Brislin v. Killanna Holding Corp.

85 F.2d 667, 1936 U.S. App. LEXIS 4219
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedAugust 10, 1936
DocketNo. 378
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 85 F.2d 667 (Brislin v. Killanna Holding Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brislin v. Killanna Holding Corp., 85 F.2d 667, 1936 U.S. App. LEXIS 4219 (2d Cir. 1936).

Opinion

SWAN, Circuit Judge.

Upon an involuntary petition filed January 7, 1932, Killanna Realty & Construction Company, Inc., was adjudicated bankrupt. Cornelius A. Brislin yas appointed its trustee in bankruptcy and thereafter filed a bill in equity to reach certain property which the bankrupt had transferred [669]*669in November, 1931. The property m question consisted o£ two apartment houses on Ilayes avenue and a junior participating interest in a second mortgage covering other premises. The transactions under attack must be set forth in some detail.

Thomas F. Guidera was the president and sole stockholder of the bankrupt. Early in November, 1931, he caused to be organized Killanna Holding Corporation and caused the bankrupt to convey to it, in exchange for all its capital stock, the Hayes avenue apartments, and the above-mentioned mortgage participation. The stock of the holding corporation was then transferred to Morris E. Ginsberg pursuant to a tripartite agreement, dated November 14, 1931, between the bankrupt, Ginsberg, and Guidera. In form the transaction was a sale of the stock to Ginsberg for an expressed consideration of $58,000, of which $34,900 was to be paid in cash, and $23,100 by procuring the satisfaction of two debts owed by the bankrupt, $14,500 being owed to D. Ginsberg & Sons, Inc., and $8,600 to J. Klein Iron Works, Inc. On November 16th the debts were released and Ginsberg paid the bankrupt $34,900. By the tripartite agreement the bankrupt was given a six months’ option effective after two years to repurchase the stock for $70,000. This sum was arrived at by adding to the purchase price of $58,000 interest thereon at 6 per cent, per annum for 2½ years, plus $3,300 as a profit for Ginsberg’s investment. The agreement also gave Ginsberg the privilege of borrowing money from the holding corporation repayable if the option to repurchase should be exercised, and provided that Guidera should be employed by the holding corporation to manage the Hayes avenue apartments on a commission of one per cent, of the rents collected.

The complainant’s theory of the transaction was that the respondents had conspired to put beyond reach of the bankrupt’s creditors property of value far greater than the consideration paid by Ginsberg, and he sought to set it aside as a transfer in fraud of creditors, or as a voidable preference in so far as the two creditors of the bankrupt were benefited. The District Judge after hearing testimony found that there was no fraud involved, and that the transaction was intended by the parties as a mortgage to secure the $34,900 advanced rather than as a sale of the stock. The court directed that the pleadings be amended to conform to the proof, and entered an interlocutory decree to the effect that the stock and property of the holding corporation were assets of the bankrupt estate subject to a lien in favor of Ginsberg which was to be foreclosed if not paid on or before July 17, 1934; and Harry M. Lewis was appointed “sole agent” to take possession of the property in the meantime. Ginsberg was directed to account for sums received from the holding corporation during his control of it. No finding was made as to the value of the property transferred by the bankrupt, nor as to the latter’s insolvency at the date of such transfers. As a result of Ginsberg’s accounting, he was surcharged $7,026.18 and interest, and this was ordered deducted from the sum secured by his lien.

On June 27, 1934, the complainant, on the ground of newly discovered evidence, applied for a rehearing on the issue of fraud and conspiracy. A reference was ordered to a special master to take testimony and report his opinion whether the interlocutory decree should be vacated as to the lien awarded Ginsberg on the ground that the evidence in the case and the newly discovered evidence prove that the challenged transfers were made in fraud of creditors. In the meantime foreclosure of the lien was stayed. An enormous mass of testimony and exhibits was introduced before the master. In general, it was directed to proving that Ginsberg had not put up any money of his own but had financed the $34,900 on the credit of the holding corporation and paid the bank loan with its money. The master, however, believed the explanations of the respondents and in a report of 100 printed pages analyzed the evidence and found that fraud had not been proved. His report was approved, and on June 11, 1935, a final decree was entered. It decreed that Ginsberg has a valid lien on the stock and assets of the holding corporation in the sum of $27, 873.82 with interest thereon from Novem ber 14, 1931, at 6 per cent, per annum until paid, and it directed that the lien be foreclosed by public sale. Both the complainant and the respondents (other than Guidera) have appealed.

The complainant’s appeal raises almost exclusively questions of fact as to which he asks this court to make findings directly contrary to those made by the master and District Judge. It is perfectly obvious that we cannot do this. The issues turn on conflicting testimony where credibility must be the determining factor. Under [670]*670such circumstances it is axiomatic that an appellate court will not reverse the findings of judge or master who heard and saw the witnesses unless the error is clear beyond dispute. It is urged that the respondent’s witnesses were contradicted by documentary proof, but the documents relied on were subject to explanation and the explanations offered were believed by the master. For example, the temporary loan, which Ginsberg made from the Ginsberg corporation on November 16th, was refinanced by discounting at the bank on December 1st, a note made by the holding corporation and indorsed by Ginsberg, the Ginsberg corporation, and Klein. On the face of the paper the maker was the primary obligor, but it was proved conclusively by the bank officials, unless their testimony be thrown out as perjury (which the master eipressly refused to do), that the loan was made to Ginsberg on the credit of himself and the Ginsberg corporation. The record is inordinately long— more than 3,300 printed pages — and it would serve no useful purpose to take up each item of the evidence which the complainant says points to a conspiracy to defraud creditors. It will suffice to say that we are satisfied that the court below correctly decided that fraud was not proved,

The contention that the transaction was a voidable preference must also fail, for there was no adequate proof that the bankrupt was insolvent on November 16, 1931. It was then the owner of some 21 properties. No attempt was made by the complainant to show the value thereof. The fact that they were subject to mortgages, upon some of which foreclosure had been started, and that the bankrupt had no liquid assets falls far short of proof of insolvency.

When Guidera first approached the Ginsbergs with a view to raising money, he proposed a loan secured by a second mortgage on the Hayes avenue apartments, When this was rejected, he devised the plan set out in the tripartite agreement of November 14th. Because of the option to repurchase reserved thereby and the testimony that a loan- was really intended, the District Judge held that the transaction should be recognized as a mortgage and that Ginsberg should have a lien upon the capital stock and assets of the holding corporation for the amount of his cash advanee. Compare Lowenstein v. Reikes, 60 F.(2d) 933, 935 (C.C.A.2).

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Bluebook (online)
85 F.2d 667, 1936 U.S. App. LEXIS 4219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brislin-v-killanna-holding-corp-ca2-1936.