In Re Shapiro & Ornish

37 F.2d 403, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1782
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Texas
DecidedJanuary 23, 1929
Docket2610
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 37 F.2d 403 (In Re Shapiro & Ornish) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Shapiro & Ornish, 37 F.2d 403, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1782 (N.D. Tex. 1929).

Opinion

*404 ATWELL, District Judge.

At a meeting certain creditors decided to contest the disr charge of the partnership and the individuals and directed the trustee to file specifications. These specifications rather generally object to the bankrupt’s application because it is alleged they made preferential payments to the North Texas National Bank, having a fund concealed somewhere, and failed to satisfactorily account for assets. The trust fund specification is merely assumed from facts which tend to show the disposition of a large amount of merchandise, at special sales, during the last two or three months before the filing of the petitions. There is no evidence upon which one may place his finger to substantiate or support this objection.

The other two are less nebulous. Irrefutable proof of the payments to the bank is in the reeord. That institution received $9;000 in various payments just a short time before the firm closed its doors. Some of the indebtedness was not due. That those payments were preferential within the terms of the law is not proven, the bank does not seem to have had any knowledge or intimation, for that matter, that the firm was insolvent, though one of the officers of the bank testified that he did have an inquiry from a seller of merchandise; to the cautious careful banker such an inquiry might have caused an arching of the eyebrows.

The reeord is full, however, of unsatisfactory information showing the sacrificial sale of vast quantities of merchandise. The bankrupts contend that all of these sales were made for cash and much below cost. The sales were evidently cash sales, but whether the merchandise was sold above or below cost is proven only and solely by the bankrupts themselves, and their attitude in the entire matter is such that any statement they make should be carefully weighed.

On the 1st of January, 1928, according to a statement made by the bankrupts to a commercial agency, for the purpose of securing credit, they showed more than $27,000 in merchandise, more than $6,000 in cash, and a comfortableness in the individual situations. During the year they bought more than $90,-000 worth of merchandise, and turned over to the trustee about $25,000 worth, with $60 in cash on hand. The year’s business shows a discrepancy of thousands of dollars. The only explanation that is afforded by the bankrupts is that during the last few months of the year, after there had been a water damage to one of their stocks, by reason of an overflow from a beauty shop on the upper floor, they sold merchandise below cost, and that the expenses and the water damage and the undereost sales furnish the reason for the discrepancy.

The reeord shows that within 60 days of the time of the filing of the voluntary petition each of the partners cashed in certain insurance policies; paid the balances upon two automobiles; settled the taxes upon their respective homes; paid various and sundry personal ,accounts; and one of them paid for a rather expensive pin for his wife. A part of this indebtedness, especially for the automobiles, was not yet due, and they secured cashier’s checks from their bank which they took to another bank where they paid this undue paper.

Each of the partners also testifies that he did not know that the firm was insolvent until the day before they filed the petition. This testimony is manifestly untrue, because the record discloses that many creditors were pressing them, and, while it is probable that some of the Dallas representatives of these creditors had secured the claims by solicita^tion, which is a rather questionable habit, yet the fact remains that both partners knew of this serious financial embarrassment, and were evidently shaping their affairs to do exactly what they did do.

Neither of the partners was able to give any fixed figure as the percentage at which they sold below cost. The reeord shows that sometimes they said 10 per cent., and sometimes 15 per cent., and sometimes 50 per cent. The person whom they had to keep their books knew nothing about the items that he put in the books, except what they gave him. He never checked the actual sales against the cash, nor did he know whether the sales exceeded the sale tickets that the partners gave him to enter. The figures furnished by the bankrupts themselves, if taken in lump, do show the losses that they claim, but no one can feel safe in accepting the same as correct.

The store at 1008 Elm street, where the water damaged goods were on sale, also, according to the bankrupts, was used as a place for the sale of other merchandise.

Here is a sample of the explanation:

“Q. Now you were depositing all of the money taken from the sale of merchandise in the North Texas National Bank. A. Yes, sir.

“Q. Less what, if anything? A. Less expense.

“Q. Paid out in cash? A. Yes, sir.

“Q. Now during the month of October, November, and December your firm had on a sale? A. Yes, sir.

*405 “Q. Why was the sale being put on at that time? A. To raise money to pay creditors.

“Q. Was it an ordinary sale like you have every year? A. No, sir.

“Q. What kind of a sale was it?. A. A half price sale.

“Q. What do you mean by that? A. We called it a half .price sale.

“Q. Were you selling your merchandise at half price? A. No, sir, not exactly half price.

“Q. Were you selling your merchandise at wholesale price, at half, or, what it cost you? A. No, sir.

“Q. About what were you selling it for? A. About ten or fifteen per cent, below the cost; some at cost, and some we made a little profit on.

“Q. What percentage did you sell below cost? A. Ten or fifteen per cent, below cost.

“Q. Of the wholesale cost? A. Yes, sir.

“Q. During October, November and December? A. Yes, sir.

“Q. That was true at all of the stores? A. Yes, sir, at the other store we sold below that, that was at 1008 Elm street.

“Q. You didn’t sell anything down there below cost except that damaged merchandise? A. Yes, sir, we sold standard merchandise below cost.

“Q. You had other merchandise that was not damaged? A. Yes, sir, we sold it in the same way we did in the other store.

“Q. The store that you were conducting down there as a damage sale store, at 1008 Elm street, you would take merchandise, not damaged, out of the other store, and sell it below cost? A. We took some hard merchandise over there we sold fifty per cent below cost, for any price we could get to get rid of hard stuff.”

Again:

“Q. Your firm had quite a net worth January 1st, 1927, didn’t it? A. Yes, sir.

“Q. About $40,000.00, according to your statement, or more? A. Net worth?

“Q. Yes, or more, in your statement of January 1st., 1927, you show a total net worth of $42,000.00, of which amount the two homesteads were listed at $23,000.00, leaving a net worth of the business of $19,492.-13; now from that time up to the time you went into bankruptcy that was completely wiped out, wasn’t it? A. Yes, sir.

“Q. And you find yourself owing over $60,000.00? A. Yes, sir.

“Q.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 F.2d 403, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1782, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-shapiro-ornish-txnd-1929.