In re Hoole

3 F. 496, 1880 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 147
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJuly 24, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 3 F. 496 (In re Hoole) 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 Hoole, 3 F. 496, 1880 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 147 (S.D.N.Y. 1880).

Opinion

Choate, D. J.

This is an application to the court to vacate an order entered in this proceeding on the twelfth day of April, 1877, whereby the assignee was authorized to surrender to one Charles E. Lamed three policies of life insurance belonging to the estate, upon the release by said Lamed of' the alleged indebtedness as security for which Earned held the policies, under a pledge thereof made by the bankrupt, before the filing of the petition in bankruptcy, which indebtedness was alleged to exceed the value of the securities about $350.

The order was entered upon the petition of the assignee, and the accompanying affidavit of Lamed, setting forth the following facts: That the petition in bankruptcy was filed February 3, 1877; that May 1, 1876, the bankrupt was indebted to Earned in the sum of $2,715.85 for money loaned; that Lamed held, as security for this sum, the three policies for the amount, in all, of $6,000, the present value of which was $2,531.89; that Earned was willing and desirous of accepting the policies in full satisfaction of the debt, and agreed to release the bankrupt estate from all claims and demands upon the transfer of the policies; that the assignee believed this liquidation of the debt would greatly benefit the estate.

The petition was verified by the assignee, and accompanied by an affidavit of Earned to the truth of these facts. Thereupon, and without any notice to creditors, or any further proceeding, the court granted the application and the order was entered.

A creditor now moves to vacate the order on the ground that the estate was not in fact indebted to Earned; that the debt for which the policies were pledged had been paid in frill, and that he had no valid claim on the policies, but that they should be surrendered to the assignee as assets belonging to the estate. The petition to vacate the order was filed on the sixteenth of January, 1879. Upon an order to show cause thereon. Lamed appeared, and put in an affidavit in answer to the petition denying that the debt had been paid, [498]*498or any part of it, and insisting on the truth of the averments of the petition on which the order was entered, alleging that he had sold and assigned the policies to one Eoss, and was no longer interested in them. Testimony has been taken upon the petition and answer, and the matter has now been heard upon the papers and the testimony. No point is now made of any assignment of the policies to Eoss, nor is there any proof of any such assignment. The case has been argued and submitted as if there was no third party, who had acquired intervening rights which the court might be obliged to recognize and protect.

The material facts proven, and which are not disputed, are as follows: In 1870 the bankrupt was in partnership with his son, John E. Hoole, Jr., in the business of book-binders, and the firm borrowed money of Lamed on their note, for which he took as collateral security two of the life policies. John E. Hoole, Jr., died in February, 1872, and thereafter the bankrupt continued the business alone. In May, 1872, in order to settle up the affairs of the firm, the bankrupt took up the firm note and gave his own notes for the loan, the policies remaining as collateral security. During 1873 the bankrupt borrowed a further sum of Earned on his own note, giving him as security the third life policy.

Lending money on security was part of Larned’s regular business, and he confined to hold the policies down to the time of the bankruptcy, and till the application of the assignee for leave to transfer them to him upon release of the debt. The notes given were demand notes, but some part of the debt has been paid, and the notes were renewed from time to time for the unpaid amounts; and, at the time of the application to the court by the assignee for leave to make said settlement, Earned held the notes of the bankrupt, on which there was, apparently, due the amount alleged in the petition, $2,715.85, with interest from May 1, 1876.

From the beginning of these transactions, however, John E. Hoole & Son and John E. Hoole allowed and paid interest on the loan far in excess of 7 per cent, per annum, generally at the rate of 2 per cent, a month; and, if the excess of [499]*499these payments above legal interest is applied to the payment of the principal of the loan, then the debt had been fully paid before the bankruptcy, and there was nothing duo Larned for which he could hold the policies as security. It is claimed by this petitioning creditor that the excess of interest paid should be thus applied; that nothing was, in fact, due Larned; that the petition of the assignee and Larned’s affidavit were, therefore, false, and the order entered thereon should be vacated.

On behalf of Larned it is claimed that the arrangement or compromise made was made in good faith between him and the assignee; that it was made at the solicitation of the assignee himself; that the assignee then knew all the facts now disclosed; that to apply the excess of interest, as now claimed, would he in effect enforcing the defence of usury agaist him by the assignee, when the assignee did not himself set it up, and that he had a right to waive it; that the only remedy of the creditors or the assignee was to bring a suit under the statute of New York for the excess of interest paid; and, at any rate, that the assignee would have had no right to recover by suit the excess of interest paid by the firm of John E. Hoole & Son, nor any right to go hack of the time when that firm was dissolved, in applying the excess of interest to the liquidation of the principal; that the remedy of the creditors, if the assignee has been guilty of dereliction of duty in not setting up the usury, or in not collecting and redeeming the assets of the estate as ho was bound to do, is to dispute the settlement of his accounts, charge him on accountwith what he has lost by his negligence, or sue Mm on his bond for neglect of duty. It appears that the assignee gave bond in tho sum of $25,000, with Lamed as his surety.

It is unquestionably shown by the evidence that the assignee, who, during all these transactions, was the bookkeeper of the bankrupt, knew of tho usurious character of tho loans, and was familiar with all the details of the transactions. It also appears that he first suggested tho arrangement that was made about the surrender of the policies to Larned. The matter was in negotiation for some time. The [500]*500assignee urged the settlement upon Larned on the ground that he could, if he pleased, defend against Larned’s claim on the ground of usury, to which Larned replied that he thought he could beat him. Finally, it was agreed to between them, and then application was made to the court to authorize it, as above stated.

Upon these facts, and upon the respective claims of the parties, I am clearly of opinion that the order should be vacated.

It is unnecessary to determine whether an assignee in bankruptcy is bound to set up usury as a defence to a claim made against the estate for the purpose of avoiding what is in other respects a valid and meritorious claim. That he may do so has frequently been decided. The only authority cited by the learned counsel for the respondent, for the proposition that an assignee for the benefit of creditors is not bound to do so, seems to be rather the suggestion of a doubt than a ruling to that effect of the learned court. Beach v. Fulton Bank, 3 Wend. 573.

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Bluebook (online)
3 F. 496, 1880 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-hoole-nysd-1880.