Fechheimer v. Sloman

33 F. 787, 2 L.R.A. 153, 1888 U.S. App. LEXIS 2181
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedJanuary 31, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 33 F. 787 (Fechheimer v. Sloman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fechheimer v. Sloman, 33 F. 787, 2 L.R.A. 153, 1888 U.S. App. LEXIS 2181 (uscirct 1888).

Opinion

Brewer, J.

The controversy in this case is between the secured and the unsecured creditors of Morris H. Sloman, a merchant doing business in the city of Omaha, under the firm name of Sloman Bros. While there are several pleadings by different parties there is but the one controversy, in which the secured creditors may be known as the complainants, and the unsecured as the defendants. The debtor disputes none of the claims, so that, as against him, all are to be treated as just debts. The trouble arises by reason of these facts: On the twenty-ninth of May, 1886, Herman Fechheimer, a creditor living in Detroit, came to Omaha and demanded security. The debtor consented to give a chattel mortgage, but at the same time insisted on giving like security to other holders of what he considered confidential debts. Thereupon mortgages to each of said creditors were executed. Immediately thereafter, and on the same day, Fechheimer filed his bill to foreclose his chattel mortgage, and obtained the appointment of a receiver. The other secured creditors filed their cross-hill, and thereafter three unsecured creditors, having obtained judgment, filed their cross-hill in behalf of themselves and all other unsecured creditors. The entire stock was sold by the receiver, and the money is now in the registry oi this court, which fund is the object of pursuit by the various creditors. Now, going hack to the history of Morris Sloman’s affairs, we find that prior to January, 1886, he was in partnership with his brother Samuel Sloman carrying on business under the same firm name; that of Sloman Bros. They had two houses; one in Omaha, and one in Chicago. Eugene Sloman, a younger brother, wras in charge of the Chicago house, having an interest in the profits of the concern. On that day Morris Sloman bought out his brother Samuel A. Sloman. The latter was financially responsible; the condition of the former will appear [788]*788more fully as we proceed. The consideration of the purchase by Morris Sloman was a house and lot, some Wyoming Meat Company stock, $5,000 in money, which was obtained by discounting a note at the bank, and a note for $4,700. Notice of the dissolution was published in the “Watchman,” a paper of little circulation in the city of Omaha, and a copy of this notice was sent to Eugene in Chicago, with instructions do have it published in a daily paper of the least circulation. In the latter part of January, Morris Sloman made a statement of his financial condition to one of the mercantile agencies in Omaha, which statement is as follows:

Merchandise on hand, ' - 41,768 24
Wool on hand in Chicago, 62,000 00
Hides on hand in Chicago, 8,500 00
Accounts, 12,214 59 •
Bills lleceivable, - 421 75
Making the total assets, - $124,904 58
Liabilities to the Hirst National Bank of Chicago, secured by warehouse receipts on wool, - - - - $ 48,560 00
Owe Hirst National Bank of Chicago on notes, 5,800 00
Owe Morris H. Sloman on personal acct., - 1,555 00
Owe Eastern accounts, - 440 11
Owe the Commercial National Bank of Omaha, 3,000 00
Owe Samuel A. Sloman, - 20,000 00
Making the total liabilities, $ 79,355 11

On the seventeenth of March he made a second statement to the same agency, which is as follows:

Merchandise on hand in Omaha, - - - - $ 41,000 00
Hides in Chicago, , - - - - 9,000 00
Book Accounts, ------- 12,000 00
Bills, -......... 421 75
Making the total assets, - $ 62,421 75
We owe nothing for merchandise, but the Chicago National Bank, - - - $ 4,300 00
Owe the Commercial National Bank of Omaha, 10,000 00
Total liabilities, - - - - - - $ 14,300 00
Leaving net worth, -._--$ 48,121 75

The principal change, as will be noticed, is in the wool on hand in Chicago, and the indebtedness to the Chicago bank, he representing at the time that such indebtedness had been discharged by the sale of wool. About this time he attempted to organize a corporation in Chicago, to be known as the “Chicago Hide & Wool Company,” through which, evidently, it -was intended that the business in Chicago should be done, but for some reason, not fully and satisfactorily disclosed, this project, after having been initiated, was abandoned. On the thirtieth of .March a call report wras issued by the Chicago agency, criticising the financial condition of the house, and on April 9th and 12th other call reports [789]*789were issued by the Omaha agency, and the rating of the houses was then withdrawn in that agency. From some part in the latter part of March, until the closing up on May 29th, Sloman Bros, were ordering and receiving largo quantities of goods. In thus purchasing, the firm dealt not with a few, hut with many houses, sending out orders for moderately sized hills, apparently in every direction, so that when the collapse came tho unsecured creditors numbered something oyer a hundred, none of them having very large bills, and yet, in the aggregate, amounting in the neighborhood of $50,000. The secured indebtedness aggregated about the same amount, so that the indebtedness at the time of the failure was fully $100,000, while tho stock on hand inventoried only $58,-000, and, in fact, on sale realized much loss. In other words, on the seventeenth of March, Morris Blonian appears to have been worth $48,--000, while on tho twenty-ninth of May ho was at least $50,000 behind hand. Practically, in about two months and a half, a hundred thousand dollars lias disappeared. Of course, this indicates either extreme carelessness, great losses, or fraudulent concealment. No satisfactory explanation is tendered: but, on the contrary, Morris Blonian refused to be sworn as a witness until compelled by an order of this court, claiming that his witness fees had boon demanded and not paid, and after having been sworn, and while being examined was an unwilling witness, and frequently declined to answer questions put by counsel. The books of the Omaha house wore offered in evidence, and several hundred pages of testimony were taken in respect to the facts disclosed by those books. This branch of the testimony has been to me very embarrassing, and one of the matters which has caused the delay in tho preparation of this opinion. 1 take it that it is impossible for one not himself an experienced book-keeper to appreciate, fully the import of this testimony. Whether it disclosed merely unskillful book-keeping, or wrong-doing on the part of Morris Sloman, whether the hooks of the Chicago house, if produced, would have made clear the uncertain entries in the books of the Omaha house or not, are questions which, if this testimony were considered by itself alone, 1 am frank to say I do not know how I should solve it. Taken in the case they strengthened the conviction that there was something wrong in the financial transactions of Morris Sloman, and if the case turned simply on the controversy between the creditors and him, I should have little hesitation as to the conclusion to ho reached.

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Bluebook (online)
33 F. 787, 2 L.R.A. 153, 1888 U.S. App. LEXIS 2181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fechheimer-v-sloman-uscirct-1888.