First National Bank v. Level Club, Inc.

241 A.D. 433, 272 N.Y.S. 273, 1934 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8272
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJune 8, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 241 A.D. 433 (First National Bank v. Level Club, Inc.) 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
First National Bank v. Level Club, Inc., 241 A.D. 433, 272 N.Y.S. 273, 1934 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8272 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

Martin, J.

The Level Club, Inc., one of the defendants herein, a non-profit association, organized under the Membership Corporations Law, has been sued by the plaintiffs in equity, to rescind the sale of certain collateral serial six per cent coupon notes. The [435]*435individual defendants, its officers and directors at the time of the transaction here under consideration, have also been sued for damages for fraud and deceit.

The court dismissed the complaint at the close of the plaintiffs’ case as to all the defendants, except the Level Club, Inc., and against the club at the end of the entire case after proof had been adduced by it.

In the year 1928 the Level Club, Inc., issued a series of notes aggregating the sum of $750,000, secured by a second mortgage upon its club house located on West Seventy-third street, near Broadway, borough of Manhattan, and by an assignment of existing subscriptions of members to debenture bonds as well as subscriptions to be thereafter received. The issue of notes was sold outright by the Level Club, Inc., to Sawyer Bros., Inc., at eighty-eight per cent of their face value, under a written contract of sale dated January 31, 1928.. Sawyer Bros., Inc., sold one-half of the notes to Cullen & Drew on March 14, 1928. Both of these firms were investment brokers and the respective allotments of notes thus purchased by them were resold for their own account and profit to individuals and institutions, either for investment purposes or for future resale. Many of the notes were taken for investment by State and national banks. A large proportion of the entire issue (less approximately $100,000, par value, of the notes which were redeemed) found their way into the hands of the plaintiffs in this action. The defendant Level Club, Inc., failed and the first mortgage on the premises was foreclosed. The club has been adjudged bankrupt and is wholly unable to meet its notes.

It was established upon the trial that the written agreement of sale of the notes required the Level Club, Inc., to furnish Sawyer Bros., Inc., “ with all such information, and in such manner as it [Sawyer Bros., Inc.] shall reasonably require for the purpose of publishing in any prospectus to be issued by it in order to promote the sale of the said notes.”

Sawyer Bros., Inc., caused their attorney to prepare a letter setting forth the nature and purpose of the issue, a description of the club and of the properties pledged and assigned as security for the notes. This letter was sent on February 23, 1928, by said attorney to Alexander Rosenbaum, chairman of the Level Club’s legal committee, with the request that it be signed by the president of the club. Rosenbaum transmitted it to one Albert R. Sasserath, the secretary, who in turn forwarded it to the president for signature, Sasserath having first examined the statements therein and checked them with the corporate records kept under his supervision. In addition to this check-up, it appears that Sawyer Bros., Inc., or [436]*436their representatives examined the club’s books and records prior to their preparation of the letter and were familiar with the facts stated therein.

The letter was received by the president who telephoned the secretary, who in answer to the president’s direct inquiry informed the latter that the facts had been examined by him and checked with the club’s records, and the statements therein had been found to' be correct. The president thereupon signed the letter and returned it to the secretary who either directly or through Rosenbaum transmitted it to the attorney for Sawyer Bros., Inc. This letter was incorporated in a prospectus prepared by Sawyer Bros., Inc., and circulated by them and by Cullen & Drew among their customers, some of whom, after reading it, purchased the notes in suit. The material parts of the letter are as follows:

“ Referring to the $750,000 Collateral Serial Six Percent (6%) Coupon Notes of Level Club, Inc., which you have agreed to purchase, I take pleasure in giving you the following information:

“ Club

“ * * * Membership in the Club is limited to members of the Masonic Fraternity. From the original membership of twenty-two, the Club has grown to a present membership of over four thousand. The present membership limit is five thousand, including both resident and non-resident members. Included among the members are Grand Lodge Officers and Past Grand Masters of the Grand Lodge of the Free and Accepted Masons in both the City and State of New York, as well as other States, and also prominent statesmen, jurists, business men and leaders in every walk of life. * * *

“ Operation and Earnings

a * * * The annual dues are Sixty Dollars for resident members and Twenty-five Dollars for non-resident members. * * * At the time that the Club property was appraised by Joseph P. Day, Inc., they estimated that its annual income from dues, initiation fees and other Club activities * * * would amount to $789,684, and that its annual expenses for all purposes, but exclusive of interest on these Collateral Serial Six Percent (6%) Coupon Notes, would amount to $423,500, leaving a balance of $366,184 available for the requirements of the sinking fund under the first mortgage of the Club and for the service of this issue, * * *. The first mortgage aforesaid requires the payment by the Club as a sinking fund of $53,550 per year until April 1st, 1931, and $76,500 for the succeeding year, at the end of which period all of these Collateral Serial Six Percent (6%) Coupon [437]*437Notes will have been paid. Thus there is a balance of $312,634 available during the first three years of the life of this issue of notes for its service, equal to nearly seven times the maximum interest requirement.

Security

“ * * * The notes will be secured by

“ First. The assignment to, and deposit with, American Exchange Irving Trust Company of New York City, as Trustee under a Deed of Trust, of all undelivered debenture bonds of the Club, amounting to approximately $800,000, and all unpaid subscription agreements for such bonds now in the hands of the Club and those to be hereafter received. Each member of the Club is now obligated to purchase at least one $500 debenture bond, for which he may pay either in cash in full or in installments. Out of the total authorized issue of $2,000,000 of such debenture bonds, approximately $1,600,000 have been subscribed for and either fully or partly paid for. All these subscription agreements on the part of the members of the Club are, in the opinion of counsel, assignable and transferable and may be sued upon. Payments on these subscription agreements are being regularly made in an amount in excess of the amount needed to pay the interest on this entire issue of $750,000 Collateral Serial Six Percent (6%) Coupon Notes and to retire $100,000 face value every six months. All moneys payable by the members of the Club upon such subscription agreements will be payable to the Trustee and all moneys received by the Club from the sale of such debenture.bonds and upon any such subscription agreements will be paid over to the Trustee, and all such moneys received from both such sources will be exclusively devoted by the Trustee to the payment of the principal and interest of this issue of Collateral Serial Six Percent (6%) Coupon Notes.

Second.

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Bluebook (online)
241 A.D. 433, 272 N.Y.S. 273, 1934 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-v-level-club-inc-nyappdiv-1934.