Gallagher v. Hannigan

5 F.2d 171, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 2623
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedMay 8, 1925
Docket1761, 1762
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 5 F.2d 171 (Gallagher v. Hannigan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gallagher v. Hannigan, 5 F.2d 171, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 2623 (1st Cir. 1925).

Opinions

JOHNSON, Circuit Judge.

These cases are appeals from a final decree of the District Court of the United States for the District of Massachusetts. The same questions are involved in both and they have been argued together. In each a bill in equity was filed by John E. Hannigan, as trustee in bankruptcy of the Old Colony Foreign Exchange Company, adjudged a bankrupt as an unincorporated company October 11, 1920, upon an involuntary petition filed August 16, 1920, in which he seeks to recover from the defendants money paid to them by the bankrupt, alleged to have been fraudulent transfers.

Raymond M. Meyers, Charles M. Bright-well, and Gunner R. A. Lindblad executed a written instrument on July 8, 1920, which provided in very broad terms for the carrying on of different lines of business, including the purchase of foreign merchandise and foreign exchange under the name of the Old Colony Foreign Exchange Company and that the title to all the property which it acquired should be in them as trustees or their successors.

The said Meyers, Brightwell, and Lind-blad were named therein as trustees, and it was declared that the association contemplated a capital stock of $1,000,000, represented by 10,000 units of the par value of $100 each; that annual and special meetings of the unit "holders were to be held; that the trustees’ sole duty and power should be to hold the title to the property of the association or trust; that a board of directors should be elected who should have and exercise exclusive management and control of the business of the association; that there should be no personal liability on the part of the trastees or on the part of the board of directors or on the part of the holders of the certificates and units in said trust; and that the property of the trust alone should be held liable for obligations' incurred by the board of directors or trustees.

This instrument was filed under the provisions of the General Laws of Massachusetts, chap. 182, § 2, in the office of the Commissioner of Corporations. No business of the kind described in it was ever done and no certificates for the ownership of any units in the property of the association were ever issued to any parties except to the three trustees. No directors were ever elected and no record of trustee meetings or any other meetings was ever.kept.

[173]*173The association opened an office at 89 State street, Boston, Mass., and began to issue notes signed by the Old Colony Foreign Exchange Company, by R. M. Meyers, manager, in which it promised to pay to parties who might intrust their money to it the principal, with 50 per cent, interest, in 90 days. A little later it issued what was termed a “debenture,” which promised the same return to the holders and concluded with this statement:

“The trustees, under a declaration of trust filed in the office of the Commissioner of Corporations of Massachusetts, herein designated as the Old Colony Foreign Exchange Company, as such trustees and not individually, have caused this debenture to be signed in their behalf by their treasurer and secretary.
“Old Colony Foreign Exchange Company,
• “C. M. Brightwell, Treasurer.
“R. M. Meyers, Secretary.”

The issue of notes began July 28, 1920, and of debentures August 1, 1920, and was continued until August 13, 1920, when the business of the Old Colony Foreign Exchange Company was stopped by the commonwealth of Massachusetts.

It took in from the issue of notes and debentures $383,70450, from about 1,400 persons. An audit of its affairs disclosed that no investment was ever made by it and no purchases, outside of office furniture; that it had done no business except to borrow money upon its notes and debentures; that notes to the amount of $84,602.50 had been redeemed ; that it had paid in the way of commissions to agents $39,095.45, $5,655.75 to two other parties, and certain amounts to the attorneys who are named as defendants; that from all the records which could be found, the balance on hand should have been $223,-119.36, but that the sum of $164,559.98 was all that could be found, leaving a balance of $58,559.38 unaccounted for.

On August 12, 1920, investors, apparently alarmed by the disclosures in the daily papers in regard to the fraudulent practices of Charles Ponzi, which appear to have been similar if not substantially the same as those of the Old Colony Foreign Exchange Company, started a run on the latter, which was continued until about 2 o’clock in the afternoon of the next day, when Charles M. Brightwell and Raymond M. Meyers were arrested on warrants issued by the municipal court of the city of Boston. Lindblad was then out of the country.

The sum of $10,000 was paid to defendants Dennison and Gallagher as a retainer; $5,000 on the morning of August 13, 1920, and $5,000 about noon of that day. The District Court has found that these payments were made by Meyers from the money obtained by the Old Colony Foreign Exchange Company by the issue of notes and so-called debentures; that Mclsaac was retained as general counsel about August 2, 1920, and the sum of $4,500, from the same source, was paid to him; that defendant Wy-man received the sum of $2,500 for past legal services; and that this payment to him constituted an illegal preference under the Bankruptcy Act.

The defendants filed a motion to dismiss, which was denied by Judge Morris in a careful and elaborate statement, expressing views with most of which we find ourselves in accord.

The case was later tried upon its merits before Judge Lowell, who adopted Judge Morris’ views as to jurisdiction and on the main questions involved and then, on all the evidence, found as above noted.

The ease comes here on 75 assignments of error, some of which relate to the denial of the motion to dismiss because of lack of jurisdiction, and the remainder to the findings of Judge Lowell upon the merits and his refusal to give certain rulings and make certain findings which were requested. In support of the motion to dismiss, it was urged that the complaint was defective upon its face, because it did not allege that the bankrupt, the Old Colony Foreign Exchange Company, had made the payments which, it is alleged, were fraudulent; that as these Were plenary actions, the trustee could not maintain them in a federal court without the consent of the defendants, given in accordance with section 23b of the Bankruptcy Act (Comp. St. § 9607).

It is true that the complaint must contain an allegation of a substantial case within the jurisdiction of the Bankruptcy Act. See Flanders v. Coleman, 250 U. S. 223, at page 227, 39 S. Ct. 472, 473 (63 L. Ed. 948), where the court said, speaking of the •allegations of a bill:

“If there be enough of substance in them to require the court to hear and determine the cause, then jurisdiction should have been entertained.”

The bill of complaint, after alleging the faets hereinbefore stated, alleges that while the run upon the Old Colony Foreign Exchange Company was going on, Bright-well and Meyers paid to the defendants, Dennison and Gallagher, “the sum of $5,-000 from the money aforesaid of the Old Colony Foreign Exchange Company, and [174]

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Gallagher v. Hannigan
5 F.2d 171 (First Circuit, 1925)

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Bluebook (online)
5 F.2d 171, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 2623, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gallagher-v-hannigan-ca1-1925.