In re J. C. Wilson & Co.

252 F. 631, 1917 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 772
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJune 28, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 252 F. 631 (In re J. C. Wilson & Co.) 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 J. C. Wilson & Co., 252 F. 631, 1917 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 772 (S.D.N.Y. 1917).

Opinion

MAYER, District Judge

(after stating the facts as above). The careful and comprehensive report of the special master renders unnecessary reference to many details. It will conduce to a clear understanding to point out in what respects there is agreement or disagreement with the views of the special master in respect of the principles of law involved, making such reference to particular claims as may be illustrative or otherwise regarded as desirable.

The master has allocated the claims of those urging reclamation into two general classes, viz. class A and class B, placing the claims of superior equity in class A, and those of inferior equity in class B, and in addition he has dismissed certain claims, leaving such claims in the position of general creditor claims. Apparently the fund is insufficient to satisfy all class A claimants, and thus at the outset an interesting question arises, which is well exemplified by the situation of the claimant Rolph.

[636]*636Rolph’s Claim and the Doctrine of Pippey’s Case.

As the result of transactions detailed in the testimony and in the master’s report, it appears that on July 30, 1914, Wilson & Co. (hereinafter called Wilson) were holding 300 shares of Mexican Petroleum common for Rolph, for which Rolph had paid in full, and 100 shares of the same stock, upon which Rolph owed Wilson a debit balance. There is some controversy as to whether, in respect of the transactions, Rolph was a margin trader, or had bought these 300 shares outright. As I agree with the conclusion of the master that the 300 shares were bought outright and fully paid for, reference to the testimony is unnecessary. It may,- however, be remarked, in addition to other facts which fully justify this conclusion, that the testimony shows that no interest whatever was credited Rolph on the cash balance arising from his several previous sales, although it was the invariable custom of Wilson to charge interest on a marginal account, if it ran only for a day. To those familiar with transactions of this character, this failure to credit interest is almost conclusive on the point that Rolph was not a margin trader. In regard to the last 100 shares purchased, upon which there was a debit balance against Rolph, I have no doubt that the master was right in holding that this purchase was in class B, and that Rolph could recover the proportion indicated by the master only on payment of his debit balance.

I. will therefore leave this last purchase and proceed to consider the status of the 300 shares. These 300 shares were hypothecated by Wilson without authority with Harris, Winthrop & Co. (hereinafter called Harris). They were not among the securities sold by Harris to satisfy his pledge, and thus survived the liquidation. Rolph contends that he is now entitled to these identical 300 shares.

[1] There are other claimants whose securities were fully paid for and hypothecated without right by Wilson with Harris, and these securities, having been sold by Harris after the filing of the bankruptcy petition, did not, therefore, survive the liquidation in kind. In respect of such cases the special master has held, where the claimant has successfully traced, that the claimant is in class A and entitled to a lien on the proceeds. Such claimants insist that Rolph is in precisely the same situation as they are, and that the mere accident that Rolph’s 300 shares have survived liquidation does not give him equities superior to them. The proposition thus advanced by those opposing Rolph’s contention seems obvious upon simple principles of equity, for nothing is better settled than that equity will treat alike those similarly situated. Rolph, however, presses the point that a different view was entertained by the Circuit Court of Appeals for this circuit in the case of In re T. A. McIntyre & Co. (Appeal of Pippey) 181 Fed. 955, 957, et seq., 104 C.C.A. 419.

In view of its importance in the pending controversy, I have thoroughly examined the record on appeal in Pippey’s Case. In that case the involuntary petition against McIntyre & Co., stockbrokers, was filed on April 24, 1908. About March 4, 1907, McIntyre & Co. obtained a loan from the Metropolitan Trust Company of $200,000 and [637]*637deposited as collateral thereto, a large number of stocks and bonds. On April 23, 1908, the day before the filing of the petition in bankruptcy, McIntyre & Co., without right, pledged Pippey’s stock with the Metropolitan Trust Company as part of the collateral to the loan aforesaid. On April 25, 1908, Pippey demanded from the Trust Company his certificate of stock, which was still in the Trust Company’s possession, and whose identity had been preserved. It is unnecessary to describe in further detail Pippey’s efforts, which are sufficiently set forth in the opinion of the court in 181 Fed. at page 957 et seq., 104 C. C. A. 419.

The master reported (pages 39 and 40) that after the bankruptcy, and on April 24, 1908, the Trust Company applied certified checks for $70,000 toward the payment of the $200,000 loan, reducing the principal thereby to $130,000 and thereafter the Trust Company from time to time sold the securities, applying the proceeds in reduction of the debt. On May 6, 1907, after applying the proceeds to the payment of the principal and interest on the debt, there was a cash credit to McIntyre & Co. for their estate in bankruptcy of $832.16 and the following securities: 300 shares of International Power Company common unclaimed, 200 shares of American Can Company preferred (Hudson), 18 shares of Pullman Company (Pippey), and 66 shares of United States Steel Pref erred. This cash and these securities, by order of .court were redeposited with the Metropolitan Trust Company, to remain subject to order of court. The task before the master was to determine the rights of the various claimants to this balance of cash and these shares of stock which had survived the liquidation by the Metropolitan Trust Company. The master then proceeded to examine each claim:

Pippey (42). The master held that Pippey had identified his 18 shares of Pullman Company stock, and that this stock must bear its proportionate share of the burden of the loan, and that Pippey was entitled to share pro rata with others similarly situated in said surplus of money and securities. The Circuit Court of Appeals pointed out that the conduct of the stockbrokers in pledging Pippey’s stock with the Metropolitan Trust Company amounted to larceny. The result was that Pippey had the highest kind of equity, and the Circuit Court of Appeals held that he was entitled to recover his stock or the proceeds free of any burden to share pro rata with others.

Ellen J. Sedgwick and Fred L. Bishop (45). The master awarded to these claimants 60 shares United States Steel preferred (10 to Bishop and 50 to Mrs. Sedgwick), under the same circumstances and principle under which a similar award has been made in this case by common consent to Allie M. Powell. There was no petition to revise and no appeal from the master’s order in this regard.

Charlotte B. Miller (47). On April 1, Mrs. Miller, through her son as her agent, bought through McIntyre & Co. 12 shares of United States Steel preferred, which stock was paid for on April 3, 1908. McIntyre & Co. were requested to have these 12 shares of stock transferred to the name of Mrs. Miller and thereupon to send same to her. Between April 7, 1908, and the date of the failure, April 24, 1908, Mrs. Miller’s son called at the Syracuse office of McIntyre & [638]*638Co.

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Bluebook (online)
252 F. 631, 1917 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 772, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-j-c-wilson-co-nysd-1917.