In re Metallic Specialty Mfg. Co.

210 F. 663, 1914 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1199
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 23, 1914
DocketNo. 4189
StatusPublished

This text of 210 F. 663 (In re Metallic Specialty Mfg. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Metallic Specialty Mfg. Co., 210 F. 663, 1914 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1199 (E.D. Pa. 1914).

Opinion

J. B.- McPHERSON, Circuit Judge.

This controversy is over a claim made by Mary Needles against ,the bankrupt upon two promissory notes. The trustee attacked the claim on the ground that the debt had been released and canceled by Mrs. Needles on or about February 4, 1910. The facts will appear by the report of the referee (Edward F. Hoffman, Esq.):

“It appeared that Mrs. Needles was the mother-in-law of Marc Sternberg, the president of the corporation. She had been for years a confirmed.invalid, suffering from a rheumatic affliction, which confined her to her room and the use of a rolling chair for moving about in her residence. Her depositions were taken by me at her home, 1815 North Broad street, Philadelphia.
[664]*664“Prior to the loan in question she had derived a fund of some $17,000 from the sale of real estate, and there is no dispute as to the loan, nor the circumstances under which the notes in question were procured from her, and the occurrences at the meeting I have alluded to.
“The facts are, briefly, as-follows: The Metallic Specialty Manufacturing Company was a corporation with a stock issue of $250,000 divided into shares of the par value of $25 each. On or about the time that the loan was made, Mrs. Needles was given, as collateral for a loan of $11,000, 440 shares, or an equivalent to the amount of the loan, taking the stock at par value as collateral security.
“In February, 1910, the Metallic Specialty Manufacturing Company was financially embarrassed. It was being pressed by George S. Rominger for the collection of a claim of $12,948.32 for loans made by him to the corporation. He had placed the collection of his claim in the hands of Messrs. Simpson & Brown, attorneys, and Frederick W. Bauer, Esq., on behalf of this firm, issued a foreign attachment against the corporation.
“Ás a result of the legal proceedings, a proposition was made to Rominger that for the purpose of avoiding insolvency of the company several of its creditors should release their demands against the company if Rominger would withdraw his attachment and contribute the amount of $2,000 to enable the company to meet its pressing demands, the company to give him its notes for the. amount of his original demand with an added amount of $2,000 to be loaned by him. This negotiation with Rominger was conducted on the part of the company by Marc Sternberg, president.
“Of the claims to be released to carry out' this negotiation with Rominger it was stipulated in a written agreement that Mrs. Needles should surrender her notes in amount of $11,000 for cancellation. Mrs. Needles, however, was not on terms with her son-in-law, Marc Sternberg. She did not speak to him or have communication of any kind with him, nor was she informed of the transaction that was contemplated with Rominger.
“Mare Sternberg, who was optimistic as to the future of the company if rescued from its impending insolvency, resorted to a fraud to obtain the notes from his mother-in-law. He asked his wife to obtain the notes from her mother without giving to his wife information as to the purpose for which they were to be procured except that they were to be exhibited at a meeting.
“Mrs. Needles’ account of the circumstances under which the notes' were procured is as follows:
“ ‘My daughter asked me to let her have the notes to take over to the company, so they could show it to Rominger that I was not any larger creditor than $11;000.
“ ‘Q. Did she state who directed her to call upon you?’
“(Objected to.)
“ ‘A. The company.
“ ‘Q. Was anything said at the time about the return of the notes?
“ ‘A. She was to bring them back to me just as soon as she was through with them.’
“There is not a word in the testimony that shows that the notes were delivered for any other purpose than that of exhibiting them to show the amount of indebtedness.
“I find as a fact that Mrs. Needles delivered the notes for the sole purpose of allowing the notes to be exhibited to show the amount of the company’s indebtedness to her, and if any agency was created by delivery of the notes it was limited to authority only to exhibit them to show amount of indebtedness. The notes having been thus obtained by Mrs. Sternberg were placed in the possession of Marc Sternberg, who in turn took them to the meeting arranged to be held on the 4th of February, 1910.
“He reported to the meeting that he produced Mrs. Needles’ notes for cancellation in accordance with the negotiation that had been arranged and without any inquiry as to his authority to deliver the notes other than the possession of them, the signatures were torn off the notes, and they were thereby-considered as canceled, and Rominger carried out the agreement he had made [665]*665as to the cash contribution and the raising of the foreign attachment against the property.
“A few days after she had delivered these notes, Mrs. Needles made inquiry from her daughter as to the return of the notes. She was first met with evasive answers, and finally, Mrs. Needles having threatened legal proceedings to procure the return of the notes, her daughter told her if she would let her have the stock she would give her new notes. ■ Thereupon Mrs. Needles gave the daughter the 440 shares of stock and new notes were given to her in the amounts of the notes that had been previously trusted to the daughter, but nothing was- said to her at any time about the agreement with Kominger or the cancellation of the original notes.
“From the facts I have found I cannot see any terms of agency under which the notes were delivered that could enable Sternberg to affect Mrs. Needles’ claim on the notes. If agent at all, he was simply an agent for the custody of the notes. They were obtained from Mrs. Needles by a mere trick devised by Marc Sternberg, and perpetrated through the intervention of the daughter, whom she trusted, and through whom they were obtained without any authority from the party giving the transfer to make any other use of the notes except to exhibit them to show the amount of the company’s indebtedness.
‘•Under these circumstances, I do not see that there is any question of agency in the ease.
"When the notes were produced at the meeting, it was incumbent upon the parties interested in the negotiation to show that the debt of which the notes were an evidence were properly released. Mere delivery of the notes without establishing the authority of the holder of the notes to deliver them is not a valid delivery for the purpose of canceling the debt. It is not surprising that when Sternberg produced his mother-in-law’s notes at the meeting, offering them for cancellation, that it was taken for granted he did so with the sanction of Mrs. Needles; but this assumption was at the risk of those who acted on it, as the mere possession of a paper that does not pass by delivery does not impart authority to release or collect the debt of which it is the evidence.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Miller Piano Co. v. Parker
26 A. 303 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1893)
Investment Co. v. Eldridge
34 A. 629 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1896)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
210 F. 663, 1914 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-metallic-specialty-mfg-co-paed-1914.