Haggerty v. Badkin

66 A. 420, 72 N.J. Eq. 473, 2 Buchanan 473, 1907 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 119
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMarch 8, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 66 A. 420 (Haggerty v. Badkin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Haggerty v. Badkin, 66 A. 420, 72 N.J. Eq. 473, 2 Buchanan 473, 1907 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 119 (N.J. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Pitney, V. C.

This is a proceeding to compel the delendant to pay to the complainant the amount ol a decree recovered by the latter against the former in this cause on the 5th day ol January, 1905, lor upwards ol $500, besides costs.

The motion is resisted on two grounds.

The first and principal ground is a discharge in bankruptcy, [474]*474granted a .year later by the district court of the United States, for the district of New Jersey, which purports to discharge defendant from all debts and claims which existed on the 10th day of May, 1905, “excepting such debts as are by law excepted from the operation of a discharge in bankruptcy.”

The complainant replies to this defence that the debt for which the decree was granted is within that exception, and he relies on the fourth subdivision of sect: oar 17 of the Bankruptcy act, where are enumerated the several exceptions; the fourth of which is: “Such debts as were created by his fraud, embezzlement, misappropriation or defalcation while acting as an officer or in any fiduciary capacity.”

The coarrplainant contends that the debt herein arose by a misappropriation to his owoa use of aaroaaey which had been confided to him by complainant’s intestate in a fiduciary capacity.

To sustain this conteaition resort is had to the original bill in the cause, the answer thereto and the proofs and facts appearing at the trial, and the findings of the court thereon.

The bill charges that the intestate, in his lifetime, about the 20th of May, 1902, being in negotiations with the defendant in reference to a proposed partnership between them, deposited with the defendant the sum of $500 as and for his share of the partnership capital. The bill farther shows that immediately after such deposit complainaaat’s intestate was taken violently ill, and died of the illness on May 26th, and alleges that the actual formation of the partnership ivas interrupted by such illness aaad was never consummated.

The answer of the defendant dearies these allegatioaas, and sets up that there were in fact negotiations between the parties as to the formation of such partnership, but that the plan for such partnership did not include the use of any capital; that the defendant was employed as a salesman for a furniture house, and complainant’s iaatestate desired to join him ira the business of selling furniture, aaad that in order to carry out that piara it was necessary for defendant to abandon his present business connection, which was valuable, aaad that intestate paid him the $500 as a personal compensation to him for giving up his then present lucrative job.

[475]*475The cause came on for hearing before me as vice-chancellor and I found the issue in favor of the complainant, and as a matter of fact, that the $500 was paid to the defendant as a contribution to partnership assets and funds.

I have since read over the stenographer’s minutes of the evidence and my oral reasons for the decree and am entirely satisfied with the result above stated.

It appeared at the hearing that the complainant’s intestate, at the date of the transaction, May, 1902, was twenty-four years old and single, and resided with his mother in Hackensack, New Jersey, and worked as a clerk on a small salary for his uncle, a New York business man.

The defendant was a married man, about fourteen years older than intestate, and lived with his wife in Hackensack.

He was a salesman on a salary of $30 per week for a New York furniture house.

Neither of the parties had any capital nor were either engaged in any business of any sort for themselves.

The defendant kept no bank account, but brought his weekly wage home to his wife every Saturday night, and handed it to her after the fashion of an ordinary mechanic.

In this state of affairs, about the 1st of May, 1902, the parties entered into negotiations to enter into the business of selling furniture as partners, and it was supposed that they would need a little capital in the business, presumably to pay traveling expenses and the like, which, under the arrangement between defendant and his employers, were paid by his employers in addition to his weekly wage. For the purpose of supplying this capital it was arranged that complainant’s intestate should contribute to the business $500, and the defendant contribute his knowledge and familiarity of the business to stand as an equivalent for the contribution in cash by the intestate.

Complainant’s intestate borrowed that sum from his uncle in a check dated May 17th, 1902, drawn by his uncle to his order. On the evening of May 19th (as near as the date can be determined) deceased took the check to the house of the defendant in Hackensack and there endorsed it over specially to him as his contribution to the capital.

[476]*476Either at the moment of the endorsement or immediately after deceased was taken violently ill with malignant diphtheria.

Defendant took the check to New York and opened an account in his own name in a bank and deposited the check to his own credit. The date of the entry in the book is May 20th.

He called to see the deceased the same evening and found him very ill. They had some conversation on business matters heard in part by the deceased’s mother, who heard the deceased say to the defendant, “Let that remain for a few days.”

It appeared that no written contract had as yet been entered into between them, but typewritten sheets embodying a contract, with corrections, were found in the possession of the deceased. He died on the 26th of May.

Defendant called at once upon the uncle who had advanced the money, and the uncle recited to him the terms of the contract as hereinbefore stated, and he admitted it to be correct. He speedily used the $500 for his personal use.

The evidence satisfied me that the terms of the contract of partnership were substantially agreed upon, but that the intestate desired to have them reduced to writing.

Under these circumstances the question is whether the debt is excepted from the effect of the discharge in bankruptcy, and that question depends on whether it was received in the first place or afterwards detained by the defendant in a "fiduciary capacity.” That it was so received or detained I think there can be no doubt, if we give to these words their ordinary meaning.

Money is received or detained by one from another in a fiduciary capacity, when, in the mind of the person handing the money to the other, as such mind is known to that other, it does not become the absolute money and property of that other to do with as he chooses as his own money, but is received by him for a particular purpose in which a person or .persons other than the person receiving it is or are interested.

If two persons are in partnership and one is acting as cashier or financial manager and the other pays money to his partner to be used in partnership business, the money so paid is received in a fiduciary capacity. The receiver holds it in trust for the partnership and for the benefit of the partners in proportion to their [477]*477several interests, and neither partner has the right to appropriate one dollar of it to his individual use without the consent, express or implied, of the other party.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 A. 420, 72 N.J. Eq. 473, 2 Buchanan 473, 1907 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haggerty-v-badkin-njch-1907.