In re Shaw

9 F. 495, 21 F. Cas. 1188, 1881 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 207
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedOctober 18, 1881
StatusPublished

This text of 9 F. 495 (In re Shaw) 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 Shaw, 9 F. 495, 21 F. Cas. 1188, 1881 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 207 (S.D.N.Y. 1881).

Opinion

Brown, D. J.

The sale of the stock and fixtures to Smith, for the sum of $58,228.50, would not be disturbed on the ground of inadequacy of price. This sum is more than there is any probability an assignee in bankruptcy could have made out of the property; and the evidence does not show its value was any more than that, if as much, considered as a gross sale of the whole stock in bulk. The sale is shown to have been a device merely to avoid immediate sale on execution in suits pending against the firm. • On this ground it might- probably have been avoided by judgment creditors, or by an assignee in bankruptcy; but it was in fact made, as the evidence shows, in the interest of the general creditors, and was, doubtless, so regarded by them. Smith was an employe of the firm. His notes, secured by mortgage on the stock, represented the whole price, and the possession' was practically unchanged. It is scarcely possible that any. creditor could have been deceived or misled by this thin disguise; and had there been any desire to disturb the arrangement so made, the creditors would have proceeded to choose an assignee in bankruptcy to set it aside. Instead of doing so they voted almost unanimously to accept a composition of 15 per cent. This was done with full knowledge of all the essential facts. The notes represented the full value of the stock. The schedules and the chattel mortgage apprised the creditors of the main facts; and had they desired any further information they, should have examined the bankrupts before accepting the composition, as the law provides they may do, and intends they shall then do, as to any mattters concerning which further information is needed. Section 5103; Ex parte Walter, 34 L. T. (N. S.) 701.

[497]*497There is nothing, however, in the evidence, even as it now appears, so far as respects the amount of the bankrupt’s estate, which would vary essentially the apparent amount of assets. The schedules showed about $70,000 estimated assets, of which $58,000 were notes of Smith, secured by the mortgage, being about 30 per cent, on the entire indebtedness; and that is the amount of dividend which Peyser, the petitipner, testifies Shaw told him the estate would pay. Page 453. The creditors, including the petitioner, with all this in full view, nevertheless voted to accept 15 per cent, cash, and the composition -was approved by the court and paid. If any creditor was dissatisfied, on the ground that the estate would net a sum more nearly approaching to what the schedules showed, viz., twice the amount offered as a composition, it was his right and his duty to present his objections at the time. Least of all can a creditor, who, like the petitioner, voted for the composition and received payment with full knowledge of the schedule estimates, and after being told by the bankrupts that the estate would pay 30 per cent., be now heard in seeking to set the composition aside for mere inadequacy, and because the amount so offered and paid was not as much as the schedules indicated might have been offered; and the evidence does not prove any better condition of the assets substantially than the schedules indicated, if in fact as good. In the figures exhibited as to the subsequent business, no account is taken of expenses. In re Herman, 17 N. B. R. 440; In re Marionneaux, 13 N. B. R. 222.

The only additional ground for setting the composition aside is, as the petition alleges, that two creditors, the Whiting Paper Company and the L. L. Brown Paper Company, fraudulently represented to the petitioner that they were willing to take 15 per cent., whereas they were fraudulently conspiring to procure the assets for their own use by paying other creditors 15 per cent., in order to make their own debt in full. The evidence fails to establish any such design or result, or any case of fraud or conspiracy. Mr. Whiting and Mr. Brown, the active representatives of those two companies, made no representations of any kind to the petitioner, nor, as appears, to any other creditor, except undertaking to see the composition paid. After the adjudication in bankruptcy, these two companies signed the paper for a voluntary compromise at 15 per cent., which was not acted on because the signatures of some creditors, of whom the petitioner was one, could not be and were not obtained. The evidence does not show that anything more than possible proceedings in bank[498]*498ruptcy were contemplated at the time of the sale to Smith.' Had the plan alleged by the petitioner been in existence prior to the bankruptcy proceedings, viz., a plan to force a settlement at 15 per cent, for the benefit of Shaw, Whiting, and Brown, it is inconceivable that Shaw, after the bankruptcy, should have told Peyser, as the latter testifies, that the assets would pay 30 per cent. Page 453. This fact proves that there was no such plan, and confirms the direct testimony that the arrangement for paying the composition originated after the bankruptcy, and grew naturally out of the situation.

The evidence shows that these two companies found it greatly to their interest to maintain Mr. Shaw’s large trade, if possible, as that was the principal outlet for the sale of their manufactures. They had aided Mr. Shaw before, and now, to keep up their business, Mr. Brown and Mr. Whiting, individually, were willing to advance 15 per cent, cash and.take the assets for their indemnity. There is no evidence of concealment, collusion, or unfair advantage on their part over other creditors. At a meeting of creditors at the Fifth Avenue Hotel this arrangement was openly discussed. Mr. Whiting and Mr. Brown were desired to name some sum which they would advance and take the assets, and one other creditor is specified who was desired by them to join in raising the money, but declined.

A bankrupt from whom a composition is received is necessarily at liberty to deal with his assets as he' chooses, — that is, his means of payment; and where cash is offered it is to be presumed that it is done by some immediate pledge or transfer of his assets. How or with whom this is effected is wholly immaterial to his creditors, so long as no fraud or unfairness is practiced upon them. In re Reiman, 11 N. B. R. 21, 45; In re Van Auken, 14 N. B. R. 425; Ex parte Hamlin, 16 N. B. R. 320, 322.

From the known fact that Shaw & Co. had no money themselves; that cash was the offered composition, — from the open talk by other creditors with Whiting and Brown in regard to their advancing the money, and the failure to examine the bankrupts in regard to their means of paying the offered composition, — it may fairly be assumed that the creditors generally either knew that Whiting and Brown were to advance the money, or else were too indifferent to make any inquiry on the subject. There being no fraud and no concealment, they are chargeable with knowledge of what they would easily have ascertained upon inquiry. And it could not have been supposed that Whiting and Brown would advance some $30,000 to other cred[499]*499itors except upon some arrangement to take the assets for their indemnity. Under the circumstances of the case the assent of the creditors thereto is, I think, to be plainly inferred; and in what manner they afterwards dealt with the assets, whether forming a company or corporation either with or without Mr. Shaw, is immaterial. Had Brown and Whiting individually been creditors, the case is therefore not essentially different from what an express arrangement between them and the other creditors would have been for them to advance the composition on the strength of tho assets.

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Related

In re Herman
12 F. Cas. 18 (S.D. New York, 1878)
In re Van Auken
28 F. Cas. 946 (W.D. Michigan, 1876)

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Bluebook (online)
9 F. 495, 21 F. Cas. 1188, 1881 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-shaw-nysd-1881.