Bliss v. Hornthal

33 A.D. 225, 53 N.Y.S. 493
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 33 A.D. 225 (Bliss v. Hornthal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bliss v. Hornthal, 33 A.D. 225, 53 N.Y.S. 493 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

McLaughlin, J. :

These actions were brought to compel the restitution by the defendant Hornthal of certain moneys received by him from the firm of Weiss Bros., composed of the defendants Albert and Robert Weiss, and from the defendant Lewy, as trustee, for the benefit of certain preferred creditors of said firm. The plaintiffs in each action recovered judgment, from which the defendants Hornthal and Lewy have appealed. The legal principles applicable to and controlling upon us in disposing of the questions presented were settled and declared by the Court of Appeals in Baily v. Hornthal (154 N. Y. 648), unless the facts established upon the trial of these actions are different than those established upon the trial of that action.

Hpon the trial it was made to appear, and the trial court found as a fact, that in April, 1886, the defendants Albert Weiss, Robert Weiss and the defendant Hornthal'formed, under the firm name of Weiss Bros., pursuant to the statute of the State of Texas, a limited copartnership, in which Hornthal was the special and the other two the general partners; that the capital contributed by Hornthal was $50,000; that the limited copartnership was renewed and continued from time to time until April 30, 1891, when it was succeeded by the general copartnership of Weiss Bros., composed of Albert and Robert Weiss 'alone. The general copartnership took all of the assets of the limited copartnership, and continued the business theretofore carried on by it without interruption or apparent change of any kind until November 5, 1891. On the 23d of May,-1891, the general copartnership paid to Hornthal $25,000, a portion of the capital contributed by him to the limited copartnership, On the 5th of November, 1891, being unable to pay its obligations, the general copartnership failed, its failure being first made known by the execution of a deed of trust delivered on that day to the defendant Lewy, as- trustee, for the benefit of certain creditors, whose claims aggre[227]*227gated upwards of $225,000. In this deed of trust the defendant Hornthal was preferred for the balance of'the capital contributed by him to the limited copartnership, together with interest thereon from the date of his withdrawal, amounting at that date to $26,433.34. It was also made to appear, and the trial court found, that at and prior to the time Hornthal withdrew'from said firm the limited copartnérship was insolvent, and that the capital contributed by the defendant Hornthal had been wholly exhausted, and that the general copartnership of Weiss Bros., on the 30th day of April, 1891, and at all times thereafter, including the partners Albert and Robert Weiss, were insolvent and unable to pay their debts in full. It was also made to appear that at the time the firm made the trust deed, in November, 1891, it was indebted in something over $700,000, of which over $300,000 was unsecured, and that the only assets which the firm had to meet such unsecured claims were cash and accounts, then estimated to be worth less than $175,000; that the debts of the firm then apparently exceeded the assets by $150,000, and subsequent events demonstrated that they actually exceeded them by over $200,000.

The first two actions were brought in aid of judgments recovered by the plaintiffs, and the other one in aid of an attachment. A portion of the indebtedness was contracted before the expiration of the limited copartnérship, and a portion of it thereafter. As to the former, the theory of the plaintiffs is that, as creditors of the limited copartnership, they were entitled to payment before any of the special capital of Hornthal could be withdrawn; and, as to the latter, that the special copartnership being insolvent at the time of its dissolution, the new firm had no right to apply any of its assets, whether derived from the special copartnership or otherwise, to the reimbursement of Horntlial’s special capital, because he then had no enforcible claim for that capital, or any part of it. Upon examination of the record in the Baily case, it will be found that the rights of the plaintiffs to maintain these actions upon the theories referred to was there iiot only settled and determined, but that the facts there established were substantially the same as the facts established upon the trial of these cases. Upon the trial of these actions further evidence was given, tending to show the actual insolvency of the special copartnership at the time Hornthal withdrew. The books of [228]*228account of the firms were not offered in evidence upon the trial in the Badly case, but were upon the trial of' these cases, and from the books of account and other evidence taken in connection therewith, the conclusion is irresistible that the special copartnership of .Weiss Bros., on the 30th of- April, 1891, was insolvent and could not pay its debts in full. It is undoubtedly true that there is no legal presumption that the firm was insolvent in April because its successor failed in November, but, as the Court of Appeals said in the Badly case, “ The difference between the assets and liabilities at the latter date was so overwhelmingly large as .to require explanation.” This the defendants did not give. The general copartnership, as we- have seen, succeeded the special copartnership on the 30th . of April, 1891, and six months later failed with liabilities at least $200,000 in excess of its assets, and no evidence was offered whatever showing or tending to.show that this large excess of liabilities accrued intermediate the termination of the special copartnership and the failure of the general one. The existence of liabilities to this extent in excess of assets, without explanation, taken in connection with the books of account, amply sustains the finding made by the trial court that the firm was insolvent on the 30th of April, .1891; that the new firm continued to be insolvent from that time until its failure in November, and that Albert and Robert W eiss were also insolvent. It is true an ¡attempt was. made on the part of the defendants to show that at the time Hornthal withdrew there were • apparently other assets consisting of the good will of the business, etc., Which should be considered. This is undoubtedly true, but the evidence thus offered did not destroy or overcome the force of the evidence offered on the part of the plaintiffs, showing insolvency. Prospective or estimated values of property are not a genuine test of solvency of the owner. One is insolvent whenever he does not have property the actual value of which is sufficient to pay his debts in full.

In the Badly case the court held-that the payment by the trustee to Hornthal was not justified inasmuch as the amount paid belonged to creditors, and that decision, in so far as it relates to that portion of the relief demanded here, is conclusive. The questión of Hornthal’s liability to restore the $25,000 paid to him in May, 1891, was not definitely determined in the Baily case inasniuch. as that ques-" [229]*229tion was not then before it. It is, however, squarely presented here, and we are of the opinion that that payment was in fraud of the rights of these plaintiffs, in so far as they were creditors of the spiecial copartnership) upon contracts for goods ordered by that firm, or contracts made by such firm during the existence of the limited copartnership, although the contracts were not completed or the goods actually delivered until after the special copartnership ceased to exist. At the time of the dissolution of the special copartnership, the executory contracts then existing formed a liability of that concern.

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Bluebook (online)
33 A.D. 225, 53 N.Y.S. 493, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bliss-v-hornthal-nyappdiv-1898.