In Re the Assignment of Price, McCormick & Co.

63 N.E. 526, 171 N.Y. 15, 1902 N.Y. LEXIS 829
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 15, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 63 N.E. 526 (In Re the Assignment of Price, McCormick & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re the Assignment of Price, McCormick & Co., 63 N.E. 526, 171 N.Y. 15, 1902 N.Y. LEXIS 829 (N.Y. 1902).

Opinion

O’Brien, J.

The order from which this appeal is taken determined the rights of a claimant upon the fund in the hands of an assignee under a general assignment for the benefit of creditors.

On the 24th of May, 1900, the firm of Price, McCormick & Co., stock brokers, made an assignment of all the property of the firm to the assignee in this case, in trust, for the benefit of creditors pursuant to the statute. The assignee qualified and entered upon the duties of the trust and thereafter advertised for creditors of the firm, requiring them to present their claims. On the 12tli of July, 1900, before the day specified in the notice to present claims, the petitioner, George Crocker, claiming to be a general creditor of the firm, presented to and filed with the assignee a sworn claim amounting to $62,286.73, which the assignee allowed as a just and proper claim against the estate in his hands. Subsequently, the assignee declared and paid a dividend of fifty per cent upon the claims of the general creditors of the firm other than the petitioner, and refused to pay to him any part of the dividend or to make any payment to him on account of his claim against the firm.

It appears that the claimant was a special partner in the firm at the time of its failure and that he had contributed $500,000 as special capital, but none of the claims and demands presented to the assignee are on account of his special capital, hut arose out of certain dealings between the *20 claimant and the firm, which will be referred to hereafter. It appears and lias been found that the claimant, on the 24th of May, 1900, at the time of the assignment, had a speculative account with the firm of which he was a special partner, for the purchase of stocks and other securities and he was then indebted to the firm on account in the sum of $114,811.99. Upon the payment thereof to the firm the claimant was entitled to receive two thousand six hundred shares of stock of various corporations which had been purchased for his account. In addition thereto the firm held seven hundred and twenty-five shares of the common stock of a railroad. This stock, it appears, belonged absolutely to the claimant and he had delivered it to the firm, without payment, to be held for his account and subject to his instructions. The claimant, at the 'time of the assignment, it appears, was in Europe, and upon being notified of the failure and the assignment of the firm, stated that he was ready and willing and offered to pay the balance due by him upon his account and demanded the return of all the shares of stock held for his account, but was informed by the assignee that all the stocks had been used by the firm as collateral for loans made to it by divers parties, and the assignee refused to accept the tender of the balance due to the firm or to surrender the shares of stock, the same not being then in his possession or under his control. Sometime thereafter, by agreement between the claimant and the assignee, the latter gave written consents addressed to the various persons with whom the claimant’s shares of stock were pledged, authorizing such persons to deliver said shares to him on his paying to them the market price of such stock on that date. The claimant thereupon, for the purpose of releasing his shares of stock from the lien and possession of the parties with whom the same had been placed, paid to them the sum of $177,162.50, or $62,350.51 in excess of the amount due from him to the firm. The total sum due from the firm to the various parties with whom the claimant’s shares were pledged was $1,750,000, and the collateral securities pledged with them were of the aggregate value of $2,352,855.73, being largely in excess of *21 the amount of the indebtedness of the firm to the various parties above mentioned. The excess or surplus, composed in part of money and in part of securities, amounting to $602,855.73 was returned by these various parties to the assignee and the sums paid by the claimant for the redemption or release of his stock were credited on account of the indebtedness due from the firm and in reduction thereof pro tanto. The petitioner’s claim is for the difference between the amount due by him to the firm on his account with them and the sum that he paid in order to. obtain possession of his securities.

It does • not appear affirmatively that the other securities pledged to secure the total debt of $1,750,000 and which aggregated in value $2,352,855.73, belonged to the firm of brokers as their own property, but inasmuch as the contrary does not appear the fair presumption must be that the firm pledged their own property and not that which belonged to their customers. It is possible that this presumption may be changed, but we must take the case as we find it upon the record. We agree with the learned court below that section 37 of the Partnership Law has no application to this case. Under that section a special partner, such as this claimant was, is not permitted-to make any claim upon the assets of the firm on account of his capital until all the general creditors have first been paid in full, but, in so far as he has loaned or advanced money to the special partnership in the transaction of its business, his claim stands upon the same footing as that of all other general creditors.

We do not think that the rights of the claimant depend entirely upon his status as a creditor of the firm. At the time of the assignment he had no debt whatever against the firm, but owed the firm a large sum of money on the speculative account, which he subsequently paid in full, and besides paid an additional sum of $62,350.51. Mor do we think that it is important to inquire whether, under the circumstances of the casé, he became subrogated to the rights of the creditors of the firm, that is to say, the bankers who held the stock in *22 pledge. It is not important, in our view, to go into the question of subrogation at all. The claimant’s claim never existed as against the firm, but grows out of a transaction which took place subsequent to the assignment between himself and the assignee. The assignee, in writing, authorized, and in one of the letters requested, the claimant to advance the money for the redemption and release of his stock, and he did advance, not the amount of the debt which he owed the firm but much more, that is to say, the market price of the stock on the day of the redemption, -which amounted, as we have already shown, to over $62,000 more than the debt. To the extent of the money that the claimant paid over and above his debt it operated to release the other securities which belonged to the firm, and which were primarily liable for the whole debt aside from that due from the claimant himself. Therefore, the funds in the hands of the assignee were enhanced by the payment on the part of the claimant of his own money to the extent of over $62,000.

The question is whether this part of the fund in the hands of the assignee belongs to the claimant or to the general creditors. If, in equity, the claimant has_ the superior right to be repaid that amount, then he should be paid in full. The general creditors have no claim upon a fund which does not arise from the- property of the firm but from the money of the claimant.

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Bluebook (online)
63 N.E. 526, 171 N.Y. 15, 1902 N.Y. LEXIS 829, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-assignment-of-price-mccormick-co-ny-1902.