, the court ordered the receiver to borrow not exceeding $15,000 on receiver's certificates for the purpose of continuing the business of the bankrupt in order to preserve and protect the property, and later ordered an additional $10,000 of certificates. These certificates are declared to be liens on the bankrupt's property and assets. The first order was without notice; of the second the indemnity company had notice and assented—in fact it purchased $8,000 of the certificates. The indemnity company now contends that the court had not the power to displace the security of its assignment without notice. An all-sufficient answer to this is that the indemnity company kept its assignment hidden until after the bankruptcy and was not entitled to notice. Moreover, it stood by and without protest saw the receiver expend the money to its advantage, for at that time it was chargeable with the cost of finishing the work. It was silent then; it cannot be heard now. Furthermore, had the receiver had notice of the assignment, it is well settled that a court, in custody of assets of a private corporation, through a receiver, may carry on the business for the purpose of realization and preservation of its property, and, when realization or preservation is as well for the interest of fixed charges, to subject such fixed charges to the expenses. Lockport Felt Co. v. United Box, Board & Paper Co., 74 N. J. Eq. 686, 70 A. 980. This may be done as a rule only after notice, and without notice in emergency such as arose here, where, at the end of the week, the day the receiver was appointed, there was a large pay roll due which had to be met on penalty, under labor union rules, which could not be disregarded, of time and a half time to labor while idle, who would not continue work without pay, nor allow the work to go on until they were paid. The situation was acute and called for instant action to avoid greater loss. This was not a case of disturbing a fixed lien to carry on the corporate affairs in the hope and expectation of saving something for general creditors, as counsel argues, and supports his argument with worthy authority (International Trust Co. v. Decker Bros. [C. C. A.] 152 F. 78, 11 L. R. A. [N. S.] 152; In re Clark Coal & Coke Co. [D. C] 173 F. 658; Lockport Felt Co. v. United Box, Board & Paper Co, supra), nor one where a lien was displaced, for here, at the time the receiver was appointed, there were no funds to which the indemnity company's lien attached. The unpaid balance of the contract price at that time was the property of the board of education, and the funds came into being only after the board had satisfied its own requirements in completing the contract, and was made possible by the court's action, and to the extent that the receiver's efforts and expenditures contributed towards the creation of the fund, his claim must be first met. Thereceiver is entitled to his expenses and the costs of his administration, to be determined by the court of his appointment. Bliss v. Linden Cemetery, 90 N. J. Eq. 404, 107 A. 594; Id., 91 N. J. Eq. 329, 109 A. 500; Seidler v. Branford Restaurant, 97 N. J. Eq. 153, 127 A. 36; Id., 97 N. J. Eq. 531, 128 A. 166.

The remaining question is, Which of the assignees is entitled to the balance of the fund? The indemnity company claims it, aside from its assignment, by way of subrogation to the rights of the board of education. What rights? If the indemnity company had been called upon and had finished the work upon the contractor's failure, it would have stood in the shoes of the board of education and entitled, of the contract price, only to the sum expended in the completion. St. Peter's Catholic Church v. Vannote, 66 N. J. Eq. 78, 56 A. 1037; Union Stone Co. v. Freeholders of Hudson County, 71 N. J. Eq. 657, 65 A. 466. It is argued that the indemnity company is entitled to subrogation because it has paid and will have to pay materialmen large sums of money, but that obligation is personal to the materialmen and arises out of the bond given for their security. The condition of the indemnity company's bond, that the contractor would pay labor and materialmen, was not an indemnity to the board of education, for the board owed them no duty to pay. The condition is an engagement directly with labor and materialmen which they alone may enforce; to their claims the indemnity company may succeed, upon payment, as against the contractor. If labor and materialmen had filed valid liens against the fund, the indemnity company would have been entitled to be subrogated to their liens; but no valid liens were filed. In so far as the indemnity company has paid and will be called upon to pay for labor and material in discharge of its bond, it will stand as a common creditor of its principal. Whatever rights it has lie in its assignment. Its assignment is senior to that of the trust company, and the rule is, "First in time, best in right." The trust company contends, however, that as both assignments are of equitable interest and governed by equitable principles, its junior assignment is superior in equity because of the prior notice to the board of education. In Jenkinson v. N. Y. Finance Co., 79 N. J. Eq. 247, 82 A. 36, Vice Chancellor Emery considered the free transfer of equitable interests as essential to their value, and liable to be impaired unless protected by the rule of notice, in analogy to the Recording Act, and, adopting the principle of the English cases of Dearie v. Hall, 3 Russ. 1, Ward v. Duncombe, 1893 App. Case. 369, and Foster v. Cockerell, 3 Cl. & F. 456, held that notice to the trustee is necessary to protect an assignment as against a subsequent assignee who is a purchaser for value in good faith and without notice, and declared the equitable ground upon which the rule rests to be:

"That the failure of the prior assignee to give notice is a negligence which leaves the assignor in a position where by his apparent ownership he is able to deal with the property in a manner to defraud or injure any subsequent purchaser notwithstanding all due inquiry made."

The English cases hold, and the Vice Chancellor approved the doctrine, that the junior assignee is entitled to priority even though he made no inquiry of the trustee as to prior assignments and consequently suffered no injury in fact by the negligence of the prior assignee to give notice. The United States Supreme Court declined to follow the English rule that priority of notice, without more, gave priority of lien. Salem Trust Co. v. Manufacturers' Finance Co., 264 U. S. 182, 44 S. Ct. 266, 68 L. Ed. 628, 31 A. L. R. 867. The footnotes to that case cite some of the conflicting authorities in our courts. See, also, Fidelity Trust Co. v. Bolles, 80 N. J. Eq. 15, 82 A. 883. The trust company, however, is not a purchaser for value, in good faith, without notice. It is a purchaser in good faith. Knowles Loom Works v. Vacher, 57 N. J. Law, 490, 31 A. 306, 33 L. R. A. 305, affirmed, 59 N. J. Law, 586, 39 A. 1114. But it is not a purchaser for a valuable consideration. Mingus v. Condit, 23 N. J. Eq. 313; De Witt v. Van Sickle, 29 N. J. Eq. 209. Assuming Jenkinson v. N. Y. Finance Co. to have been correctly decided, the trust company is not favored by a special equity.

The fact that the board of education exacted from the trust company a consent or release to the payment to the contractor of installment payments under the contract did not effect a valuable consideration for its assignment. It may possibly have suffered harm in consequence, but such injury is not a valuable consideration relating to the execution of the assignment.

The balance of the fund after paying the receiver will be ordered paid to the Globe Indemnity Company.


Summaries of

Bd. of Educ. of City of Elizabeth in Union County v. Zink

COURT OF CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY
Jun 3, 1927
137 A. 713 (Ch. Div. 1927)
Case details for

Bd. of Educ. of City of Elizabeth in Union County v. Zink

Case Details

Full title:BOARD OF EDUCATION OF CITY OF ELIZABETH IN UNION COUNTY v. ZINK et al.

Court:COURT OF CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY

Date published: Jun 3, 1927

Citations

137 A. 713 (Ch. Div. 1927)