Church v. Swetland

233 F. 891, 147 C.C.A. 565, 1916 U.S. App. LEXIS 2524
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedApril 18, 1916
DocketNo. 110
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 233 F. 891 (Church v. Swetland) 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
Church v. Swetland, 233 F. 891, 147 C.C.A. 565, 1916 U.S. App. LEXIS 2524 (2d Cir. 1916).

Opinion

ROGERS, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts as above). The complaint in this case, the main averments of which have been summarized above, covers 34 printed pages. The facts are somewhat complicated, and the complaint is unusual, and, as it appears to us, somewhat extraordinary. The court is asked to fix and determine the rights of the complainant against any of the defendants and to determine the complainant’s interest in any of the property mentioned in the bill. The defendant Swetland is called upon to disclose in his answer what consideration was paid to Griswold, Dickinson and Ellis when the leases and buildings of the bankrupt were purchased from them subject to the mortgage of $200,000. He is also called upon to state in whose .name the title was taken and in whose name it now stands; and if the title stands in the ¿parné of the Swetland Operating Company, the complainant wishes to be informed what securities of that company were issued to defendant Swetland, and what securities of that company are now held by him. Swetland is also called upon to say who now holds the notes of the bankrupt, aggregating $150,000, given to him when he loaned $105,000 to the bankrupt. Complainant also wants Swetland to say who now holds the $150,000 of bonds of the bankrupt, which were procured from the complainant at the time Swetland made the loan to the bankrupt; and the court is also asked to issue an injunction to restrain Swetland from disposing of any of the bonds.

The court below dismissed the bill as against defendants Swetland, Bruckman, and Moore as members of the creditors’ and stockholders’ committee, as against Swetland individually, the Swetland Operating Company, and the Commercial Trust Company. As to those defendants it was dismissed on a memorandum opinion, stating that, if a cause of action is stated against any of them, it is one at law, and not in equity. The bill was allowed to stand as against defendant Ellis, as he had not moved to dismiss.

[896]*896[1] Where, in a bill for discovery and relief, the discovery sought is incident to the relief sought, a demurrer well taken to the relief is held to hold good as to the discovery also. In McClanahan v. Davis, 8 How. 170, 183, 12 L. Ed. 1033 (1850), Mr. Justice Nelson, speaking for the court, said:

“The complainant having, in our judgment, failed to set forth any foundation for relief, the right to the discovery, which is claimed as incidental, of course fails with it.”

[2] As the complainant asks for equitable relief, while not indicating tíre specific relief he thinks he is entitled to, and asks the court to determine and fix his rights as against the defendants in any of the property mentioned in his complaint, we have endeavored to find what justification hé has for coming into a court of equity at all as against the appellants. If he has a complete and adequate remedy at law as respects them, the action of the court below in dismissing the bill as to them must be affirmed.

'It appears that early in 1912 the bankrupt was financially embarrassed. The complainant and defendant Swetland were stockholders in it, and'the latter offered to loan it $105,473.68, provided the corporation would deliver to him its notes for $150,000, together with collateral security, consisting of $150,000 of its bonds secured by a mortgage upon its real estate. The loan was made on the terms above stated. The bonds given to Swetland as security, according to complainant’s averments, were bonds issued by the bankrupt, and which had been deposited with the Title Guarantee & Trust Company as collateral for the performance of a contract of purchase by which defendant Wyckoff was bound to complainant. The latter avers that he was induced by Swetland to allow Wyckoff to withdraw $150,000 of the bonds deposited as collateral with the Title Guarantee & Trust Company, and that complainant consented to the arrangement upon the assurance that the bankruptcy tvould be thereby prevented, and also upon an agreement that the bonds, belonged to complainant as collateral security subject to the right of Swetland to hold them also as collateral security. This did not, however, prevent the bankruptcy and the receiver was appointed shortly thereafter, on March 12, 1912. Then in April the protective committee of creditors and stockholders was formed, with Swetland and Bruckman as members of it.

The complainant became a party to the committee agreement, depositing thereunder his shares of stock, and signing the agreement as an unsecured creditor, and assigning to the committee his claim for $9,250. The committee agreement which the complainant signed stated that the purpose was to devise and carry into effect an equitable and fair plan of reorganization. The agreement contained a provision declaring that neither the committee nor any member thereof should be liable “for any mistake of law or fact, or for any act, default, or omission of any other member, * * * and the committee or any member thereof cannot be held personally liable in any case for any act or acts of any agent or employé, or for its own acts or acts of any of its members, except in case of willful negligence or malfeasance.” There are no allegations in the complaint which entitle the complain[897]*897ant to relief as against Swetland and Bruckman as members of the committee. The committee seem to have been made parties to the bill because Ellis is alleged to have undertaken to transfer to it the dividends on the $9,250 claim against the bankrupt belonging to the complainant in order to pay the expenses of the committee. But this surely constitutes no ground for equitable relief and is wholly insufficient to make the committee trustees of any dividends Ellis undertook to transfer.

As respects the $150,000 of bonds which complainant consented should be turned over to Swetland to secure the latter on his loan to. the bankrupt, the bill discloses no ground of equitable relief. The allegations of the complaint show that whatever interest Mr. Church originally had in the $150,000 of bonds was subject to the right of Mr. Swetland to hold them as collateral security for the note of the bankrupt. It does not appear that the note has ever been paid, and it is nowhere alleged that complainant’s consent to the transfer of these bonds to Swetland was due to any mistake made by him or to any fraud practiced upon him. We are at a loss, therefore, to see at this stage of the transaction that he is entitled to any equitable relief as against Swetland, who appears to be a bona fide holder of them for value.

The subsequent agreement which the complainant made with Ellis, by which complainant assigned to Ellis his interest and equity in $200,-000 of the bonds (which included the bonds held by Swetland as collateral and $50,000 additional hereinafter referred to), certainly could not in any way operate to deprive Swetland of his right to hold these bonds as collateral for the notes, which were still unpaid, as Swetland was not a party to any such contract subsequently made, and there are no allegations that complainant was induced by mistake or fraud to enter into that contract.

Then Ellis, having obtained from complainant absolute assignment of his interest in the bonds and having a right as owner to transfer the same, actually transferred them to Swetland for a valuable consideration.

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Related

Montgomery Light & Water Power Co. v. Charles
258 F. 723 (M.D. Alabama, 1919)
Church v. Swetland
243 F. 289 (Second Circuit, 1917)

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Bluebook (online)
233 F. 891, 147 C.C.A. 565, 1916 U.S. App. LEXIS 2524, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/church-v-swetland-ca2-1916.