In re Pincus

147 F. 621, 1906 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 125
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedSeptember 4, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 147 F. 621 (In re Pincus) 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 Pincus, 147 F. 621, 1906 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 125 (S.D.N.Y. 1906).

Opinion

HOUGH, District Judge.

These bankrupts filed with the referee in charge, and about five months after adjudication, the petition under review. No action by the court was taken thereon, until more than a year after adjudication, and the objecting creditors now contend that the filing with the referee was insufficient to confer jurisdiction, and the petition should be dismissed as not having been preferred within the statutory year. It is true that the referee “as referee” has no power to consider the petition. Collier on Bank. (5th Ed.) p. 171. But within this district, and by force of district rule 11 in bankruptcy, the office of the referee is the office of the court. The objection is overruled.

On and prior to July 1, 1903, the bankrupts were trading under the firm name of “Castle Manufacturing Company.” The petition in involuntary proceedings which brought them into this court runs against the bankrupts as partners only. The prayer of the petition is that the “firm of Castle Manufacturing Company” be adjudged bankrupt, and the adjudication declares that the petitioners “doing business under the firm name of Castle Manufacturing Company are declared bankrupts accordingly.” This is therefore a proceeding- against a partnership under the authority of section 5 of the bankruptcy act (Act July 1, 1898, c. 541, 30 Stat. 547, 548 [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 3424]). On or about July 1, 1903, a statement of the financial condition of this firm was prepared, which the special commissioner reports as true when prepared. I concur in his finding of fact.

On and before July 1, 1903, a large part of the assets of the firm consisted of a loan made to it by Bernstein, one of the partners. Inasmuch as the partner’s right to repayment was subordinate to the claims of creditors of the partnership, this advance (consisting of $10,000) was rightly treated in the statement above referred to (as well as in preceding statements) as an asset. On the 3d of August, 1903, Bernstein’s loan to the firm became, by an instrument of transfer in which all of the petitioners joined, the loan of an outsider (i. e., of Bernstein’s uncle), and the asset of $10,000 immediately became a liability for the same amount, ranking with the demands of persons who sold goods to the partnership, and a claim for the same has been proved herein by the assignee.'

The Credit Clearing House is a mercantile agency, having for its object, inter alia, the collection of information regarding mercantile establishments for the guidance of its subscribers, who are known as “associate members.” On or about July 11, 1903, the bankrupt firm furnished to the Credit Clearing House the correct statement of their assets and liabilities as made up on or about July 1st. This statement is extremely definite, is in effect a brief trial balance, and was compiled with the assistance of an expert accountant.

[623]*623At the foot of this very definite statement is appended the following:

“The above is a full and correct statement of our financial condition and is made to form a basis for credit with the associate members of the Credit Clearing House.
•‘[Signed]
Castle Manufacturing Company,
“By Albert Bernstein, Member of Firm.”

On November 12, 1903, the firm furnished to one of the objecting creditors a statement identical in figures with the one given in July to the Credit Clearing House, and, indeed, from July, 1903, down to the time of failure, this statement appears to have been available to any creditor or merchant who chose to inquire for it. At the foot of this last-mentioned copy of the statement is appended the following:

“The above is a full and correct statement of our financial condition on the first day of July 1903, and is made to form a basis for credit with Sherman, Bold, & Company.
“[Signed]
Castle Manufacturing Co., by Albert Bernstein.
“Date, New York, Nov. 12, 1903.”

This last statement was furnished to a Mr. Chaffee, of the firm named. " His firm was an associate member of the Credit Clearing House. He had had prior to July 1, 1903, a series of reports from the bankrupt firm, and in those earlier reports definite statements had been made regarding Bernstein’s loan “at the risk of the business,” which formed so large a part of the bankrupts’ assets, and he knew that the firm reported to the “Clearing House.” In December, 1903, therefore, he called upon the manager of the Credit Clearing House, a Mr. Wheeler, and inquired whether a statement regarding this loan appeared upon the last report made by the bankrupts. Wheeler said it did not. Chaffee asked him to go and find out about the matter. Thereupon, in the latter part of December, Wheeler called upon Bernstein with the report of July 11th, and asked regarding the loan. Bernstein took from Chaffee the original signed statement of July 11th and wrote upon it (and above his firm signature at the foot thereof) the following words:

“The additional loan of $10,000 is included in above amount and has been renewed.”

Wheeler communicated the result of this visit to Chaffee; and Sherman, Reid & Co. thereupon sold goods to the bankrupts, the price of which constitutes a provable debt that has never been paid; and the evidence here is that such sales were made upon the faith both of the mercantile agency report and of the statement dated November 12, 1903.

Upon these facts it is asserted that discharge should not be granted because of the material falsity, within the meaning of section 14b (3) of the bankruptcy act (Act July 1, 1898, c. 541, 30 Stat. 550 [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 3427], as amended by Act Feb. 5, 1903, c. 487, § 4, 32 Stat 797 [U. S. Comp. St. Supp. 1905, p. 684]), of (1) the statement made to the Credit Clearing House in December, 1903, by addendum to the report of July 11, 1903, and (2) the statement made to Sherman, Reid & Co. on November 12, 1903.

[624]*624On August 3, 1903, the statement of July 1st became ancient history, and any further use of it as a basis for credit, dishonest. If on November 12th deceptive oral representations had been made by the petition- ' ers in response to natural inquiries regarding the Bernstein loan, questions would be raised that need not be here discussed. Nothing-happened on November 12th which could justify Sherman, Reid & Co. in regarding the instrument as anything but what it literally purported to be — a statement true on July 1st. If the creditors chose to make no contemporaneous inquiry, while candidly admitting that the divergence of dates was noticed, it must be inferred that they regarded the partnership condition in July as a basis for credit in November. Another creditor (Simpson’s Sons & Co.) received in January, 1904; from the bankrupts another copy of the statement of July 1st. They likewise seem to have been content to get a report purporting on- its face to be six months’ old, to make no inquiry, and accept it as a basis for January sales. All objections based on transactions other than the statement of December, 1903, to Wheeler of the Credit Clearing House are overruled.

That Bernstein’s statement of December, made in response to Wheeler’s inquiry, was materially false, is scarcely denied.

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Bluebook (online)
147 F. 621, 1906 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-pincus-nysd-1906.