Case v. Terrell
by Samuel Freeman Miller
Syllabus
719208Case v. Terrell — SyllabusSamuel Freeman Miller
Court Documents

United States Supreme Court

78 U.S. 199

Case  v.  Terrell

APPEAL from the Circuit Court for the District of Louisiana.

Terrell and others, creditors of the First National Bank of New Orleans, which had failed and been put into liquidation, brought this bill in chancery in the court below against one Case, who on the failure of the bank had been appointed receiver of it, Hurlburd, Comptroller of the Currency of the United States, and one May and Beauregard, citizens of Louisiana.

The prayer for relief was that a certain admitted debt due to the United States from the bank be ascertained; that they (the United States) be charged with certain sums, and required to account for them, and that a writ of injunction issue restraining the comptroller from making a dividend of the funds of the bank until this account be adjusted.

Case and Hurlburd, the receiver and comptroller as aforesaid, appeared and answered; the answer of the latter being put in for him by the district attorney, and neither signed by Hurlburd nor sworn to by him. In it,

'He submits, on behalf of the United States, to the decision of the court the claims of the United States to priority of payment over the allowed claims of the creditors of said bank that are not disputed.'

The final decree, besides making a general order on the comptroller to distribute the funds of the bank in his hands ratably among its creditors as the law directs, decreed against the United States in favor of the creditors of the bank for the sum of $206,039.91, and that no claim of the United States shall have any priority in the distribution of the funds of the bank except as to the bonds pledged to secure its circulation.

From this decree, Case, the receiver, and Hurlburd, the comptroller, appealed.

Mr. B. H. Bristow, Solicitor-General, and Mr. C. H. Hill, Assistant Attorney-General, for Hurlburd, Comptroller; Mr. Case, propri a persona, by brief.

Messrs J. A. Campbell and H. B. Kelly, contra.

Mr. Justice MILLER delivered the opinion of the court.

Notes edit

This work is in the public domain in the United States because it is a work of the United States federal government (see 17 U.S.C. 105).

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