John W. Greeson was duly appointed receiver of the Osceola Milling Company, a corpora*25tion, by the circuit court of St. Clair county. Afterward the assignee of the St. Clair County Bank obtained judgment for $358 against the milling company and assigned it to one Woolfolk. The receiver paid this judgment to Woolfolk without an order of court. Afterward the court allowed the receiver credit for such payment over the objection of other judgment creditors.
Receivers: pay«ient: Wg The judgment having been obtained after the receiver was appointed and not being for the enforcement of any prior lien, had no priority . .7 . . .. over other debts against the milling company. Attorney-General v. Ins. Co., 28 Hun. 360; Jackson v. Lahee, 114 Ill. 287. There being therefore no extraordinary circumstances, equitable or otherwise, for the payment of this judgment to the exclusion of, or in preference to other claims, its payment was unwarranted and the receiver should not have credit therefor.
"Teins^Troiec^ com-torder of It was a hazardous matter for' the receiver to make the payment without an order of the court. He is an officer of the court and has possession of the property received by him to be adminiby the court for the equal benefit of those entitled to the property or its proceeds. He is but the “arm of the court” and the property held by him is in custodia legis. Neither he nor the court can arbitrarily create a preference of creditors. The property must be administered according to the rights-of the parties under the law, the receivership being not inaptly termed an equitable assignment for the benefit of creditors. If the receiver had applied to the court for direction and had been ordered to pay the judgment to Woolfolk he would have been protected even though the order was erroneous. But when he paid without an order, he took upon himself the *26responsibility and unless the payment was right under the law, he will be responsible for a misapplication of funds.
As we gather the contention of the receiver, it is that th,e milling company was not hopelessly insolvent, that it was “a going concern” and that therefore Wool-folk could be made a preferred creditor. He cites us to the cases of Alberger v. Bank, 123 Mo. 313, and Slavens v. Drug Co., 128 Mo. 341, to show that a corporation, like an individual, may prefer creditors and that it may do so though in an embarrassed. and insolvent condition. Those cases do hold that a corporation in such condition can make a preference of creditors. But the law, as thus declared, is based on the assumption that the corporation is in possession of the property of the corporation. Certainly it ought not to be thought that the corporation could make such preference when its property and assets have been wrested from it and placed in custodia legis. In such case the jus disponendi is gone. The cases cited have no application here.
It appears that the receiver made a payment to two heirs of one James Clardy, deceased, of $270 and this was allowed him as a credit in his settlement. We have not been able to discover any authority for this allowance. It is sought to uphold it on the ground of an expenditure by the receiver in preserving 'the property in his hands. Whatever service these heirs may have performed was before the appointment of a receiver. Besides it appears that Clardy was one of the principal stockholders in the milling company and these heirs inherited the stock whatever it might amount to. It is certain that what they might have done before the receivership was merely an interest in their own inheritance. The record is not as clear as it should be, but *27a perusal of it as it is has failed to show any possible legal ground for this allowance.
The judgment will be reversed and cause remanded with directions to disallow the claims to the receiver.
All concur.