In re Judicial Settlement of the Account of Parascandola

223 A.D. 654
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 31, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 223 A.D. 654 (In re Judicial Settlement of the Account of Parascandola) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of 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 Judicial Settlement of the Account of Parascandola, 223 A.D. 654 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

Young, J.

The decedent, Joseph Auditore, died on May 9,1920, leaving a will which was duly probated. The executors and trustees appointed by the will renounced, and, on August 18, 1920, letters of administration c. t. a. were issued to Guisippina Auditore and Frank Auditore, and they filed a bond for $500,000 with the National Surety Company as surety. On June 16, 1925, upon the petition of his coadministratrix, Frank Auditore was removed as administrator upon the ground that he had wasted the assets of the estate in his hands. The decree for his removal required that the administrators should immediately account. The administratrix filed her account, but Frank Auditore filed none. Since her appointment, the administratrix has married and is now the petitioner in this proceeding.

The question involved in this appeal relates to the charge against Frank Auditore for alleged misappropriations of funds and property belonging to the estate.

At the time of the decedent’s death he had a fifty per cent stock interest in the Auditore Contracting Company, a New York corporation, and his brother Frank, one of the appellants here, held the other fifty per cent. From May, 1920, to November, 1923, [656]*656Frank was president, treasurer and one of the three directors of the company, and Joseph G. Stockham, who was completely under his control, was secretary and a second director. During this period, Frank completely dominated the affairs of the corporation. In November, 1922, he caused all the assets of the Auditore Contracting Company to be nominally transferred, without any real consideration, to-the Auditore Company, Inc., a Delaware corporation of which he held the entire capital stock of ten shares. In October, 1923, he caused all the stevedoring assets then held by the Auditore Company to be again transferred by that company, for a pretended consideration of $1,000, to the Auditore Company, Inc., a New York corporation of which he took all the capital stock. During the above period, he also looted the Auditore Contracting Company and its successor companies. This was determined in an action brought by the administratrix, the petitioner here, as a stockholder, in behalf of the corporation, against him and others to recover the moneys and property of the corporation converted by him. This action resulted in a decision and judgment against Auditore and Stockham in which it was decreed that they return something over $340,000 to the corporation. The judgment also provided for a body execution, and, although they were arrested and incarcerated, nothing has ever been collected.

The surrogate has found that the amount which should be chargeable against Frank Auditore as administrator and against his surety, the National Surety Company, is one-half of the sums diverted from the corporation, which with interest aggregate $416,287.51, and that such one-half, $208,143.75, except for his diversion, would have come to the estate.

The judgment in the Supreme Court action adjudged that the estate was entitled to fifty per cent of the stock interest of the Auditore Company of Delaware, and also of the New York corporation of the same name, and, pursuant to the judgment, stock certificates therefor were delivered to the administratrix.

The decree, entered upon the decision of the surrogate, so far as material upon this appeal, directs Frank Auditore to pay to the administratrix the amount found due by him, and also that the National Surety Company,' the surety upon his bond, pay the administratrix the said sum less certain amounts allowed to it for premiums on the bond. It further directs that the sum directed to be paid by Frank Auditore and the surety company be deposited upon its receipt by the administratrix in the National City Bank, People’s Trust Branch, subject to the further order of the court.

There is no dispute of fact except on the part of Frank Auditore, [657]*657who claims, among other things, that the evidence is insufficient to support the findings against him; but I do not deem it essential to review the evidence in this respect. There is abundant evidence to support the finding that he converted these funds of the corporation, of which he was an officer and a director, and the finding in this respect is the same as that in the Supreme Court action. Of course, there is the question whether this evidence of diversion from the corporation constitutes a conversion of the funds of the estate, but that is not a question of fact, and there is, therefore, involved only questions of law on this appeal.

The theory upon which this case was decided is, in effect, that the corporations which Frank Auditore looted had but two stockholders, the estate and himself; that at the time of the misappropriations he was administrator and represented the estate; that, during the joint lives of Frank and the decedent, they appropriated to themselves, by various irregular devices, funds of the company of which they were the sole stockholders, and, after the decedent’s death, Frank continued these practices but retained all the money withdrawn; that while these acts of decedent and Frank .in so distributing the funds of the company without a declaration of dividends were illegal, if no rights other than those of the stockholders were affected no one could be heard to complain, and that it was in effect an informal and irregular distribution of assets without any formal dividends. After decedent’s death, Frank represented all the stock, holding half in his own right and the other half as administrator, and when he, by any artifice, distributed the assets of the corporation, the distribution was as much to himself in his representative capacity as to himself individually, and that the estate, as the owner of half of the stock, was entitled to receive one-half of all sums distributed and that the separate entity of the corporation might be disregarded, and that, when he distributed the funds of the corporation, one-half thereof became subject to a constructive trust for the benefit of the estate. The learned surrogate then referred to the rights of creditors and said that their rights were involved as well as those of stockholders, and that, while their extent was not proven, they were asserted to exist and that the amount distributed by Frank which should have gone to creditors cannot be charged with the trust; that whatever amount was distributed from the assets of the corporations by the means adopted in excess of the amount due creditors must be, to the extent of half thereof, treated as a dividend due and diverted from the estate, and be surcharged against Frank Auditore, and that the amount due creditors of the corporation might be determined upon subsequent hearings.

[658]*658This ruling presents a novel and interesting question. While the Supreme Court judgment directed Frank Auditore to repay, these funds to the corporation, he has never done so, and the corporation has never been able to collect that judgment although he has been arrested and incarcerated thereunder. May we not, therefore, for the purpose of this proceeding, treat these funds as still in his hands, and determine that one-half of them belong to the estate, since he and the estate are the only stockholders and the only persons interested in the corporation (aside from the creditors, to which subject I will advert later)? The learned surrogate has treated this fund in Frank Auditore’s hands as an informal or irregular dividend or distribution of the corporate assets between the two stockholders, and a theft by him of the estate’s share.

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Bluebook (online)
223 A.D. 654, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-judicial-settlement-of-the-account-of-parascandola-nyappdiv-1928.