Dressel v. North State Lumber Co.

119 F. 531, 1902 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 282
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. North Carolina
DecidedDecember 13, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 119 F. 531 (Dressel v. North State Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dressel v. North State Lumber Co., 119 F. 531, 1902 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 282 (E.D.N.C. 1902).

Opinion

PURNELL, District Judge.

After the former decision in this cause, March Ii, 1901 (107 Fed. 255), other creditors joined in the petition, and without objection the North State Lumber Company was on August 20, 1902, adjudged a bankrupt, and the cause referred. Under the original order (see above citation) made in the cause the petitioners took depositions in support of their claims, which depositions seem to be full. After the adjudication the parties were before the referee, and the case is now before this court on the report or what purports to be the report of the referee. This report is defective in many particulars, especially in that the referee does not state his findings of fact and conclusions of law, but certifies the depositions, book of proceedings, and papers filed, in which the questions raised on the hearing appear when pointed out. Possibly the cause should have been re-referred for a proper report, but on account of official engagements the record was not examined until counsel had argued the case. It appears from the argument, and what can be gleaned from the record, that two claims are contested: .First, the claim of I. N. E. Allen & Co., amounting to $7,630.60, divided up by assignment as follows: Edw. A. Pierce, $284.76, Fred. H. Dressel, $367.10, Eugene F. Perry, $5,999-55, and I. N. E. Allen & Co. $999.42; second, the [532]*532claim of the First National Bank of Durham for $2,485.92. The objections to the first claim, as divided up, was sustained, and the claim disallowed. The second claim was allowed by the referee.

The claims of I. N. E. Allen & Co. and their assignees, as set out above were objected to on the ground that neither were creditors of the North State Lumber Company, but, on the contrary, the said I. N. E. Allen & Co. was indebted to the bankrupt, and a suit involving the settlement of this contention is now pending in the courts of New York. Taking all the testimony and documentary evidence, it appears the dealings between the bankrupt and I. N. E. Allen & Co. were without financial basis, and what is known in commercial circles as “kiting.”' To go into the mystic details of these dealings has made a voluminous record, from which it is exceedingly difficult to eliminate facts. The claims classified above all depend upon the dealings between the bankrupt and I. N. E. Allen & Co., who did business at 31 Nassau street, New York, as wholesale dealers in lumber. I. N. E. Allen, who resided in New York, was an officer of the bankrupt corporation at Durham, N. C. E. A. Pierce frequently signed the checks and drafts of I. N. E. Allen & Co. From a careful examination of a complicated record and account, it appears and is found as a fact that I. N. E. Allen & Co. were financiering a bankrupt corporation, and adopted a system by which the corporation did not get ahead of them, and at the time of the filing of the petition and at the time of the assignment of the claims above, instead of being indebted to I. N. E. Allen & Co., the said I. N. E. Allen & Co. were indebted to the North State Lumber Company. Therefore the decision of the referee disallowing these claims is affirmed.

The exception to the ruling of the referee refusing to allow these claimants further time to take depositions in New York is overruled. As before said, the depositions seem to be full. Ample time was allowed for the taking thereof,—six or eight months,—and it was understood by the parties from the initiatory steps in this cause that their claims were contested. Many exceptions in the record it is unnecessary to notice in detail. They are what are termed “broadside” exceptions. Exceptions must be specific. This is too well settled in the United States courts to require the citation of authority. For the purpose of appeal, if parties are so advised, these exceptions are overruled.

The claim of the First National Bank was originally $10,496.42, including two accepted drafts, which appear to have been assigned to Wilson R. Hunter for $4,010.50 and Sydney C. Chambers for $4,000; total $8,010.50. These drafts were stricken from the claim by order of the referee, to which ruling the bank excepted. This ruling of the referee is affirmed. The objections to the proceedings before the referee for not granting time, etc., were matters of discretion with the referee, and, it not appearing it worked an injustice to even parties making such objection, but the facts were fully disclosed, such objections are without force.

The bank, after deducting claims which it had assigned, was permitted to prove a claim for $2,485.92, which is made up as follows: A draft for $185.35, drawn by A. G. Fleming on the North State Lumber [533]*533Company Sept. 25, 1900, at three months, duly accepted and paid t>y the bank; an acceptance of the North State Lumber Company indorsed by A. G. Fleming, at three months, for $612.10; acceptance of North State Lumber Company indorsed by A. Max, ninety days, for $396.06; a note for $1,250, drawn by I. N. E. Allen & Co., indorsed by the North State Lumber Company, and discounted by the First National Bank; an overdraft of the North State Lumber Company for $42.40, maturing December 1, 1900. The claim of the First National Bank was objected to by Frederick H. Dressel, I. N. E-Allen, and others, which objections were answered by the assertion these parties were not creditors of the bankrupt. This the referee found to be true, and the court affirms such findings. Not being creditors, their claim not allowed, they had no interest in the bankrupt estate or interest in the funds thereof; hence no right to be heard. It is not for parties not interested to interject objections in bankruptcy proceedings. They might be heard by permission of the court, under the equity rules, upon it appearing they had a bona fide interest in the fund; but they had no such interest.

The bankrupt corporation, in the assignment complained of as an act of bankruptcy, acknowledged itself indebted to the bank in a much larger sum than that now allowed, which indebtedness has been materially reduced by the withdrawal of notes which seem to have been assigned before the petition was filed. The objections were based on the allegation the bank had received a preference by payments on a claim of said bank against I. N. E. Allen & Co. and H. L. Garwood, upon which claim the bank had entered suit, and $800 was paid to the attorney for the bank within four months of the filing of the petition in bankruptcy by one of the defendants. This $800 was paid by check to J. S. Manning, Esq., attorney, not by the bankrupt, not out of the assets of the bankrupt estate, but upon a separate and distinct commercial paper. The acceptor on commercial paper is the principal debtor, the presumption being he owes the drawer of the draft, and one who discounts such paper may elect to sue such acceptor as principal, or the drawer of the draft as surety. But the payment was not by the bankrupt, and in no way reduced the assets of the bankrupt estate. It in no way worked an inequitable distribution of the bankrupt’s assets, and could in no way be a preference. The money was paid by Gar-wood, not out of the bankrupt estate. H. L. Garwood signed a note at three months, payable to I. N. E. Allen & Co., for $803.51, August 22, 1900. This note was discounted by the First National Bank, and the amount placed to the credit of the North State Lumber Company. Why, does not appear. The name of the lumber company does not appear in or on the note. Suit was entered on this note, and the $803.17 was paid to J. S. Manning, attorney for the bank.

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Bluebook (online)
119 F. 531, 1902 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dressel-v-north-state-lumber-co-nced-1902.