Guggenheimer & Adelsdorf v. Groeschel

23 S.C. 274, 1885 S.C. LEXIS 102
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 20, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 23 S.C. 274 (Guggenheimer & Adelsdorf v. Groeschel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Guggenheimer & Adelsdorf v. Groeschel, 23 S.C. 274, 1885 S.C. LEXIS 102 (S.C. 1885).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mr. Ciiiee Justice Simpson.

The defendant, Joseph Groeschel, on February 8, 1882, being then a merchant at Winnsboro, Fairfield County, and insolvent, made an assignment of all his real and personal property, consisting of a stock of goods and a certain lot situate in said town, for the benefit of his creditors, in which certain named creditors were preferred, among them the defendant, Charles Sternbach. The defendant, Isaac N. Withers, was the assignee. Shortly after the execution of this assignment, a meeting of the creditors was had in pursuance of the statute in such case made and provided, at which meeting the said Isaac N. Withers was appointed agent of the creditors.

Before anything was done by the assignee with the assigned [277]*277property, Groesehel, the debtor, compounded with his unpreferred creditors by agreeing to pay them 36 per cent, on their claims, this amount to be paid in four instalments and in full of said claims, for which he gave notes, bearing interest from February 18, 1882, and payable to James H. Rion, as attorney for the creditors, all of which have since been paid. He also made satisfactory arrangements for the payment of the claims of the preferred creditors, all of whom have since been satisfied, except the defendant, Charles Sternbach, there being still remaining on his claim some $1,200, after crediting a payment of $1,000 made in August, 1882.

After this composition and arrangement, to wit, in March, 1882, the assignee returned the stock of goods to Groesehel, the assignor, who immediately resumed his former business of buying and selling goods, commencing with this returned stock, in which he continued until January, 1884, depleting and replenishing his stock, from time to time, as the business required, and without interruption from any quarter. During this time he contracted many debts in the purchase of goods, and among them the plaintiffs’. In 1884, when the greater part of the stock, if not all, which had been returned to him by Withers, the assignee, had been exhausted and its place supplied by other purchases, being threatened by his subsequent creditors, Withers took possession, claiming, as it seems, under the original assignment. It does not appear whether this action of Withers was assented to or not by Groesehel. However, Withers took possession and immediately sold the goods on hand. Out of the proceeds of the sale, Withers paid off the last of the four notes given by Groeschel to his unpreferred creditors mentioned above, and also a note to one J. Herbst, with certain expenses and commissions, leaving in his hands the sum of $2,978.64.

At this juncture of affairs, the plaintiffs commenced the action below, claiming to be a creditor on account of goods sold and' delivered on December 16, 1883, amounting to $274.91, and demanding judgment: 1st. That the defendant,-Isaac N. Withers, assignee as aforesaid, be enjoined from paying out of the funds or assets in his hands, or under his control, any balance that may be claimed to be due the defendant, Charles Sternbach, [278]*278as a preferred creditor, or from malting any other disposition or application of said funds, except as ordered by the court. 2d. “That the plaintiffs be paid their debt, or their proportionate share thereof, in the ratable and equitable distribution of the same among such of the creditors as may come in and establish their claims in this action.” The defendants answered the complaint, admitting the facts alleged in the complaint, except the statement that the stock of goods taken by Withers in 1884 had entirely “changed its component parts” from the stock turned over to Groeschel under the composition agreement in 1882, which was denied. It was also denied that Sternbach had “concurred and acquiesced in and assented to the transfer and delivery of the assigned goods and assets to the said Groeschel by Withers, and that he made a new agreement with Groeschel as to his debt,” and Sternbach claimed that he was entitled to be paid the balance due him out of the funds in the hands of Withers as a preferred claim.

The case was ordered to a referee, with instruction to call in all creditors claiming to share in the distribution of the money in the hands of Withers. Under this call, three classes of creditors established their demands. 1. A preferred creditor under the original assignment who had not been paid in full, to wit, Charles Sternbach, whose claim is mentioned above. 2. The unpreferred creditors under said assignment who had been paid their then existing claims, but who since that time had become creditors of Groeschel for goods and merchandise sold him, to wit, Kerngood Bros, and Wiesenfeld & Co. And 3. Those who were not creditors at the time of the original assignment, but had become so since, to wit, the plaintiffs. Upon the coming in of the report of the referee, which contained the testimony upon the issues raised in the pleadings and the claims established, the case was heard by his honor, Judge Cothran.

In the testimony reported, it appeared that Kerngood Bros, and Wiesenfeld & Co., who, as stated, were unpreferred creditors of the original assignment, had received, by a private arrangement made with Groeschel in the composition with them, considerably more than 36 per cent, on their claims, and the plaintiffs contended that they should account for this excess on their new [279]*279claims now before the court. Plaintiffs also contended that the defendant, Charles Sternbach, having made a new arrangement with Groeschel as to his preferred claim, should be confined to that, and was entitled to nothing out of the funds in the hands of Withers.

His honor, the Circuit Judge, sustained the plaintiffs as to Sternbach’s claim, but overruled it as to Kerngood Bros, and Wiesenfeld & Co., and he ordered (1) that the funds in the hands of Withers be turned over to the clerk of the court for distribution ; (2) that the clerk, after paying the costs, taxes, &c., distribute the balance pro rata among the creditors of Joseph Groeschel (excepting Charles Sternbach), who shall, under the usual form of publication by said clerk, present and prove their demands before him within sixty days from the judgment rendei’ed, &c.

The plaintiffs have appealed from so much of the decree as allowed Kerngood Bros, and Wiesenfeld & Co. to share in the funds in contest without accounting for the excess received in the composition, and also from so much as directed the creditors to establish their demands over before the clerk. Sternbach appealed because his claim was ruled out, and also from so much of the decree as directed the funds to be turned over to the clerk and that the creditors should again establish their demands before him.

This is a novel case, and in some of its features without precedent in the books. The main, and as was said by the Circuit Judge the pivotal, question is the effect of the composition upon the original assignment. The Circuit Judge held, in substance, that it annulled, cancelled, the assignment, and in this we think he was entirely correct. The object of the composition, no doubt, was to accomplish this, the creditors ‘by their action at least assented to it, and the assignee carried it out by openly returning the assigned property to Groeschel, upon which he, Groeschel, again began to merchandise, continuing in the business for some two years without objection. We think these facts were entirely sufficient to authorize the conclusion of the judge, that the assignment was at an end.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 S.C. 274, 1885 S.C. LEXIS 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guggenheimer-adelsdorf-v-groeschel-sc-1885.