In re Broome's Men's Shop

92 F. Supp. 98, 1949 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1805
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. South Carolina
DecidedDecember 6, 1949
DocketNo. 4405
StatusPublished

This text of 92 F. Supp. 98 (In re Broome's Men's Shop) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Broome's Men's Shop, 92 F. Supp. 98, 1949 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1805 (southcarolinaed 1949).

Opinion

TIMMERMAN, District Judge.

Petitions for review of the Referee’s order of April 21, 1949, are before the Court for consideration. Mutual Savings and Loan Association, hereinafter referred to as Mutual, filed a secured claim in the amount of $4,000 against the estate of the above named bankrupt; and Perpetual Building and Loan Association, hereinafter referred to as Perpetual, also filed a like character of claim for $5,800 against said estate. Each claim, purportedly, was secured by [99]*99a mortgage covering all the assets of the bankrupt. Mutual’s note and mortgage bore date May 5, 1947, and Perpetual’s May 20, 1947. Neither mortgage was recorded until November 20, 1947, six months after the date of the latter. The Referee allowed both claims as unsecured debts of the bankrupt, but disallowed them as secured claims, since the recordation date of each mortgage was within the four months next preceding the filing of the petition in bankruptcy.

Mutual and Perpetual complain that the Referee erred in disallowing their claims as secured debts of the bankrupt; and the Trustee complains that the Referee erred in not disallowing the claims as unsecured debts. In other words, the Trustee contends that neither claim represents a debt of the bankrupt.

It is concluded that the Referee was right in disallowing the claims as secured debts. Also that he was right in allowing Mutual’s $4,000 claim as an unsecured debt, but that he was in error in allowing Perpetual’s claim of $5,800 even as an unsecured debt.

The record is voluminous and replete with surmises, conjectures, hearsay, equivocations and unsubstantiated claims and contentions. The business venture, out of which this matter arose, was started, with inadequate capital, about the last day of January, 1947, and was insolvent before November 20 of that year, and likely was at the time of its incorporation which occurred on May 5, 1947.

James T. Broome, owner and manager of the original business, opened its first bank account of $2,000 in The South Carolina National Bank, Columbia, S. C., on January 31, 1947, under the trade name of Broome’s Men’s Shop. The origin of this opening deposit was a check for $2,000 drawn by Chas. F. Cooper on The First National Bank of Columbia, and payable to James T. Broome. Mr. Cooper testified that Broome, on that date, borrowed $1,000 from him to put into the business, that Broome gave him $1,000 in cash and he in turn gave Broome the $2,000 check which was deposited as aforestated. Cooper also testified that, while he gave his personal check to Broome for $2,000, the advancement of $1,000 was for the account of Mutual for which he, Cooper, acted in the matter.

Here Mr. Cooper’s connection with the parties involved in this controversy should be stated, since he was involved in transactions that will be discussed below. He was at all relevant times an active executive and managing official of both Mutual and Perpetual, and he became the vice president, co-manager and attorney of the bankrupt at the time of its incorporation. He was authorized to and did, both before and after incorporation of Broome’s Men’s Shop, countersign its checks.

Mutual, acting through Cooper as in the case of the first loan, advanced two additional sums of money to Broome’s Men’s Shop, that is to say $1,000 on March 12, 1947, and $2,000 on April 11, 1947. To evidence this total indebtedness, so Mr. Cooper testified, James T. Broome gave Mutual a note in the sum of $4,000 on the 12th of March, 1947 (although the final $2,000 was not advanced until a month later) and secured it by a mortgage covering all the property and assets of Broome’s Men’s Shop of which Broome was the sole owner. This note and the mortgage securing it are in evidence. No revenue stamps were placed on the note and the mortgage has never been recorded.

On May 5, 1947, Broome’s Men’s Shop was incorporated under the laws of South Carolina. As a condition precedent to obtaining its charter from the Secretary of State, a declaration was filed with that official in which it was stated, among other things, that 50 per cent, of the proposed capital stock of $60,000 had been subscribed by bona fide subscribers thereto; that 20 per cent, of the amount subscribed had been paid to the treasurer of the corporation in money, property or labor; and that the subscribers had met and elected the following officers and directors of the corporation: James T. Broome, president, treasurer and director, B. M. Brazell (sometimes hereinafter referred to as Beatrice Brazell), secretary and director, and Guy V. Whitener and Douglas R. Broome, di[100]*100rectors. However no record of any such meeting of the subscribers, held prior to the filing of declaration, has been found in the records of the corporation, nor has one been produced; and no stock subscription sheet or book has been found'or produced. See Sec. 7728, Code of Laws of S.C.1942.

A paper was offered in evidence which purports to be the minutes of a meeting of the “Organizers and Stockholders of Broome’s Men’s Shop, Inc.” held at 5 p. m. on the date the charter was issued and obviously after the declaration had been filed, and the charter issued. These minutes admittedly were dictated by Cooper some, time during the succeeding month and were signed at some time thereafter, just when is not disclosed, by James T. Broome, president. The secretary of the corporation had no part in their making, nor did she sign them. In fact both Miss Brazell, secretary and- director, and Guy V. Whitener, director, testified that they attended several corporation meetings prior to July 17, 1947, on which date the stock certificates were issued, .but that at none of them was the below referred to Douglas R. Broome note and mortgage for $5,800 discussed or authorized. Thus the authenticity of the referred to minutes is brought into question.

Concerning the minutes of May 5, 1947 (the only minutes of any meeting that have been produced) it should be noted that they do not list the stockholders in attendance or show even an attempted compliance with section 7728, Code of Laws of S.C. 1942.

If the produced minutes, typed on a letterhead of Broome’s Men’s Shop, be accepted at face value, they show:

1. That the following persons were subscribers to the capital stock of the corporation in the amounts stated, to-wit: James T. Broome, $15,000; Douglas R. Broome, $7,500; Guy V. Whitener, $7,000; and Beatrice Brazell $1,000, — a total of $30,500.

2. That the corporation agreed to accept all of the properties of Broome’s Men’s .Shop “at an agreed value of $15,000.00, subject to a note and mortgage to Mutual *. * *; in the principal sum of $4,000.00.” 3. That it was agreed that “the remaining $11,000.00 of said agreed value” should be disposed of by giving James T. Broome a credit of $5,200 on his stock subscription of $15,000 and by giving Douglas R. Broome $5,800 in cash or by giving him, or his designee, a note for that amount, bearing interest at the rate of 6% per annum, and secured by a mortgáge of all the properties of the corporation, on the condition that Douglas R. Broome give his note to the corporation for $7,500, endorsed by Guy V. Whitener, in payment of Douglas R. Broome’s stock subscription.

4. That Chas. F. Cooper was named vice president of the corporation and authorized to hold half of the stock subscribed by James T. Broome and to have “equal and joint control of the business”, presumably with James T. Broome, president.

5. That Chas. F.

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92 F. Supp. 98, 1949 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1805, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-broomes-mens-shop-southcarolinaed-1949.