B. J. Van Ingen & Co., Inc. v. David J. Connolly B. J. Van Ingen & Co., Inc. v. David J. Connolly Mildred E. Gale and Howard Conover, Executors of the Estate of Charles Street Mills, Deceased, and Harry B. Williams, on Behalf of Themselves and in a Representative Capacity on Behalf of All Other Former Holders Similarly Situated of the Stock of Tacony-Palmyra Bridge Company, a New Jersey Corporation (Petitioners for Intervention)

225 F.2d 740
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedSeptember 15, 1955
Docket11462
StatusPublished

This text of 225 F.2d 740 (B. J. Van Ingen & Co., Inc. v. David J. Connolly B. J. Van Ingen & Co., Inc. v. David J. Connolly Mildred E. Gale and Howard Conover, Executors of the Estate of Charles Street Mills, Deceased, and Harry B. Williams, on Behalf of Themselves and in a Representative Capacity on Behalf of All Other Former Holders Similarly Situated of the Stock of Tacony-Palmyra Bridge Company, a New Jersey Corporation (Petitioners for Intervention)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
B. J. Van Ingen & Co., Inc. v. David J. Connolly B. J. Van Ingen & Co., Inc. v. David J. Connolly Mildred E. Gale and Howard Conover, Executors of the Estate of Charles Street Mills, Deceased, and Harry B. Williams, on Behalf of Themselves and in a Representative Capacity on Behalf of All Other Former Holders Similarly Situated of the Stock of Tacony-Palmyra Bridge Company, a New Jersey Corporation (Petitioners for Intervention), 225 F.2d 740 (3d Cir. 1955).

Opinion

225 F.2d 740

B. J. VAN INGEN & CO., Inc., Appellant,
v.
David J. CONNOLLY et al.
B. J. VAN INGEN & CO., Inc.
v.
David J. CONNOLLY et al.
Mildred E. Gale and Howard Conover, Executors of the Estate of Charles Street Mills, Deceased, and Harry B. Williams, on Behalf of Themselves and in a Representative Capacity on Behalf of All Other Former Holders Similarly Situated of the Stock of Tacony-Palmyra Bridge Company, a New Jersey Corporation (Petitioners for Intervention), Appellants.

No. 11456.

No. 11462.

United States Court of Appeals Third Circuit.

Argued March 8, 1955.

Decided August 5, 1955.

Rehearing Denied No. 11456 September 15, 1955.

Donald B. Kipp, Newark, N. J. (Pitney, Hardin & Ward, Robert P. Hazlehurst, Jr., Newark, N. J., Frederic W. Girdner and James M. FitzSimons, of the New York Bar, New York City, on the brief), for B. J. Van Ingen & Co., Inc.

Peter H. Kaminer, New York City (Winthrop, Stimson, Putnam & Roberts, New York City, Carpenter, Gilmour & Dwyer, Thomas L. Morrissey, Jersey City, N. J., on the brief), for respondents Blair, Rollins & Co., Inc., Estabrook & Co., Equitable Securities Corp., Harris, Hall & Co., Inc., Lyons & Shafto, Inc., John Nuveen & Co., R. W. Pressprich & Co., Tripp & Co., Inc., and R. D. White & Co.

Walter D. Van Riper, Newark, N. J. (Van Riper & Belmont, Charles E. Villanueva, Newark, N. J., on the brief), for defendants-appellees, David J. Connolly and William H. Wells, as Receivers.

Robert L. Hood, Newark, N. J., for Burlington County Bridge Commission.

Leon H. Kline, Philadelphia, Pa. (David Berger, Morton P. Rome, Philadelphia, Pa., Arthur W. Lewis, Camden, N. J., on the brief), for Mildred E. Gale and others.

Before McLAUGHLIN, KALODNER and HASTIE, Circuit Judges.

HASTIE, Circuit Judge.

