In re Ketchum

1 F. 815, 1880 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 40
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJanuary 10, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1 F. 815 (In re Ketchum) 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 Ketchum, 1 F. 815, 1880 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 40 (S.D.N.Y. 1880).

Opinion

Choate, J.

This is a proceeding to expunge two proofs of debt made and filed by Morris Ketchum. The bankrupts, Franklin M. Ketchum and Thomas Belknap, Jr., were partners, composing the firm of Ketchum & Belknap, and they were adjudicated bankrupts on the petition of Ketchum, one of the partners, filed August 31,1878. They did business as stock-brokers, in the city of New York, down to the twenty-fourth of July, 1878, when they failed. The proofs of debt now objected to were sworn to by Morris Ketchum and filed July 30,1879. One is for the sum of $8,612.37, alleged to be due “upon an account stated between deponent and said Ketchum & Belknap, of which account a copy is hereto annexed.” [816]*816Annexed to the proof is an account showing sundry items of cash debit and credit between the dates of June 2, 1875, and July 24, 1878, with a balance struck July 24, 1878, to the credit of Morris Ketehum, of $8,549.21, to which interest is added to August 31, 1878, making in all the sum mentioned in the proof of debt, $8,612.37. The second proof of debt is for $27l,080.69, alleged to be due as “the proceeds of certain stocks and securities which the said Ketehum & Belknap held for this deponent, and belonging to him, which were sold and disposed of by the said Ketehum & Belknap, and said proceeds appropriated to their own use. ”

There is little or no dispute about the facts. The firm of Ketehum & Belknap was in business from some time in the year 1871 to the time of their failure, except for a period of about eight months after the panic of 1873, when they suspended business. The partner Ketehum had a seat in the stock board, and attended almost exclusively to buying and selling stocks for customers, and other business of the firm out of the office. Belknap attended almost exclusively to the ,business in the office,- the financial affairs of the firm, the raising of money, the drawing of checks, and the charge of the bank account. For several years prior to the failure this alleged creditor, Morris Ketehum, who was the father of Ketehum, the bankrupt, employed the bankrupt Belknap, individually, as his agent and attorney to attend to some parts of his business. He entrusted to Belknap, individually, for safe keeping, large amounts of stocks and securities, which Belknap kept in a tin box, of which he retained the key. The box was deposited in a safe in the office of the firm, to which safe both the partners had access.

Morris Ketehum also kept. a deposit account with the Fourth National Bank of New York City, and Belknap individually acted as his attorney in drawing out moneys from this account, upon checks signed by him, in the name oi Morris Ketehum. This part of the business done by him for Morris Ketehum was transacted under a power of attorney, executed before the formation of the firm, which authorized Thomas Belknap, Jr., and Franklin M. Ketehum, severally, [817]*817to draw and indorse checks and drafts. This power was, in fact, not acted on by Franklin M. Ketehum, but by Belknap alone. Belknap had no authority, as between himself and Morris Ketehum, to draw out any money from the bank, except for the proper use and benefit of Morris Ketehum, nor had he any authority to use or dispose of said stocks and securities except by order of Morris Ketehum. Belknap, without the knowledge or consent of Morris Ketehum, from time to time drew checks, in Morris Ketchum’s name, against this bank account for various sums of money, and deposited said checks to the credit of the firm of Ketehum & Belknap in the same bank, where they also kept their bank account. These transactions were wholly without the knowledge of Franklin M. Ketehum until after the failure of the firm, when Belknap informed his partner and Morris Ketehum of the fact that he had misappropriated these funds to the use of the firm by depositing them in their bank account.

Belknap, also, without the knowledge or consent of Morris Ketehum, or of his partner, Franklin M. Ketehum, sold and disposed of some of the stocks and securities belonging to Morris Ketehum, in his possession, and deposited the proceeds of them in the bank account of the firm, and used others of these stocks and securities by hypothecating them with the Fourth National Bank for loans to the firm; and, at the time of the failure of the firm, some of the stocks thus hypothecated were still held by the bank as security for such loans. The proof of debt first above stated, being the balance of an alleged account, consists wholly of moneys thus transferred by means of checks drawn as aforesaid from the account of Morris Ketehum to the account of the firm. The proof of debt second above stated is for the value of the securities so sold, and their proceeds deposited in the firm’s bank account, and of those hypothecated with the .bank as security for its loans to the firm. At the time of the failure the firm was largely indebted to the bank for over drafts, besides the secured debt above stated.

After the failure and before the filing of the petition in [818]*818bankruptcy, Belknap made entries in the books of the firm crediting Morris Ketebum with the amounts of the several checks misapplied by him as aforesaid, and also entered upon the books of the firm, as of the date of July 2á, 1878, a credit of Morris Ketehum “for sundry stocks and bonds, $26,822.50.” It is not shown when these entries were made, except that they were in August, 1878, and before the filing of the petition in bankruptcy by Franklin M. Ketehum. In the schedule of debts annexed to his petition the bankrupt Ketehum included the following as unsecured claims of Morris Ketehum: “Sales of sundry stocks and bonds belonging to said Morris Ketehum, and which Ketehum & Belknap were unable to return credited at market value, on July 21, 1878, $26,822.50; interest to August 31, 1878, $198.19.” “Balance of book account, receipts and payments of money on July 21, 1878, $8,519.21; interest to August 31, 1878, $63.16.” Another unsecured claim of Morris Ketehum is included as to which no question is raised, with the exception of the entries thus made in the books of the firm.

After the failure and the insertion of these items in this schedule of the firm debts, nothing was done by either partner, so far as the evidence shows, by way of adoption by the firm of these contested claims, nor was any account rendered by the firm to Morris Ketehum, or any agreement made between him and the firm in respect to said moneys so received by the firm, or in respect to said securities, other than such as may be, if any, implied by law from the foregoing facts. Franklin M. Ketehum testified that, at the time he inserted these items in the schedule, he knew of the entries made in the books by Belknap, and he put these claims in the schedule because he believed the firm to be liable for the money and stocks to Morris Ketehum. It also appeared, by the evidence, that, at the time of making the schedule, Franklin M. Ketehum knew, by the confession of Belknap, that the money and the stocks had been wrongfully used by Belknap, and that the proceeds had gone into the bank account of the firm. Belknap drew from the firm bank account for his own use, and for the use of the firm, at all times indiscriminately, and [819]

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Bluebook (online)
1 F. 815, 1880 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-ketchum-nysd-1880.