In re Itemlab, Inc.

197 F. Supp. 5, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3906
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedJune 27, 1961
DocketNo. 60-B-640
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 197 F. Supp. 5 (In re Itemlab, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.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 Itemlab, Inc., 197 F. Supp. 5, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3906 (E.D.N.Y. 1961).

Opinion

BARTELS, District Judge.

Petition to review an order, dated March 16, 1961, by Hon. William J. Ru-din, Referee in Bankruptcy, denying a motion by the above debtor-in-possession to declare that a certain chattel mortgage executed jointly by the debtor, Itemlab, Inc. (herein “Itemlab”), and Itemco, Inc., a corporation not a party to this proceeding, in favor of Eighteenth Avenue Land Co. (herein “the lender”), is not a valid lien. Annexed to the mortgage was a consent by stockholders purporting to own two-thirds of the stock of Itemlab and a certificate of the president and secretary reciting such consent, although in fact the mortgage had not been consented to by the two-thirds majority required by New York statute (Stock Corporation Law, McKinney’s Consol. Laws, c. 59, § 16). The referee having found that the mortgage was a valid lien on Itemlab’s assets, the debtor-in-possession seeks review.

Facts

On August 19, 1960 Itemlab, jointly with Itemco, executed a note and chattel mortgage payable to the lender in the principal amount of $47,000, bearing interest at the rate of $1,925 per month, and payable four months after execution 1. Many other documents were annexed to the mortgage in addition to the spurious consent of the stockholders and the certificate of officers of Itemlab including (i) an identical stockholders’ consent and certificate of consent executed by officers of Itemco 2, (ii) copies of identical resolutions of Itemco and Itemlab stating that at a stockholders’ meeting on October 15, 1959 each corporation had been authorized to “refinance its existing liabilities to the extent of $100,000” and to execute any chattel mortgage that might be required to achieve such finane-ing, which resolution the secretary of each corporation certified was “now in full force and effect”, and (iii) a letter by counsel to the two corporations stating that in his opinion the mortgage was binding and that the consent of the stockholders to the execution of the mortgage was not required.

Aside from the stockholders’ consent and the certificate of officers, the additional documents seem superfluous and ordinarily are not required as part of a mortgage except in a dubious case. Added to this collection were two further instruments which were included for the purpose of effectuating the chattel mortgage and which on their face charge the lender with notice that Itemlab owned all of the property being mortgaged and that Itemco was a joint mortgagor in name only. These papers were (i) an affidavit of Itemlab’s president which recited that Itemlab was "the sole and only owner of the goods and chattels described and more specifically enumerated in the schedule hereto annexed and made part hereof” (Emphasis added) and (ii) two schedules annexed to the mortgage which clearly indicate that Itemlab was the owner of all of the pledged assets. There was not, as the said affidavit stated, one schedule but two, the first, captioned “Schedule A” and bearing the designation “Items Purchased By Item Lab Inc From Outside Sources” and the second, captioned “Schedule B” and bearing the designation “Equipment Purchased By Item Lab Inc. From Itemco”. These schedules leave no doubt as to the ownership of the assets. Strangely enough, there also was annexed to the joint mortgage an affidavit by the president of Itemco stating that Itemco was the sole and only owner of the assets described “in the schedule”. This was patently inaccurate and would cause an ordinary reasonable man to make inquiry.

With the security papers in this condition, the lender advanced not $47,000 but $42,820 in two different checks, one for [7]*7$20,000 and the other for $22,820, both checks being payable to counsel “as attorney for Itemco, Inc. and Itemlab, Inc.” It appeared at the hearing that Itemlab received only $18,500 in cash and that Itemco received a like amount3. As previously stated, there had not in fact been a consent by two-thirds of the stockholders of Itemlab to this joint chattel mortgage as set forth in the certificate executed by the president and secretary.

The learned referee found that the October 15, 1959 resolution of Item-lab’s stockholders was in full force and effect as of the date the instant mortgage was executed4, that the mortgage was valid because under Section 17 of the New York Stock Corporation Law the certificate of oifieers with respect to the stockholders’ consent was “conclusive” in favor of the lender, remarking that the “ * * * best evidence of its good faith is the fact that it paid out $42,820 upon the security of the mortgage”, and that the debtor-in-possession had failed to establish “by competent proof that the lender did not act in good faith in that it knew the resolutions to be inaccurate and that the debtor did not receive a fair value for the mortgage.”

The pertinent provision of Section 17 states:

“ * * * Whenever hereafter, in compliance with any law of this state, the officers of any corporation shall have made and filed and recorded a certificate that the execution of a mortgage hereafter made by the corporation has been duly consented to by stockholders, such certificate shall be conclusive evidence as to the truth thereof, in favor of any and all persons who in good faith shall receive or purchase, for value, any obligation purporting to be secured by such mortgage. * * * ” (Emphasis added.)

The crux of the matter then, is whether the lender in this case (a) acted in good faith and (b) paid value. These two requirements shall be treated in inverse order.

Payment of Value

The Court has a grave doubt on the existing state of facts as to whether the lender paid value to Itemlab for the mortgage of its assets in view of the fact that Itemlab received only $18,500 under the circumstances above related in return for a note and mortgage for $47,-000.

The learned referee determined that since the attorney who received the checks had apparent authority to do so, the lender could not be charged with any subsequent diversion of the consideration which it had paid. This is a clearly erroneous conclusion because it appears from the facts that the attorney’s apparent authority was to act as agent for both corporations as is evidenced by the manner in which the checks were made payable, and it is thus obvious that his authority encompassed the distribution of at least part of the funds received to a non-pledgee. In fact, there would have been no object in Item-co executing the joint obligation as well as the joint mortgage and the attorney acting as agent for Itemco, if this were not true. Under such facts the lender is charged with knowledge, not of a subsequent diversion, but of notice of a probable failure of Itemlab to receive the full [8]*8amount of the loan for which it had provided all the security. Eliminating the chattel mortgage from the transaction, there remains a joint note executed by two corporations which presumably would share the proceeds thereof. Even under this hypothesis, the validity of the note would be subject to attack unless it complied with the provisions of Section 19 of the Stock Corporation Law. No evidence upon this issue was adduced. Further, a joint note by two corporations is unusual and the resolution of authority should be specific. Here, however, a mortgage on the assets is also involved which presents the additional problem of whether value was paid to Itemlab for the mortgage.

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Bluebook (online)
197 F. Supp. 5, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3906, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-itemlab-inc-nyed-1961.