Graham v. Peale, Peacock & Kerr of New York

173 F. 9, 97 C.C.A. 311, 1909 U.S. App. LEXIS 5052
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedOctober 5, 1909
DocketNo. 804
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 173 F. 9 (Graham v. Peale, Peacock & Kerr of New York) 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
Graham v. Peale, Peacock & Kerr of New York, 173 F. 9, 97 C.C.A. 311, 1909 U.S. App. LEXIS 5052 (1st Cir. 1909).

Opinions

PUTNAM, Circuit Judge.

This was a suit at common law for an alleged deceit, in which the plaintiff in the Circuit Court recovered a verdict for $20,005.81, with interest, being substantially the entire amount of its debt as hereinafter described. Thereupon the defendant in that court sued out this writ of error. It will be convenient to describe the parties in this opinion as arranged in the Circuit Court. Many questions were discussed before us which it is not necessary for us' to consider; because, unless an entirely different case is hereafter made in the Circuit Court than what appears on this record, the point on which we let our decision turn will dispose of the litigation. In order to properly settle this point we must take the case as told by the plaintiff, which is as follows:

The Thomas & Pike Company (hereinafter called the “Coal Company”) was a corporation selling coal at retail in Boston. It had a capital stock of $100,000, and did a business of about 80,000 tons a year. Its treasurer and manager was Herbert W. Pike, who had been in the business, either as treasurer of the corporation or as partner in the firm which preceded it, for many years. The secretary of the corporation was Fred L. Childs, who came into the business about 1900. Before that time he had for many years been discount clerk at the International Trust Company, of which the defendant was the president, and his relations with the defendant were very close. He caused the Coal Company to bank with the Trust Company. As secretary of the Coal Company, he attended largely to its financial affairs. In 1902, when the coal strike began, the credit and business of the Coal Company were good. In the early winter of 1902 the Coal Company adopted the policy of keeping itself fully supplied, and it had coal all winter to meet all demands. It had to pay high prices for the coal, but [11]*11the profit was very large, as it sold at retail all the way from $18 to ¡'•A") a ton. But this condition of affairs was unexpectedly interrupted. The weather grew warm iu January, and remained so until the demand for coal greatly decreased, and prices dropped accordingly. As a result the Coal Company found itself by the end of January with a large stock of coal on hand, on which it was likely to make a heavy loss. ° It had bought its coal from various dealers, much the largest pari of its supply coming from E. B. Townsend. Among others it bought several cargoes from the plaintiff, the last two of which, amounting to $25,605.81, were shipped on January Btli and January 21st, and arrived in Boston about ten days after those dates. By the terms of the sale the Coal Company was bound to pay cash on receipt of bill of lading; but it did not do so. On January 26th Pike asked Edgarton, the broker who had sold the coal for the plaintiff, to resell it at a considerable loss, and promised to make up the difference. Edgarlon could not get his price, and Pike presently reported that he had resido the cargoes himself. 1 ie. promised to ¡ray tlic plaintiff in a day or two, as soon as he received the money; but he did not pay. On, Monday, February Dili, lie came iu and asked Edgarton to see the defendant. This Edgarton did at once. The defendant urged the desirability of granting some indulgence to the Coal Company, expressed the utmost confidence in it as a thrifty going concern, worthy of the support of the few larger creditors, and as proof of his confidence said that his bank was ready to advance it, if necessary, $25,000 more than it then owed. Upon his advice Edgarton wrote to New York laying the matter before the plaintiff, and in consequence F. D. Peale, Esq., a New Jfork lawyer, who was the plaintiff’s counsel, and also its secretary and director, came to Boston on February 12th to attend to the matter.

Peale called on the defendant, who discussed the Coal Company’s affairs in detail, enlarging on the value of its business and the excellence of its prospects. He argued that its present difficulties were merely temporary, resulting from its overstock of coal and the peculiar conditions caused by the strike; and he strongly recommended as the only -wise course that the three large creditors stand together, and let the Coal Company pay off its debts pro rata as it sold its coal and collected its accounts. Peale testified:

“I asked him what they owed his bank, and he said about S65.000; and !u; said he had such confidence in their ability to pull through that he had said to them already, and he repeated It to me, that he was willing to loan them an additional $25,000 if that should prove necessary in connection with the conduct of their business. 1 ie further said that he had laid before Mr. Townsend. whose claim ivas even larger than the Trust Company’s, the plan of having the three creditors stand together; and that Townsend had assented to it if the plaintiff was witling, lie said he and Mr. Townsend had agreed that was the best thing to do, and that they were both willing to do it, and that it simply was np to us, and our decision -would determine whether the plan should become effective or not.”

Peale was persuaded by these representations, and accepted the defendant’s view as to the best course to be pursued. -Accordingly he returned to New York without insisting on immediate payment. The plaintiff's directors approved his decision, and permitted the Coal Com[12]*12pany to go on with its business, supposing that sundry payments which were thereafter received from time to time, amounting in all to $15,-500, were made in accordance with the plan proposed. On June 10th these payments ceased, and in consequence Peale came to Boston in July and saw Childs. After assurances from the latter that he had kept faith with the plaintiff, and had paid it pro rata with Townsend and the Trust Company, and after every excuse and device to prevent an investigation of this statement had been exhausted, Peale at last obtained access to the Coal Company’s books. From tírese and from the bookkeeper, he learned for the first time, not only that the Trust Company’s debt had been paid in full, and that Townsend had received over $90,000 on account of his claim, leaving a balance due him of only about $20,000, but, furthermore, that the business of the Coal Company had long- since been secretly sold out, leaving no assets for the payment of the plaintiff’s claim except some accounts of doubtful value, and that this winding up of its affairs had been completed in April, long before the dates of the letters in which, as late as the end of May, Childs had kept up the pretense that he was actively engaged in the affairs of a going concern. The plaintiff immediately filed a petition in bankruptcy against the Coal Company, and it was adjudicated a bankrupt. The plaintiff disclosed its present claim at the outset of the bankruptcy proceedings, but it did not sue the defendant until after the trial of a suit brought against the Trust Company by the trustee in bankruptcy, preferring- that litigation for the benefit of the estate should have precedence over its private claim.

On February 12, 1903, the Trust Company held 11 notes of the Coal Company, amounting to $68,500, falling due at different dates between February 16th and May 15th of the same year. On February 2d the Trust Company lent to the Manufacturers’ Commercial Company, a corporation engaged in lending money on the security of accounts, the sum of $48,000, taking as security an assignment of open accounts for $64,694.61 due the Coal Company. These were substantially all its good accounts. The Manufacturers’ Commercial Company drew a check for $48,000, and turned it over to the Coal Company.

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Bluebook (online)
173 F. 9, 97 C.C.A. 311, 1909 U.S. App. LEXIS 5052, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graham-v-peale-peacock-kerr-of-new-york-ca1-1909.