Adams v. Clark

146 N.E. 642, 239 N.Y. 403, 1925 N.Y. LEXIS 980
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 27, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by77 cases

This text of 146 N.E. 642 (Adams v. Clark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. Clark, 146 N.E. 642, 239 N.Y. 403, 1925 N.Y. LEXIS 980 (N.Y. 1925).

Opinion

Pound, J.

The action is based on a conspiracy to defraud. Plaintiff’s testator, Mrs. Page (formerly Wegman), was the owner of a majority of the stock of the Wegman Piano Company, herein mentioned, which was a once prosperous concern in the city of Auburn, but was at the time of the transaction, although claiming to be solvent, in need of ready money and available working capital. The alleged purpose of the conspiracy .was to destroy the value of her stock. The alleged plan of the conspiracy was that the Cayuga County National Bank should squeeze the piano company by discontinuing financial accommodations; that defendant Knapp should falsely and fraudulently represent that he would furnish necessary, money to carry on the business if the company were reorganized; that defendant Clark should falsely and fraudulently represent to Mrs. Page that reorganization through the- formality of friendly bankruptcy proceedings was the only proper method and that in order to make the proceeding possible it was necessary that a resolution of the board of directors be passed reciting that the corporation was unable toy meet its immediate obligations, this admission being an act of bankruptcy although not an admission of insolvency *407 (Matter of Russell Wheel & Foundry Co., 222 Fed. Rep. 569.)

It is alleged that Mrs. Page, believing and relying on the representations, consented to the adoption of the resolution, although it was against the interests of the corporation and her own interests, and that thereupon the corporation was put into bankruptcy, its assets dissipated and the value of plaintiff's stock destroyed; that defendants had no intention of furnishing the necessary funds to carry on the business, and did not furnish such funds; that their purpose was to obtain control of the corporation.

Of the original defendants, William R. Payne, who was vice-president of the bank, and a partner of Clark, and the defendant bank were eliminated from the conspiracy on the trial, leaving Paul R. Clark and Alice Swaby Knapp, executrix of James M. Knapp, deceased, against whom plaintiff has obtained judgment. Knapp, it is said, was the pretendedly friendly capitalist who was to furnish the money and Clark was acting as the attorney for the Wegman Piano Company on the recommendation of the bank officials, but, it is charged, in bad faith and to bring about its destruction.

The case was tried on the theory that if Clark and Knapp made specific false affirmations to Mrs. Page of the arrangement under which the reorganization of the company was to occur, knowing that it was not so to occur, and damages resulted, the representations were actionable. (Ritzwoller v. Lurie, 225 N. Y. 464.) We may assume for the purpose of this appeal that the evidence was sufficient to go to the jury to the effect that the Wegman Piano Company was solvent, that the act of bankruptcy was obtained by the joint fraud of appellants and that Mrs. Page was damaged thereby. If by reason of such fraud Mrs. Wegman's stock became valueless, she suffered an injury for which the tort feasors were hable to her personally. (General Rubber Co. v. Benedict, 215 N. Y. 18.) Mrs. Page alleges that the value of her *408 stock was .$700,000, and that the same was rendered valueless by the fraud of defendants; the verdict of the jury was for $25,000.

It is contended by appellants that the bankruptcy proceedings were res adjudicata on the question of solvency (Gratiot Co. St. Bk. v. Johnson, 249 U. S. 246), or at least competent as bearing on the questions at issue. The learned trial justice held in effect that the regularity of the bankruptcy proceedings was not on trial; that their regularity might be assumed; that the question was merely whether the bankruptcy proceedings were initiated in fraud; that while there was no attack on the regularity of the proceedings themselves, they were not res adjudicata on the question of the solvency of the company because that question was not litigated. He, therefore, excluded as irrelevant the schedules, reports and other proceedings in bankruptcy which established for the purposes of the administration of the estate in bankruptcy that the company was insolvent and that its assets were insufficient to pay creditors more than ten cents on the dollar. He properly drew a distinction on the question of value between a live, going concern and the same concern in bankruptcy; but he further held that the adjudication in bankruptcy merely established the status of the corporation as a bankrupt and gave the court jurisdiction to administer the estate as that of a bankrupt. The fraud, he held, was in the obtaining of Mrs. Page’s consent to an act of bankruptcy; the fruit of the fraud was the bankruptcy, and defendants could not take advantage of their own fraud. The non-existence of insolvency would have been no defense to the bankruptcy proceedings which were based on an act of bankruptcy merely. (West Co. v. Lee, 174 U. S. 590.) The principal question of law to be considered is whether it was error to exclude the evidence offered to show the condition of the bankrupt estate. Undoubtedly the theory of the learned trial justice was correct that the fraud, if established, set in *409 motion a train of disaster and that defendants cannot negative the fraud by proving the disaster. But the solution of the problem of the admissibility of evidence depends upon the circumstances of the rejected proof in relation to the whole case.

On the undisputed evidence it appears that the piano company, while claiming to have assets largely in excess of its liabilities, was far from prosperous; that it was troubled in obtaining extensions of credit; that it needed and was seeking a large amount of new capital.. Although the complaint alleges that the conspiracy had for its object the acquisition of the business of the Wegman Company by defendants, it does not appear that this purpose was accomplished or sought. Knapp was appointed first receiver and then trustee of the property of the bankrupt company. As such he received his fees. Clark was employed as attorney and also received fees, but the alleged purpose of the conspiracy did not otherwise fructify. It was a closely disputed question of fact whether the company was in a position to meet its outstanding obligations when the act of bankruptcy was committed, or indeed, whether it was solvent at the time. It might be inferred that unless it could get new capital or make new loans to take up old ones, the company could not long continue to meet its outstanding obligations when they became due, or remain in business or keep out of bankruptcy.

We thus come down to the substantial questions (a) did Clark and Knapp falsely and fraudulently say that the bankruptcy would be a mere formality to go through with in order to effectuate a reorganization; (b) did Knapp, acting with Clark, falsely and fraudulently say that, if the corporation was put through bankruptcy, he would furnish the necessary funds to rehabilitate it. Was there a false representation as to an existing fact, i. e.,

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Bluebook (online)
146 N.E. 642, 239 N.Y. 403, 1925 N.Y. LEXIS 980, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-clark-ny-1925.