In re Sterling, Ahrens & Co.

1 F. 167, 1880 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedJanuary 3, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1 F. 167 (In re Sterling, Ahrens & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Sterling, Ahrens & Co., 1 F. 167, 1880 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7 (D. Md. 1880).

Opinion

Morris, J.

The bankrupts were merchants doing business in the city of Baltimore, and, prior to their failure, in August, 1875, were very largely engaged in importing sugar. They were also the agents of the Calvert Sugar Refining Company, a corporation largely engaged in refining sugar. Walter B. Brooks was elected assignee of the estate of the bankrupts, and about the same time the Calvert Sugar Refining Company, being also insolvent, executed a voluntary deed of assignment, for the benefit of its creditors, to Benjamin F. Newcomer and O. Morton Stewart. These trustees found that the promissory notes of the corporation, delivered by it to said bankrupts, and passed off by them, were outstanding to the amount of about $1,700,000, and, upon an adjustment of the books in which were kept the accounts between said corporation and said bankrupts, it was found that the balance was largely against the bankrupts and in favor of the corporation. '

It appears that the corporation had constantly required in its business a large amount of raw sugars, and that the bankrupts, who were importers of sugars, had been in the habit of importing with the intention of selling the cargoes to the corporation.

At or about the time of the arrival of every such cargo so sold to the corporation it would be entered as a purchase on its books, and the bankrupts would at once receive credit therefor and get the promissory notes of the corporation for the sugars at an agreed price in currency, duty paid; the [168]*168gross amount being subsequently' corrected by proper entries in the books, if the weight was found to be more or less upon actual delivery, and if the price of gold should have changed when the duties came to be actually paid. The cargoes were not actually delivered until required by the superintendent of the refinery for manufacture, and were generally, at the time the promissory notes were given, in the custody of the United States government, in its bonded store-houses, subject to its .lien for the duties, and also still pledged to the bankers for their advances upon the letters of credit with which the bankrupts had purchased the sugars in Cuba.

The bankrupts, as the agents of the corporation, kept its books of account, and received all the money paid by its customers for the refined sugars sold tó them. Upon an adjustment of the books of account it was found that up to the time of the failure the bankrupts had received in money and promissory notes amounts largely in excess of the sums credited to them for'the sugars they had sold to the corporation; this excess, as the account was first made up, being about $655,-000. Subsequently it was found that five cargoes of sugar, which had been sold by the bankrupts to the corporation, and for which they had been credited, and for which they had received the notes of the corporation, could not be obtained. They had been pledged by the bankrupts to Alex. Brown & Sons, the bankers, for their full value. The amounts credited to the bankrupts for these five cargoes being deducted, and other corrections being made, the account was made up as now presented, and it is this account, now amounting to $1,027,794.94, which the trustees of the corporation are seeking to have allowed as a claim against the bankrupts’ estate.

One item in this account is for the sum of about $64,000, paid by said trustees, being dividends amounting to 50J per cent, paid by them on a claim for about $127,000, proved by Alex. Brown & Sons against the estate of the corporation for guarantees by the corporation of letters of credit issued by the bankers to the bankrupts.

The assignee of the bankrupts has petitioned the court not [169]*169to allow this account for the amount claimed, because they insist that, as for the transactions covered by the account, the bankrupts received from the corporation its promissory notes, amounting to $1,716,000, which notes the corporation has not paid, and upon nearly all of which the bankrupts were liable as indorsers, and which have been proved as claims against the estate of said bankrupts. The trustees of the corporation should not be allowed to prove, for said amount claimed by them, beyond the amount of the dividends which has been paid on account of these notos out of the estate of the corporation.

Nearly all these promissory notes were indorsed by the bankrupts, and have been proved by the holders against their estate. Some of them, however, they did not indorse, hut sold without recourse; and, as to others, they were pledged by the bankrupts as collateral security for loans made to them.

The trustees of the corporation, on the other hand, contend that as the bankrupts passed off for value, in one way or another, all these notes, they operate as payment, and so far as the account now to be adjusted between the corporation and the bankrupts is concerned they are to be treated as paid, because the bankrupts parted with them and got the proceeds of them, and the notes are now all out of their possession or control, in the hands of bona fide holders for value.

These facts have given rise to complications of rights and liabilities not easily settled, and both parties being Insolvent, neither being able to perform their obligations ox correct their mistakes, exact justice cannot he hoped for. All that remains possible is to endeavor to apply those rules and principles of law which have been established by decisions in similar cases.

One sound and well established rule applicable to the settlement of insolvent estates is that the estate must never pay two dividends in respect of the same claim. This rule was well illustrated and explained by the case cited in argument of the Oriental Bank v. The European Bank, reported in 7 L. R. (Chancery Appeals,) 99. In that case hills of exchange [170]*170drawn by one Constantinidi were accepted by the European Bank at the request of the Oriental Bank, and upon the undertaking of the Oriental Bank that it would provide funds to meet them at maturity. The bills were accepted by the European Bank under this arrangement, and, having been subsequently indorsed by the Oriental Bank, were discounted by the Agra Bank. ' Before the bills matured both the European and the Oriental Bank had stopped payment, and were being wound up by liquidators; the bills having been proved against both banks by the holder, the dividends received from both banks together just paid them in full, and the liquidators of the European Bank sought to prove against the estate of the Oriental Bank for the amount which it had been compelled to pay through its breach of the contract to provide funds to meet the bills at maturity.

In deciding the case Lord Justice Sir George Mellish, reversing the decision of Vice Chancellor Bacon, said: “It is quite obvious that if this proof is allowed the Oriental Bank will pay a double dividend on the same debt. It appears to me clearly that it is substantially the same debt, because, if all parties had been solvent, whatever sums the Oriental Bank might have paid to the Agra Bank, although they would have paid it, no doubt, for the purpose of performing the contract they had entered into by their indorsement, yet, substantially, whatever sums they might have paid to the Agra Bank would have gone in reduction of the sum which the Oriental Bank had promised to pay to the European Bank. In that case the Oriental Bank could never have been called upon to pay these bills twice over.

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Bluebook (online)
1 F. 167, 1880 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-sterling-ahrens-co-mdd-1880.