In Re Cleveland Discount Co.

9 F.2d 97
CourtDistrict Court, D. Ohio
DecidedMay 25, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 9 F.2d 97 (In Re Cleveland Discount Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Cleveland Discount Co., 9 F.2d 97 (ohiod 1924).

Opinion

WESTENHAYER, District Judge.

This is a proceeding to have the Cleveland Discount Company adjudged a bankrupt. The answer denied the commission of an act of bankruptcy. It also sets up as defenses to an adjudication that the petition should be ’dismissed for laches, want of equity, and because petitioners are not creditors, and the proceeding is not being prosecuted by them. Whether an act of bankruptcy is committed depends on whether, on February 22, 1923, the Cleveland Discount Company was insolvent within the definition thereof in the Bankruptcy Act (Comp. St. §§ 9585-9656). After issues joined, on December 11, 1923, a reference was ordered to Hon. P. L. A. Lieghley as a special master, with instructions to hear the evidence, find the facts, and make conclusions of Jaw. The matter is now before me upon his report, filed herein March 4, 1924, and exceptions thereto. I shall consider his report advisory only as to his find-* ings of fact, as well as his conclusions of law; but I cannot overlook the fact that, having seen and heard the witnesses, a certain respect is due to his findings of fact, so far as they depend upon the weight and credibility of the evidence.

The work of the master appears to have been exceptionally well done. He finds upon the main issue that the Cleveland Discount Company was not insolvent, and hence that no act of bankruptcy was committed. *99 In weighing the ovidenee, petitioners do not contend that he applied any incorrect rule, except in two instances. One is that he did not adopt tho view of petitioners’ expert witnesses lhat improved real estate should "be valued according to its earning power. The other is that, in fixing the value of certain bonds, he declined to adopt the market value, as disclosed by stock market sales, but valued tho same at par, because the evidence clearly and conclusively showed, in his opinion, that the security back of the bonds was ample. In valuing improved real estate, the master was plainly right. Many elements enter into tho intrinsic, as well as the selling, value of real estate, in addition to the present earning power of tho improvements thereon. In rejecting the stock market sales of the bonds, the master was also, in my opinion, plainly right, in view of the special facts and circumstances of the case. Many conditions combined to produce a low stock market selling price. The bonds were not dealt in actively, and rumors affecting tho credit standing of the Discount Company were in circulation. The bonds in question are pledged in trust for tho payment of collateral trust bonds. The mortgage bonds mature in series at dates earlier than the maturity of the market trust bonds. All installments of principal and interest on tho mortgage bonds have been promptly paid, and the evidence is clear that the mortgage security is ample. In this situation, particularly in determining a narrow issue of solvency in the bankruptcy sense, the master adopted the correct rule.

. There is and was very little dispute about the actual facts. The master’s summary of the ovidenee is not subjected to much, if any, criticism. The differences between him and the petitioners come down chiefly to the inferences drawn by him from admitted facts, ■or to his acceptance of tho opinions of ono set of experts as to the value to be placed upon assets, rather than to acceptance of tho ■opinions of another set. It will servo no useful purpose to enter into a discussion of the evidence in detail. It will be sufficient if I specify which findings of fact and conclusions of law I have adopted and approved, with such additional comment only as is needed to indicate the basis upon which my approval rests. At pages 77, 78 the special master sots forth briefly his combined findings of fact and conclusions of law. Of these, Nos. 3, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6 are adopted in their entirety. No. 7 is adopted, with the modifications hereinafter set forth.

The intervening petitioners, Minch & Eisenbrey Company and George Huenefeld, who assumed the prosecution of the petition in bankruptcy after the original petitioners withdrew, are creditors in the amounts stated and found. Huenefeld claimed also to be a creditor in the sum of $1,000 upon a gold note issued about January 1, 1922, in exchange for preferred stock of the Discount Company. I concur in the master’s finding that this and all other gold notes similarly issued are not debts of the company. The Delaware corporation law, under which sueh notes were issued, permits the purchase by a corporation of its outstanding shares of stock only when sueh purchase will not impair its capital stock. The capital stock of the Discount Company was already impaired, and hence, even though the company was amply solvent in the bankruptcy sense, the issue of those gold notes was illegal, and did not create a valid debt against the company. Tho common-law rule pertaining to the purchase by a corporation of its outstanding shai*es of stock is even more stringent than the Delaware statute.

The special master’s findings 2 and 6 are concurred in by me. Counsel’s action in filing and prosecuting the intervening petition on behalf of these creditors has been sufficiently adopted and approved by the petitioners, even if counsel’s original authority was not broad enough to authorize the same. This approval can bo inferred as well from their failure, after knowledge of the filing of the petition, to dissent from action taken in their name, as in any other way. The like action of counsel in furnishing security for costs, even if done without consultation with them and without subsequent approval, does not justify or require a dismissal of the intervening petition. Whether counsel may or should furnish security for costs in a pending action is a matter of ethics, and not of the law. It was so held in United States ex rel. Randolph v. Ross (C. C. A. 6th Cir.) 298 F. 64, 33 A. L. R. 728.

As to whether a bankruptcy court may, upon equitable grounds only, deny adjudication, if petitioners prove an act of bankruptcy and otherwise show themselves entitled to invoke the jurisdiction of the bankruptcy court, is extremely doubtful. The special master’s conclusion of law is that this right is a strictly legal one, snd cannot be denied, even though the court is of opinion that the best interests of the creditors will be sub-served by denying an adjudication. I am disposed to concur in this conclusion. It is certainly true, unless the interests of the creditors seeking an adjudication are-so insignifi *100 cant in comparison with the interests involved that a court may apply the maxim de minimis non enrat lex; and while it is true that the combined debts'of the petitioners are only $849.50, and upon this basis the bankruptcy court is asked to draw to itself the administration of many millions of assets, and oust an equitable receivership in progress in. a state court,-I am not willing to apply the maxim, for the reason that other creditors, unknown as to name, number, or amounts, have remained silent. The cases which have applied against petitioning creditors the doctrine of laches and estoppel to prevent an adjudication have no application to the facts of this case.

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Bluebook (online)
9 F.2d 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-cleveland-discount-co-ohiod-1924.