In Re Jersey Materials Co.

50 F. Supp. 428, 1943 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2660
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedJune 26, 1943
Docket2982—a/2824
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 50 F. Supp. 428 (In Re Jersey Materials Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Jersey Materials Co., 50 F. Supp. 428, 1943 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2660 (D.N.J. 1943).

Opinion

FORMAN, District Judge.

In 1933 the Jersey Materials Company, the bankrupt, was formed by D. Herbert Schweyer, who became its president, and Israel Krohn, its secretary and treasurer. It dealt in marble chips, talc, crayon and chalk, owning a quarry located at Phillips-burg, New Jersey.

It bought its property from John Wagner Green and Henry Green, giving in part payment a real estate mortgage in the sum of $3,500, dated July 1, 1933, payable in four years. The mortgage was not paid at maturity and, in fact, the bankrupt ceased to pay interest which is due from July 1, 1936, at the rate of six per cent.

In 1941 the affairs of the bankrupt were in a precarious state but an agreement was concluded between it and the owners of the mortgage, the pertinent terms of which are as follows:

“Whereas, the Party of the First Part [Jersey Materials Company] proposes to refinance its business, for which purpose it has caused its charter to he amended so that it may be authorized to issue preferred stock to the amount of $25,000.00, the proceeds whereof to be used for the purpose of retiring existing liens and encumbrances against the property, its outstanding loans and business indebtednesses, and the balance thereof to be employed as working capital; and
“Whereas, the Parties of the Second Part [the Greens] have agreed to accept preferred stock of the said Corporation, *429 Party of the First Part, in exchange for the Bond and Mortgage held by them:
“Now, therefore, in consideration of the premises and of the covenants hereinafter expressed, the said Parties to this Agreement do hereby mutually agree as follows:
“(1). That the authorized preferred stock of the company shall not be increased over $25,000.00 without the consent of the Parties of the Second Part.
“(2). That the Party of the First Part will pay and satisfy all tax liens against the said mortgaged property, as well as pay and satisfy the outstanding tax title by procuring either the cancellation thereof, or re-conveyance of the title to the Jersey Materials Company, so that the title to the said premises shall be free and unencumbered.
“3. The Party of the First Part shall place no mortgage against the said real estate without the consent of the Parties of the Second Part.
“4. The Party of the First Part shall re-assign to the Parties of the Second Part, all that certain stock of the Aim Syndicate originally delivered to the Party of the First Part by the Green Estate.
“5. The Parties of the Second Part agree to accept preferred stock of the Jersey Materials Company, at par, to the amount of the principal and accumulated interest due upon the Bond and Mortgage held by them against the property of the Party of the First Part, and upon the receipt thereof, will satisfy and cancel of record in the Clerk’s Office of Warren County, New Jersey, the Bond and Mortgage in the principal amount of $3,500.00 hereinbefore referred to and held by them, the said Parties of the Second Part.”

Schweyer and Krohn were practically the sole owners of the bankrupt corporation except for shares held by other members of their families. They were at odds and the feeling between them intensified after the execution of the foregoing agreement.

On October 17, 1941, the mortgage was assigned by the Greens to Walter L. Con-nor for the sum of $1,600. Connor also paid the sum of $100 for attorneys’ fees and other costs in his purchase of the mortgage.

On February 16, 1942, an involuntary petition in bankruptcy was filed against the Jersey Materials Company and it was adjudicated a bankrupt on March 5, 1942.

Connor claims the lien of the $3,500 mortgage, together with interest from 1936 in the sum of about $1,400, or an approximate aggregate figure of $4,900.

The trustee resisted the lien of the mortgage before the referee and the referee allowed the mortgage held by Connor as a lien against the real estate of the bankrupt only to the extent of $1,700 which he paid for it, together with interest upon his payment.

The matter is before me on a petition to review the order of the referee.

The circumstances under which Con-nor became possessed of the mortgage form the basis of the controversy. Schweyer and Connor were old friends. Connor was familiar with the affairs of the bankrupt company and the widening breach between Schweyer and Krohn. This had grown to the point where there was complete lack of cooperation between the two principal proprietors of the corporation.

The necessary arrangements to carry out the agreement with the Greens had not been fully consummated as between them and certainly no tender was ever made by the corporation to the Greens to complete the agreement, which would have transferred the status of the Greens from that of mortgagees to preferred stockholders.

Schweyer was in communication with the Greens about the disposition of their mortgage and, in fact, received a telephone call from one of them at the house of Connor where he was visiting in October of 1941. He told Connor immediately upon the termination of the telephone conversation that the Greens were willing to sell their mortgage at a decided discount. He urged Con-nor to buy the mortgage because he had been advised by his lawyer that as a director of the Corporation he could not legally make the purchase himself.

Connor had no money with which to make the purchase although he recognized that the sum necessary to satisfy the Greens, namely, $1,600, was a cheap price. Thereupon, Schweyer agreed to lend him the money to purchase the mortgage and subsequently arrangements were made by Schweyer with an attorney to oversee the transfer of the mortgage from the Greens to Connor.

Schweyer secured credit at a bank in the sum of $2,000 by way of a note, the full proceeds of which came into the hands of Connor who paid the consideration of $1,- *430 600 plus $100 in lawyers’ fees and costs and returned $300 to Schweyer. Connor says that at the time of the transaction he expected to be able to repay Schweyer out of the proceeds of a claim for reimbursement for hospitalization costs which he had paid on account of an injury to his son, occurring as a result of an accident. Both Con-nor and Schweyer testified that Schweyer had no interest whatsoever in this transaction.

The referee found nothing of an illegal character in this transaction and placed his decision to reduce the lien of the mortgage upon the ground that at the time Con-nor took the mortgage he did so subject to any outstanding equities against it. The referee felt that an equity “attached to this mortgage which would prevent. Connor from recovering more on the mortgage than he actually paid for it”. He held in effect that had the Greens endeavored to foreclose their mortgage in the face of the agreement which is above set forth, the Jersey Materials Company could have resisted the foreclosure and compelled them to take preferred stock.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 F. Supp. 428, 1943 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2660, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-jersey-materials-co-njd-1943.