Property under jurisdiction of court.

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In all assignments for the benefit of creditors made in this state, the district court in and for the county in which such deed of assignment is recorded as now provided by law has full power and complete jurisdiction over all the property, real, personal, and mixed, conveyed by such assignment from the date of the making of the same. The court may make any order in reference to any part or all of the property embraced in the estate and the disposition thereof by the assignee which to the court seems just and equitable, and all such orders shall be legal and binding upon the assignor, the assignee, and creditors of the estate whether or not any notice is given of the application therefor or the order so made; except that the court may in its discretion require notice of such an application so made to be given in reference to any matter that may come before it for hearing, and in such case it shall direct, by an order, the form and manner of giving such notice so required by it.

Source: L. 1897: p. 111, § 1. R.S. 08: § 226. C.L. § 6293. CSA: C. 12, § 53. CRS 53: § 11-1-54. C.R.S. 1963: § 11-1-54. L. 64: p. 207, § 10.


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