In re Stafford

226 F. 127, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1141
CourtDistrict Court, D. Connecticut
DecidedSeptember 1, 1915
DocketNo. 3239
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 226 F. 127 (In re Stafford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Stafford, 226 F. 127, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1141 (D. Conn. 1915).

Opinion

THOMAS, District Judge.

This matter is now before the court on a motion to confirm the report of the special master, on a reference to hear the evidence and make a finding and report on specifications filed by cerlain creditors in opposition to the bankrupt’s dis[128]*128charge. The master found that the grounds of objection were not sustained, and recommended that the bankrupt be granted his discharge.

The evidence shows that tire bankrupt, as president of G. A. Stafford & Co., a corporation, signed and sent to each of the objecting creditors on January 22, 1913, a written statement which purported to show the financial condition of the corporation on December 31, 1912, all the statements being identical in form and substance; die original having been submitted to and approved of by one Jerome, the financial adviser of the corporation, whose advice it was accustomed to follow in all financial matters, and to whom it paid a salary for acting as its financial adviser, and at the same time Jerome was and had been a stockholder and director of the Chatham & Phoenix National Bank, one of the objecting creditors, and was and had been on its discount committee, and it was he who arranged in the first instance with that bank, and with the other objecting creditors, for the lines of credit which they extended the corporation in the discounting of its paper, all of which bore bankrupt’s indorsement.

The statements were gotten up by the corporation’s bookkeeping department, under Jerome’s supervision, and bankrupt supposed and believed them to contain a true statement of the corporation’s condition as shown by its books. They were not correct, however, in that although, on December 31, 1912, the corporation owed $159,517.70 on account of loans made to it by two banking firms in December, 1912, no part thereof was-included in the total of the liabilities set forth in the statements, nor did any of said statements include, either under the. head of “Accounts Receivable” or otherwise, accounts which tire corporation had assigned to the concerns making these cash advancements, as security for payment of their loans, with this exception, that the excess of the face value of the accounts thus assigned, amounting to about $14,000, over and above the indebtedness owed on these loans, went to make up the total of the item therein termed “Accounts Receivable,” although the statements did not specifically so state.

Bankrupt knew of these facts, but he believed that, where accounts' were so assigned, they Recame the property of the person to whom assigned, and that no part thereof belonged to the corporation, other than whatever the excess might be, in face value, over and above the indebtedness to secure which they had been assigned. ■

The result was that the statements, correct in other respects, in so far as is here material, accounted for only the assumed equity in the assigned accounts, instead of' putting the entire amount thereof' on one side of the statements and the indebtedness to secure which they were assigned on the other, so that they contained nothing from which any knowledge could be obtained, by persons not otherwise acquainted with the facts, that the corporation had pledged some part of its “accounts receivable” as security for loans.

Without knowledge of the fact that the corporation owed the sum of $159,517.70, in addition to the amount of its liabilities set forth in said statements, or that accounts owing the corporation of about the same amount had been assigned as security for cash loans, the Coal & Iron National Bank on January 2, 1913, discounted for the corpora-[129]*129tiun one of its notes for $5,000, bearing bankrupt’s indorsement; on January 10th, another similarly indorsed and of like amount; a third on January 22, 1913; and still another on March 6, 1913.

The Metropolitan Bank on December 24, 1912, also without knowledge of the facts above related, discounted one of the corporation’s notes for $5,000 bearing bankrupt’s indorsement; a similarly made and indorsed note for the same amount on February 13, 1913; and on March 6, 1913, one for $2,500. And the Chatham &-Phoenix National Bank, without knowledge of said facts, discounted two $5,000 notes of the corporation bearing bankrupt’s indorsements, on January 16, 1913; two more of like amount and similarly indorsed, on January 29th; and two others on February 5, 1913. All of these $5,000 notes were full renewals, and the $2,500 note a partial renewal, of notes maturing on or about the dates mentioned; the originals representing cash loans made to the corporation prior to December 31, 1912. The note of $2,500 maturing on March 6, 1913, was met by the note then discounted and a cash payment by the corporation of $2,500.

Both the Coal & Iron National Bank and the Chatham & Phoenix National Bank had been doing business with the corporation from about the time it commenced business in February, 1908, and previous to that time had had business transactions with another concern in which the'bankrupt was largely interested, so that the managers of these banks were well acquainted with bankrupt, and knew his business standing and reputation covering a period of at least eight years, and during that time the Chatham & Phoenix National Bank and the Chatham Bank, which was its immediate predecessor, had discounted and been fully paid commercial' paper on which the bankrupt was indorser amounting to over $500,000.

The first paper, however, which the Metropolitan Bank discounted for the corporation, was brought to that bank some time in February, 1912, shortly after the corporation, acting on the suggestion of Jerome, its financial adviser, who was solicited thereto by one of the bank’s officers, had opened a deposit account therein; and he at the time presented to- the bank a statement which purported to- show the financial condition of the corporation as of December 31, 1911, similar in every way to one furnished by it to the other objecting creditors on January 20, 1912.

The loans which the objecting banks made the corporation, represented by the original notes, were based, not only upon the financial slanding' of the corporation on December 31, 1911, as shown by the statements sent to the first two mentioned banks under date of January 20, 1912, and to the third on February 27, 1912, but partly upon the reputation of the bankrupt in the cotton goods trade and among bankers generally. The funds thus obtained were used exclusively in the furtherance of the corporation’s business, and bankrupt had no direct, benefit from any loans made the corporation.

Had any of the objecting creditors knowledge of the fact that the corporation was pledging any of its accounts receivable as security for loans obtained from other parties, they would not have advanced any money on notes of the corporation bearing bankrupt’s indorsement [130]*130alone, unless tbe same was accompanied by satisfactory collateral; neither would they have accepted the notes which they received during the months of January, February, and March, 1913, in renewal of the notes of the corporation then maturing.

Several corporations and mills closely allied with this corporation, or owing it large sums of money, together with financial institutions to whom it was indebted, became involved in financial difficulties; some going into the hands of receivers, others into bankruptcy, and still others into the hands of creditors’ committees.

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Bluebook (online)
226 F. 127, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-stafford-ctd-1915.