Bielaski v. National City Bank of New York

58 F.2d 657, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1205
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJanuary 25, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 58 F.2d 657 (Bielaski v. National City Bank of New York) 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
Bielaski v. National City Bank of New York, 58 F.2d 657, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1205 (S.D.N.Y. 1932).

Opinion

PATTERSON, District Judge.

This is a suit by the trustees in bankruptcy of Benedict Metal Works, Inc., a New York corporation, to recover a payment received by the defendant from the bankrupt. The plaintiffs say that the payment was a preference under section 15 of the New York Stock Corporation Law (Consol. Laws, e. 59). The action is brought as one at law, and a jury was waived by stipulation in open court.

The ease is the result or one of the results of a series of forgeries by John J. Sparler. Sparler was the vie'e president and treasurer of the Benedict Metal Works and was in complete control of its business. Late in February, 1928, he asked the bank to allow the company a line of credit for $100,-000. One of his representations was that the company then had lines of credit with only two other banks, the Bronx Borough Bank and the Com Exchange Bank, each of them being, for $100,000. The bank agreed to extend the desired credit against the company’s notes to be indorsed by Sparler or to be secured by accounts receivable. -Between March 1st and March 14th it made loans against three ninety day notes of the company indorsed by Sparler, each for $25,000. The proceeds were deposited & the company’s account with the bank which was opened at the same time.

Trouble began almost immediately. Word came to the bank on March 15th that the company owed $50,000 to a bank in Mt. Vernon. One of the officers forthwith taxed Sparler with misrepresenting the situation and demanded collateral security. Accordingly, a day or two later he brought the bank six notes, each for $10,000, purporting to bear the signature of G-. A. Ball as maker. These notes were spurious. Ball happened to be acquainted with an officer of the bank and was known to, be a man of wealth. On being shown the notes he stated that the signatures were not his. Two officers of the bank got in touch with Sparler the same day, March 22d, informed him that Ball had repudiated the collateral notes, and demanded immediate repayment of the loans made to the company. Sparler protested that the Ball notes had come to him in a legitimate transaction, but acquiesced in the demand for prompt liquidation. He forthwith gave the bank a eheek for the entire balance of the Benedict account, $25,456.50, which was the remnant of the $75,000 loaned by the bank and placed in the account, and he promised that the balance of the loans would be paid without delay.

Two days later, March 24th, Sparler went to the bank with a cashier’s eheek of the Bronx Borough Bank for $49,000', payable to himself. The bank took pains to find out by telephone that the cheek was genuine. Sparler, having indorsed the eheek individually and also in the name of the company, gave it to the officer in charge of the matter, receiving in exchange the six Ball notes. While the officer was attending to having the three Benedict notes stamped as paid, Sparler proceeded to burn the Ball notes on the spot and then hurried out. Barring a small payment by the bank to the company, representing the unearned discount on the notes, this was the entire transaction. The proof shows that the $49,000 cashier’s check which Sparler turned over to the defendant had been purchased by giving to the Bronx Borough Bank a check on the company’s account for $19,000 and a cashier’s cheek of the Mt. Vernon Trust Com *659 pany for $30,000. The latter check had been purchased by Sparler out of his own funds.

For some time prior to this transaction the company had been in poor condition. Due to false bookkeeping and to widespread forgeries committed by Sparler, however, it kept up appearances and was able to obtain financial accommodation. Its affairs were to some extent intertwined with those of Sparler, the resources of one being used in times of stress to bolster up the other. Sparler had formerly been a man of means, but he had taken on a real estate venture that proved to be ruinous and led him into desperate and criminal measures in an effort to save himself. The proof shows that as early as June, 1927, Sparler was informed, by his secretary that the company’s liabilities exceeded the assets. He met this situation by ordering the inventory to be written up at twice its actual value. These tactics of inflating the inventory were repeated in June, 1928. The forgery system was that notes or acceptances of fictitious customers would be forged and then either given to banks as collateral for Benedict notes, as was done with the defendant, or else discounted directly with banks. This had been going on for some time prior to March, 1928. Sparler would pay off the obligations before maturity, raising the money by working the scheme on some other bank, and would thus get back the forged paper and avoid detection. The first trouble he seems to have had was with the Ball notes given to the defendant. At the time of this transaction, the Benedict Company had assets of about $425,000 and liabilities of about $517,000, showing a deficit of $92,000. The current assets were about $117,000," whereas all of the liabilities, $517,-000, were current. Fictitious paper discounted with banks accounted for $193,000 of the liabilities.

Sparler’s resourcefulness, however, kept the company in business for five months more. Shortly after the transaction with the defendant, other banks came down upon the company and demanded immediate settlements. Sparler mustered from his own resources and' those of his wife over $200,000, and he raised an additional $200,000 by placing a mortgage on the property of another corporation in which he was interested. With the funds so raised the banks were paid off, the immediate pressure relieved, and the difficulty tided over. Later on an effort was made to increase the capital stock and get in new money, but nothing seems to have come of this. During this time, from March to August, the company continued its manufacturing business, though operations went on at a loss. It paid off many of its ordinary trade obligations as they matured, and it kept up its advertising. In August creditors began to investigate, and a petition in bankruptcy was filed on August 24, 1928.

The trustees have no rights against the bank under the Bankruptcy Act, since the alleged preference occurred more than four months prior to bankruptcy. They base their suit upon section 15 of the New York Stock Corporation Law (Consol. Laws, e. 59). At the time of this transaction, the portion of that statute relevant to the case read as follows : “No conveyance, assignment or transfer of any property of any such corporation by it or by any officer, director or stockholder thereof, nor any payment made, judgment suffered, lien created or security given by it or by any officer, director or stockholder when the corporation is insolvent or its insolvency is imminent, with the intent of giving a preference to any particular creditor over other creditors of the corporation, shall be valid, except that laborers’ wages for services shall be preferred claims and be entitled to payment before any other creditors out of the corporation assets in excess of valid prior liens or incumbrances.”

The section was amended in 1929 so as to protect creditors without notice or reasonable cause to believe that the transfer would result in a preference. Laws of 1929, e. 653. It is agreed that this amendment has no bearing on the rights of the parties arising from a transaction that occurred before the amendment became effective (Matters v.

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Bluebook (online)
58 F.2d 657, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bielaski-v-national-city-bank-of-new-york-nysd-1932.