Balfour v. Wheeler

15 F. 229, 1883 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedFebruary 19, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 15 F. 229 (Balfour v. Wheeler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Balfour v. Wheeler, 15 F. 229, 1883 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6 (S.D.N.Y. 1883).

Opinion

Brown, J.

This is an action in equity brought by the complainant, as assignee in bankruptcy of Lucius A. Benton, to set aside as fraudulent and void a sale under execution to the defendants of the ■ii stock of goods of the bankrupt at Cleveland, Ohio, on the twenty-fifth of June, 1878.

On July 19, 1878, a petition against Benton was filed in the district court of the United States for the northern district of Ohio, by certain of his creditors, in involuntary proceedings in bankruptcy upon which he was adjudicated a bankrupt on August 5th following. On September 18th the complainant was appointed assignee in bankruptcy, and an assignment duly executed to him of the bankrupt’s property. The defendants were engaged in business in the city of New York, under the firm name of Wheeler, Parsons & Hays.

For some years previous Benton had been engaged in the business of jeweler and silversmith at Cleveland, Ohio. On the twenty-fourth of January, 1877, not being able to meet his engagements,ra meeting of creditors was called in New York, at which an oral agreement was arrived at for an extension, and the 'payment in installments of 5 per cent, a month after July, 1877, provided 90 per cent, of the creditors agreed to it. The defendants at that time held a cognovit noie of the bankrupt for the sum of $7,231.58, which, under the laws of Ohio, authorized the defendants to enter up judgment against the bankrupt and issue execution thereon at any time without further notice.

A paper was drawn up embodying the agreement, which was after-wards left in charge of the defendants. They did not themselves sign it, but by their subsequent letters ratified it and agreed to its terms. In the list of debts presented at the meeting of creditors the defendants’ claim of $7,231.58 was mentioned, as well as a further indebtedness of about $500 for goods of the defendants sold by the bankrupt on commission account.

In the month of July following, Benton paid the first installment of 5 per cent, to various creditors, and the sum of $361.59 to the defendants, being 5 per cent, on their cognovit note. During all this period Benton was in active and frequent correspondence with the defendants, and from various letters passing between them it is evident that the defendants regarded him as insolvent, and unable to carry out even the lenient terms of the extension. On January 13, 1877, they say to him, “You are a fit subject of compromise,” and, in reply to his offers to do whatever they might desire, say: “We wrote Ingersoll [their attorney in Cleveland] to see you, and be [231]*231prepared, in case somebody got ugly, to protect us anyhow;” and in several 'subsequent letters Benton offered, in substance, to do for their security whatever they desired.

In the latter part of July, 1877, after the first installment of 5 per cent, had been paid, one of the defendants went to Cleveland, and, after an interview with Benton in which it was proposed that, if necessary in order to continue payment to the other creditors, the installments payable to the defendants might be omitted, obtained from him, on the first of August, 1877, a new cognovit note for the sum of $9,566.77, which embraced the amount due upon the former cognovit note, and about $1,800 in addition. This last cognovit note was not made known to any of the other creditors. The defendant continued to pay the other creditors in part, and for some months thereafter obtained goods from them on credit.

On June 7, 1878, judgment was entered upon the cognovit note, and execution to the sheriff issued upon the same dato, under which a levy was made upon Benton’s stock of goods. On June 11, 1878, Benton signed a written consent to a private sale of the goods on execution, under which an order therefor was entered in accordance with the law of Ohio, and a private sale thereunder -was made for the sum of $7,144.30, of all Benton’s stock of goods, to the defendants on the twenty-fifth of June, without advertisement or notice to the other creditors. The proceedings in bankruptcy having been commenced against Benton in July following, as above stated, the assignee, on the twenty-eighth of December, 1878, filed his bill of complaint in this suit against the defendants to have the sale declared fraudulent and void as against the complainant, and to procure an account and payment for the goods or their value from the defendants.

Upon the facts above stated, and the testimony, and numerous letters between the bankrupt and the defendants, which have been put in evidence, the following conclusions seem vto me to be unavoidable:

1. That Benton, at the time of the meeting of his creditors in January, 1877, and thenceforward until the adjudication in bankruptcy, was at all times insolvent, and was 'known to be so, to himself and to the defendants.

2. That when the cognovit note was given on August 1,1877, both Benton and the defendants knew that he was unable to fulfill the terms of the agreement for an extension, and that this cognovit note was given for the purpose of securing a preference to the defendants, and of enabling them at a moment’s notice, whenever trouble should [232]*232be threatened, to appropriate to themselves the whole stock of goods to the exclusion of other creditors.

3. That Benton and the defendants were previously in confidential communication, and continued so thereafter, acting in concert for the'preference of the defendants.

4. That the written consent given by Benton on the eleventh of June, 1878, to the private sale of his stock of goods under execution was given in pursuance of his previous promise to do whatever the defendants might desire for their security, and for the purpose of securing a private sale of the goods to the defendants for their benefit and preference, and to'enable him, as their agent, to continue in.possession of the goods until they should be sold, as was subsequently done.

5. That by means of the installments paid to the other creditors, and the cognovit being kept secret from-them, Benton obtained from other creditors a. false credit, upon which he obtained other goods ón credit, and that it was designed by the defendants and by Ingersoll, their attorney, to postpone action under the cognovit note until it was believed they might proceed thereon without danger from the bankrupt law. See particularly their letters of February 26, 1877, July 11, 1877, and January 14, 1878.

From these conclusions, as to the facts and the intentions of the parties, it seems to me that it is not to be doubted that the bankrupt in this case did, within the terms of section'5128, “with intent to give a preference to the defendants, procure or suffer his property to be seized on execution” in favor of the defendants, and that they “had reasonable cause to believe him insolvent,” and knew that the seizure was made in fraud of the bankrupt act. Little v. Alexander, 21 Wall. 500; Buchanan v. Smith, 16 Wall. 277; Wilson v. City Bank, 17 Wall. 473, 487.

The objection that the plaintiff, as representing only creditors at large, is not in a condition to maintain this action, has been repeatedly considered and overruled. Platt v. Matthews, 10 Fed. Rep. 280; Platt v. Mead, 9 Fed. Rep. 91, 96.

It is contended on the part of the defendants that the case does not come within section 5128 as amended, because the act of the bankrupt in executing the

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Bluebook (online)
15 F. 229, 1883 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/balfour-v-wheeler-nysd-1883.