In re Belt-Modes, Inc.

88 F. Supp. 141, 1950 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4134
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJanuary 25, 1950
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 88 F. Supp. 141 (In re Belt-Modes, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Belt-Modes, Inc., 88 F. Supp. 141, 1950 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4134 (S.D.N.Y. 1950).

Opinion

IRVING R. KAUFMAN, District Judge.

The Court has before it a petition by the Trustee of the Bankrupt, Belt-Modes, Inc., to review the order of the Referee in Bankruptcy allowing the wage claims of the employees of Danin, Inc.

The facts, as they appear to this Court, are as follows:

Prior to 1946, Belt-Modes, Inc., manufactured ladies’ belts. In the early part of 1946 it began to or desired to manufacture children’s and ladies’ handbags. To make belts it had to sign a contract with the Beltmakers’ Union, and to make pocketbooks a contract had to be signed with the Pocketbook Workers’ Union.

Rather than combine both operations, on January 22, 1946, Daniel Rubin, the principal stockholder of Belt-Modes, Inc., organized a new corporation, Danin, Inc., for the purpose of manufacturing .pocketbooks, and Belt-Modes, Inc. continued to make belts.

Danin, Inc. was a separate entity. It rented its own premises, hired its own help, owned the fixtures, machinery and equipment, had its own complete set of books and records, stationery, bank account, issued its own checks, paid its own taxes, issued financial statements, purchased insurance for itself, and participated in other normal business procedures.

The transactions between the two corporations, (Danin, Inc. and the Bankrupt) followed the usual pattern found in a jobber-contractor relationship. At the end of every month Danin, Inc., rendered a bill to Belt-Modes, Inc. This bill was entered [142]*142on the Danin, Inc., books as a debit to accounts receivable and a credit to sales and was entered on the Belt-Modes, Inc. books by a debit to “purchases-contractors, labor and materials” and a credit to contractors payable.

Danin, Inc., was only one of several contractors with whom Belt-Modes had business negotiations. The same entries were made for all contracts on Belt-Modes, Inc., books.

All of the payrolls of Danin, Inc., were paid out of Danin’s bank account.

On or about the middle of 1947, Danin, Inc., moved into the same premises occupied by Belt-Modes, Inc., but continued to operate separately as it had previously done until Belt-Modes was adjudicated a Bankrupt. Danin, Inc., apparently is still in existence and is not involved in this bankruptcy proceeding.

In spite of the fact that the claimants herein were the employees of Danin, Inc., they filed wage claims against the estate of the Bankrupt. The Trustee objected to such claims on the grounds that the Bankrupt was in no way obligated to said claimants, in that the claimants were never employed by the Bankrupt and never rendered any work, labor or services for the Bankrupt.

The Referee overruled these objections and allowed these claims on the ground that the said employees were actually the employees of the Bankrupt. The Referee made findings on March 25, 1949 as follows: (The numbers are designated as in the final order of the Referee, Oct. 27, 1949.)

“1. The bankrupt was organized in 1946 and began the manufacture of belts and pocketbooks and handbags but within several months was confronted with a jurisdictional dispute between two labor unions, one claiming the affiliation of the belt makers and the other that of the pocketbook and bag workers in the bankrupt’s employ.

“2. Daniel Rubin, at all times herein mentioned being the president and sole stockholder of the bankrupt, thereupon caused the incorporation of Danin, Inc., of which he became president and sole stockholder, with the intent and purpose that Danin, Inc. would manufacture and deliver pocketbooks and handbags solely for the bankrupt with moneys and materials furnished by the bankrupt.

“3. The bankrupt’s pocketbook and handbag employees were assigned to work in other premises under the name of Danin, Inc., but after a year the activities carried on in its name were moved to the bankrupt’s premises.

“4. A bank account and set of books were maintained in the name of Danin, Inc. and reports, statements and tax returns were issued in its name, but all were kept, prepared, controlled or issued by the bankrupt through its executive or clerical employees,. Danin, Inc. at no time having in its own right any executive, manager or clerk.

“13. While in form and outward appearance and conduct Danin, Inc. conducted a' separate and independent enterprise, in truth and in fact it was merely a department or division of the enterprise conducted by the bankrupt under the control of Rubin and was not intended or conducted as a corporation engaged in business for profit.

“14. The claimants were in truth, in fact and in reality, employees of the bankrupt.”

The Trustee petitioned for a review of the Referee’s decision, which appeal was argued before Hon. Murray Hulbert, a Judge of this Court on the 18th day of May, 1949. Judge Hulbert found, among other things, in an opinion handed down on June 16, 1949, that:

“From the findings made by the Referee, the Court is of the opinion that the conclusion reached was not justified. Therefore the matter must be remanded for further findings. There are several items of importance in .the record, on which no findings were made. These include: (1) Danin carried insurance in its own name, including workmen’s compensation, paymaster robbery policy, liability insurance, even while Danin was occupying the same premises as the bankrupt at 1 East 33rd [143]*143Street, New York, N. Y. — the policies were billed to and paid by Danin; (2) the financial statements of the bankrupt never showed that it was entitled to the assets of Danin, nor were Danin’s liabilities charged to the bankrupt; (3) Danin, while occupying its own premises at 396 Broadway, paid the landlord itself; (4) the Danin employees were carried on the Danin books as creditors of Danin, not of the bankrupt; (S) the employees of Danin, through their union, had an employment contract with Danin under which the conditions of employment of Danin employees were established — e. g. the union demanded and obtained from Danin hospitalization insurance for the workers — ; (6) the books and records showed that Danin paid for “office supplies and expenses”; (7) the financial statements of Danin purported to charge the bankrupt for work done on the pocketbooks.

“In passing it is well to note that the traditional case in which a court of equity looks beyond the corporate entity is to prevent the perpetration of a fraud. Cf. Wormser, Piercing the Veil of Corporate Entity, 12 Col.L.R. 496; Jenkins v. Moyse, 254 N.Y. 319 [172 N.E. 521, 74 A.L.R. 205],

“ ‘The doctrine of corporate entity is not so sacred that a court of equity, looking through forms to the substance of things, may not in a proper case ignore it to preserve the rights of innocent parties or to circumvent fraud.’ In re Rieger, Kapner & Altmark [D.C.], 157 F. 609.

“In the present case, however, the Referee has ‘pierced’ the corporate veil not to prevent the perpetration of a fraud on the wage claimants, for they were parties, through their union contract, to the corporate setup being as it was. Rather it appears that a fraud would be perpetrated on the creditors of the bankrupt who became such without the knowledge of the existence of Danin. Furthermore, ,if the wage claims of employees of Danin are upheld as claims against the bankrupt, then the bankrupt would also be liable for all other debts of Danin, including tax claims, workmen’s compensation, and negligence liability.

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88 F. Supp. 141, 1950 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-belt-modes-inc-nysd-1950.