Brictson Mfg. Co. v. Munger
Decision Date | 13 June 1927 |
Docket Number | No. 318.,318. |
Citation | 20 F.2d 793 |
Parties | BRICTSON MFG. CO. v. MUNGER, District Judge, et al. |
Court | U.S. Court of Appeals — Eighth Circuit |
M. E. Culhane, of Minneapolis, Minn., and Frank L. Weaver and Wiliam M. Giller, both of Omaha, Neb., for petitioner.
Before STONE and VAN VALKENBURGH, Circuit Judges, and POLLOCK, District Judge.
This is an application by the Brictson Manufacturing Company for leave to file a petition for a writ of mandamus and to have issued thereon a show cause order against Hon. T. C. Munger, United States District Judge for the District of Nebraska.
The matters involved here occurred in the receivership proceedings of the Brictson Manufacturing Company. Other phases of that litigation appear in this court in Brictson Manufacturing Co. v. Close et al., 280 F. 297, Brictson Manufacturing Co. v. Woodrough, Judge, 284 F. 484, Brictson Manufacturing Co. v. Woodrough, Judge, 289 F. 1020, and Culhane v. Anderson, 17 F.(2d) 559, where the course of that litigation may be traced. Here it is necessary to state only such phases thereof as are pertinent to this application. The Close opinion determined that a receiver for the Brictson Manufacturing Company had been wrongfully appointed and that the receiver should "be required to return all property in his hands to those from whom he received it, that he be thereupon discharged, and that the bill be dismissed at complainants' costs" (page 301). Had such directions of this court been carried out, much, if not all of the subsequent complications and harassments might have been avoided. But they were not. Two results of such failure were the second and third appeals (mandamus against Judge Woodrough, 284 F. 484, and 289 F. 1020). Subsequent to the above proceedings, Judge Woodrough was disqualified and the further proceedings were before Judge Munger.
In 1921 and in 1924, lands of the company (then in possession of the receiver) were sold for state taxes and a tax deed issued in May, 1926. The holder of the tax deed executed a quitclaim deed to Mark J. Rosso who made repairs and improvements on the property. The company filed a petition to have these deeds declared void. Trustees (appointed under a state statute of Nebraska regulating disposition of the property of certain corporations), who claimed the right to possession and administration of the company's property within Nebraska, took similar action. Judge Munger heard these matters.
Judge Munger had hearings, also, on (1) an application of O. A. Brictson (filed October 9, 1925) to have the receiver turn over the property; (2) an application of the company for an order on the state Attorney General and the above trustees to show cause why the property should not be turned over to it; (3) reports of the receiver and the objections thereto of the company.
Upon the above matters, Judge Munger entered a decree on November 3, 1926, and a supplemental decree on November 27, 1926. January 31, 1927, the company appealed from the above decrees. A statement of the evidence therein has been approved and the appeals are pending in this court. March 21, 1927, Judge Munger extended the time for filing transcript in this court to May 30, 1927.
The petition for the writ, covered by this application, sets forth that the company and Brictson have been so impoverished by the taking and holding of the company's property in the receivership proceedings and by other attendant litigation that they have no funds with which to prosecute these appeals further.
The petition is based on the theory that the above decrees of Judge Munger are in violation of the mandates of this court sent down on the prior proceedings in this court. The basis of jurisdiction in this court to entertain the mandamus is stated to be to protect the orders and mandates of this court. The reason for exercising such extraordinary jurisdiction is stated to be as follows:
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