These appeals question the dismissal of an action of interpleader instituted under Section 1335 of Title 28 of the United States Code by B. J. Van Ingen & Co., Inc., hereinafter designated as Van Ingen or appellant, to obtain in the District Court for the District of New Jersey an adjudication determining the lawful disposition of a balance of $1,170,319.80 held by Van Ingen in an account to the credit of the firm of Ketcham and Nongard and admittedly owed to someone. The defendants include David Connolly and William Wells, receivers appointed by the Superior Court of New Jersey to collect a judgment entered in the case of Driscoll v. Burlington-Bristol Bridge Co., 1950, 10 N.J.Super. 545, 77 A.2d 255, modified on appeal, 1952, 8 N.J. 433, 86 A.2d 201. On the day before this interpleader suit was filed, the New Jersey Superior Court had ordered Van Ingen to pay the fund in question to these receivers.

On motion of the receivers, the District Court dismissed the present complaint as lacking in equity, meaning, as we understand the matter, that on the undisputed facts compliance with the New Jersey court's order is not likely to subject Van Ingen to such hardship or hazard as should induce a federal court to relieve this party to state litigation of its normal duty to obey the orders of the state court. On this appeal we consider whether the District Court's conclusion constituted a permissible exercise of judgment in an equitable cause.

In comprehensive view this interpleader is an attempt to obtain in a federal forum a separate adjudication of a controversy which has arisen in the attempted enforcement of a decree of a state court designed to undo an elaborate scheme of illegal profit-making at public expense. The New Jersey suit was instituted by the Governor on behalf of the people of that State to invalidate transactions whereby a public agency, the Burlington County Bridge Commission, purchased certain toll bridges at an excessive price pursuant to a scheme conceived and engineered by a group of adventurers to obtain an unjustified profit of some three million dollars at the ultimate expense of the traveling and toll-paying public. The New Jersey court found that an involved series of financial transactions did yield such an improper profit. It also found that Tuthill Ketcham, Richard Nongard and Rowland Murray, who are partners and the sole members of the brokerage and trading firm of Ketcham and Nongard, were members of the wrongdoing group. In addition, the partnership was found to have participated actively in the illegal transactions. The decree, as modified pursuant to the mandate of the Supreme Court of New Jersey on appeal, obligated the wrongdoing individuals to pay $3,050,347 to the Burlington County Bridge Commission. Certain wrongdoers, among them Tuthill Ketcham and Richard Nongard, were made liable for the entire sum. The third partner, Rowland Murray, was made liable for $76,258.68.

The receivers were charged with collecting this judgment. In due course they asked the Superior Court, which had retained jurisdiction over the matter, for an order requiring Van Ingen to pay them the money which is now in litigation. The matter came on for hearing with Van Ingen, Ketcham and Nongard, and each of the judgment debtors participating after due notice. It was admitted that in the course of the doing and undoing of the financial aspects of the bridge scheme, Van Ingen, as the manager of a bond account in which Ketcham and Nongard and certain of the judgment debtors were interested, found itself on liquidation of that account in possession of a balance of $1,170,319.80 standing to the credit of Ketcham and Nongard. Moreover, affidavits presented to the New Jersey court and later submitted without contradiction to the District Court in support of the motion to dismiss this interpleader, aver that more than $1,300,000 of the illegal gain realized by various participants in the wrongdoing scheme against whom the New Jersey judgment ran, was reflected and represented by the balance payable by Van Ingen to Ketcham and Nongard.

On the basis of this showing, the New Jersey court entered its order which reads in part as follows:

"And it appearing that B. J. Van Ingen & Co., Inc., now has in its custody and control the sum of One Million, one hundred seventy thousand, three hundred, nineteen dollars and eighty cents ($1,170,319.80), and that all or some of the judgment debtors claim that said sum is due and owing to them;

* * * * * *

"And it further appearing that both the said B. J. Van Ingen & Co., Inc., and all of the judgment debtors who claim said above-mentioned sum have heretofore participated as Defendants in the proceedings in the above-entitled action which culminated in the entry of a Final judgment on March 14, 1952;

"It Is, Therefore, on this 30th day of June, 1954, Ordered that said B. J. Ingen & Co., Inc., transfer and pay over to David J. Connolly and William H.

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133 F. Supp. 753 (D. New Jersey, 1955)
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Metropolitan Life Ins. v. Mason
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225 F.2d 740, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/b-j-van-ingen-co-inc-v-david-j-connolly-b-j-van-ingen-co-ca3-1955.