In re Shachter

119 F. 1010, 1902 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 290
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Georgia
DecidedDecember 8, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 119 F. 1010 (In re Shachter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Shachter, 119 F. 1010, 1902 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 290 (N.D. Ga. 1902).

Opinion

NEWMAN, District Judge.

This is a rule for contempt against Joseph Shachter, against whom a petition in involuntary bankruptcy was filed on September 16, 1902, and who was subsequently, on October 7th, adjudged a bankrupt. This rule for contempt was filed on September 17th, the next day after the petition in bankruptcy was filed, and after the receiver was appointed to take charge of the stock ■of goods of the bankrupt. The substance of the petition against the bankrupt, now under consideration, and of certain amendments filed thereto, is that the bankrupt had possession or control of a considerable amount of merchandise and cash, which he was secreting, and had failed to turn over to the receiver. The bankrupt appeared in response to the rule, and was represented by counsel. A considerable amount of evidence was offered by the petitioning creditors who hrought the rule, and the bankrupt testified at considerable length in his own behalf. While the testimony of a brother of the bankrupt, Philip Shachter, was being taken, it developed that a considerable amount of money had been deposited in the Fourth National Bank of Atlanta in the name of Philip Shachter, which had been given to Philip by the bankrupt, $ioo of it on the day the-petition in bankruptcy [1011]*1011was filed, $500 on September 12th, and $825 on September 13th. All of this money had been quite recently withdrawn from the Fourth National Bank, and, after Philip Shachter on the stand had made several contradictory statements about the matter, it finally resulted that the wife of the bankrupt, who was in court, produced and gave to the clerk of the court, through the bankrupt’s counsel, $895 in currency which she had on her person, and which it was conceded was a part of the money given by the bankrupt to Philip Shachter, and by Philip Shachter deposited in the Fourth National Bank in his name, and subsequently withdrawn. Philip Shachter produced while on the stand a check for $500 given by one Philip Bison, on the Fourth National Bank, for $500, which he stated also represented a part of the money so withdrawn. This check was cashed by the clerk by consent of counsel, and this amount of $500, together with the $895, subsequently turned over to the receiver in this case. Thirty dollars, therefore, of the $1,425 was unaccounted for, and had been used in some way after it was withdrawn from the bank.

The claim for the petitioning creditors is that the bankrupt had quite recently, during the month of August and in September prior to the filing of the petition in bankruptcy, bought a large amount of new goods, and that at the time the petition in bankruptcy was filed a very considerable amount of this new stock was not in the store, although it had so recently been delivered there. The evidence shows that the bankrupt had recently purchased $7,807.94 worth of new goods, all of which goods were delivered in the store from the 19th of August up to the day before the petition in bankruptcy was filed. One bill, amounting to $215, was delivered at the store August 19th, and one, amounting to $291, was delivered on August 23d. All the other new goods purchased were delivered subsequent to August 24th.

For the purpose of being used on the hearing of this rule, the receiver was directed to have an inventory made of the stock of goods on hand when the receiver was appointed. The goods on hand were valued by the appraisers at $2,750, and there was an additional amount for fixtures. It is claimed that neither the amount allowed for goods nor for fixtures represented the costs; but it is immaterial about this, in the view I have taken of the matter. It may be assumed for present purposes that the bankrupt had' sold none of his old stock whatever from the time he began to receive new goods up to the time the receiver was appointed and took charge. If he had sold any of the old stock which he had on hand when he began to receive the new goods, it would simply operate against him, and make him account for more cash than I shall hold him responsible for.

The bankrupt had bought, as stated, $7,807.94 of new goods, which had been delivered, as shown by the railroad receipts, to his store, and had become a part of his stock. Several invoices of goods were either in the depots in Atlanta when the receiver was appointed or w.ere delivered afterwards, and have been since either stopped in transit or turned back by the court to the sellers, upon the ground that it was clearly a case in which no title had passed, under the circumstances of the case, to the bankrupt. Persons familiar with the bankrupt’s stock, especially one gentleman who had worked for the bankrupt in [1012]*1012May and June, were questioned as to the amount of new goods in the store at the time the inventory was taken. The highest amount placed on the new goods in the store by any one was $300 or $400, the gentleman most familiar with the stock putting it at much less than this amount. For the purpose of dealing with the utmost fairness with the bankrupt in this proceeding, I shall assume that there were $500 worth of new goods in the store at the time the receiver took charge, although there is no- reliable evidence whatever in the record from which to conclude that it amounted to over $400.

The bankrupt took the stand in his own behalf, and undertook to account for the disappearance of these new goods in so short a period, and his explanation was this: He said he had sold, and he read from a slip of paper which he held in his hand the names of parties to whom he had sold, goods which cost' in the aggregate $4,344, and from which he had received $2,059 i*1 cash, and $574 was still due him by persons to whom he sold the goods. A calculation shows that the goods were sold, according to his own statement, for 29 per cent, below cost. The goods were sold, according to the statement of the bankrupt, in lots to peddlers, whom he named, as follows: Bressler, Constangy, Feldman, Niesbaum, Lavigne, P. Stein, Yallowitz, Bloomberg, Gritzman, P. Ruse, Zadick, Morris, A. Feller, John Robinson, Beaman, and Sinkovitz. The bankrupt in his evidence said that he did very little business during July and August, except what he sold at wholesale. He says: “Some days I didn’t take in two dollars. The most of it I sold at wholesale to peddlers.” But his counsel claim that he ought to be allowed for goods sold in the ordinary course of business in the store, $1,500, from which they say he wouid have realized $1,197. How this calculation is made does not appear in any way, and, so far as I can see, it is not supported by the evidence; but I shall give him the benefit of it for the purpose of disposing of this rule. This $1,500 will be added, therefore, to the $4,344, making $5,844.

The bankrupt claims that h‘e had shipped $400 worth of these new goods at cost price to his brother I. M. Shachter, in Jersey City, N. J., to pay on an indebtedness to his brother. Allowing him the benefit of this very doubtful transaction, it would increase the amount of these new goods accounted for to $6,244. Assuming that in the stock turned over to the receiver there was new goods amounting at cost price to $500, this would make an aggregate of $6,744, and this is allowing the bankrupt everything he claims as to goods sold and shipped out in lots, his counsel’s own estimate as to the amount sold in regular trade, and a very liberal estimate for new goods on-hand. The balance unaccounted, therefore, of the goods received in the store within a few weeks before the bankruptcy proceedings were instituted, is $1,063.94.

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Bluebook (online)
119 F. 1010, 1902 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-shachter-gand-1902.