Court Opinion

ID: 7994990
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 01:35:45.758615+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:35:30.801123
License: Public Domain

Smith, C. J.,
delivered the opinion of the court.
The appellees. are the receivers of a defunct bank and their sureties, and this suit was brought against them by the appellant, a creditor of the bank, for an alleged loss sustained by it because of the mismanagement by the receivers of the bank’s funds.
According to the allegations of the bill, in 1912 the Union Bank & Trust Company, a banking corporation, was placed in the hands of the appellee receivers for the purpose of winding up its affairs and the distribution of its assets. The bank was a depository for Lauderdale county, the surety on its bond therefor being the appellant herein. When the bank was placed in the hands of the receivers the county had on deposit with it the sum of eighteen thousand three hundred thirty-two dollars and seventy-four cents, which the appellant paid the county in compliance with the obligation assumed by it as surety for the bank, and filed a claim therefor with the receivers. The appellant is also the assignee of another deposit of one hundred twenty-eight dollars and seventy-four cents for which it also filed a claim with the receivers. Dividends up to and including May 24, 1917, have been paid on the county deposit amounting to sixteen thousand five hundred twenty-seven dollars and seventy-nine ' cents, leaving a balance due theroon. ¡of one thousand eight hundred four dollars and ninety-eight cents, and on the other deposit to the amount of *35fifty-six dollars and sixty-nine cents, leaving a balance dne thereon of seventy-two dollars and four cents.
In April, 1913, the receivers were ordered by the court to sell the assets of the bank to the highest bidder therefor at not less than par, and to accept deposit in the Union Bank & Trust Company in payment therefor, and to notify each depositor of the terms and conditions of the sale at least five days, prior thereto. A part of the notes and bonds due the bank were not sold under this order, but were sold at private sale at par to depositors of the bank, who gave in payment therefor their checks on the defunct bank, thereby receiving payment in full of the money due them by the bank. The bill challenges the validity of these sales, and prays for a discovery and a decree against the receivers and their sureties for the amount due the appellant on the two deposits hereinbefore set forth. The bill does not allege any fraud on the part of the receivers but that their exchanges of notes and bonds due the bank with certain of its depositors for the amounts due them on their deposits resulted in those creditors obtaining an unlawful preference over the other creditors of the bank. In November, 1920, the court ordered the receivers to file their final account on or before January 15, 1921, which time had expired when this suit was brought without the account being1 filed. •
It appears from the answers to the bill that the sales to or exchanges with the depositors of the notes and bonds ■of the bank were made by the receivers in good faith pursuant to orders by the court so to do.
The case was tried on an agreed statement of facts, the substance of which is as follows: There is a balance due the appellant on its two deposits of one thousand five hundred nine dollars and sixty-six cents. The assets of the bank that came into the hands of the receivers amounted to five hundred nine thousand ninety-one dollars and thirty-six cents, and they have paid to the depositors four hundred seventy-one thousand, one hundred sixteen dollars and five cents, leaving a balance due *36them of fifteen thousand one hundred five dollars and eighty-five cents for the payment of which there are no funds in the hands of the receivers. The exchange of bonds and notes of the' bank with the depositors was made pursuant to orders made by the court, but without notice to the other creditors. After this suit was brought, but without notice to the creditors of the bank, the receivers ’ final account was filed and approved.
The hill was dismissed.
All questions of procedure that have been or could be herein raised will be pretermitted, an,d the cause decided on its merits.
As we understand the appellant’s complaint, it is that the orders ofi which the sale or exchange of bonds and notes of the bank were made afford the appellees no protection, because (1) they were made without notice to the other depositors; (2.) the court was without power to authorize a private sale or exchange of the assets of the bank; and (3) the depositors with whom the exchange was made received thereby a preference oirnr the other depositors.
Section 628, Code of 1906 (section 388, Hfemingway’s Code), provides that:
“Receivers shall be subject to the orders, instructions, and decrees of the court, and of the chancellor in vacation,” etc.
And the rule is that a receiver is not subject to any personal liability for the disbursement of funds in his. hands under an order made by the court within its jurisdiction although the order is erroneous and may be reversed on appeal. 23 R. C. L. 79; 34 Cyc. 250 and 294; 23 A. & E. Enc. L. (2 Ed.), 1127; Ann. Cas. 1913D, 1117.
“A receiver obeying the orders of the court is not a guarantor of the correctness of the court’s rulings. Furthermore, when a receiver has paid out money or the fund in his hands in good faith and in obedience to the orders of the court appointing him, he cannot be compelled to make restitution, and he is not personally re*37sponsible. If the court has jurisdiction of the parties and the subject-matter, yet commits a legal error in the disppsition of the fund, the receiver because he is obliged to obey such an incorrect order is protected. The mere reversing of an order because it is erroneous does not make the receiver who has acted pursuant to it a wrongdoer, even though the effect of the reversal is to require the person who has received the benefit, of it to make restitution, if the court sees fit to require him to do so. If, on the other hand, the court appointing the receiver has not jurisdiction of the parties or has not jurisdiction over the subject-matter, an order made on the receiver may be without warrant or authority of law, and the receiver when obeying such order may be liable.” 1 Clark on Receivers, section 782, p. 839.
The court in which an estate is being administered by means of a receiver has, of course, jurisdiction of the property therein involved, and throug’h their representative the administrator, of the creditors of the estate, and., in the absence of a statute otherwise pioviding, may without notice to the creditors order the administrator to sell the property in his hands at either private or public sale. We have no statute regulating specifically sales by receivers, but being made under the orders of a chancery court they are governed by the statutes regulating sales on the orders of such courts, Howard v. Jayne, 124 Miss. 65, 86 So. 752. The only statute governing the sales of personal property under the orders of such courts that has come under our observation is section 651, Code of 1906 (section 413, Hemingway’s Code), which provides that:
“All property may be sold on such terms and at such time and place as the court may direct.”
This statute does not require notice to creditors, and it is unnecessary for us to determine whether it requires sales to be made at public auction for the reason that that question is one of method and not of jurisdiction.
*38It may be and probably is true that, when these orders complained of were made, both the receivers and the court were of the opinion that the receivers would be able to pay the creditors in full; but this opinion, being merely a mistaken one, and not the result of any fraud charged or proved, on the part of the receivers, cannot, under' the rule hereinbefore referred to, render them liable therefor.

Affirmed.