In re the Final Accounting of Hayes

37 Misc. 264, 75 N.Y.S. 312
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1902
StatusPublished

This text of 37 Misc. 264 (In re the Final Accounting of Hayes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Final Accounting of Hayes, 37 Misc. 264, 75 N.Y.S. 312 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1902).

Opinion

Fitzgerald, J.

The issues presented to the court upon this motion for the modification and confirmation, as modified, of the report of a referee taking and stating the account of an assignee, are those raised by the findings of the referee, and by the exceptions thereto: (1) of the claimant Mumford; (2) of the assignee, as the trustee for the general creditors, and (3) of the class of creditors referred to in the report and hereafter described as the Stock Exchange creditors.” In support of the exceptions to the [266]*266report filed by the claimant Mumford, no reasons were formally presented and no authorities were formally cited to the court upon this motion. A careful consideration of that portion of the record which relates to the said claim clearly indicates that the claim was, at the time of the assignment herein, one of those unliquidated and unaccrued claims which were not provable and enforcible against the assigned estate. In support of this view, and of the finding based thereon, the referee has fully cited all the existing authorities, has stated all the excepted reasons and has omitted nothing essential to a proper determination of the matter; it simply remains, therefore, for this court, in following these authorities and adopting these reasons, to confirm the findings of the referee based thereon. The exceptions of the claimant Mumford to the report of the referee are, therefore, overruled, and the finding of the referee disallowing the claim of said claimant, is, therefore, confirmed. The main contentions arising upon this motion refer to the relative rights, with respect to the distribution of the balance in the hands of the assignee; (1) of the general creditors, whose interests are vigorously asserted by the assignee, as their trustee, and (2) of that class of creditors known as the “ Stock Exchange creditors ” and consisting (a) of individual creditors who were also members of the New York Stock Exchange, and (b) of partnership creditors, one of whose ' members was also a member of the New York Stock Exchange. Briefly stated, and as shown by the established facts, the situation was as follows: At the time of the assignment herein the assignors constituted a copartnership for the transaction of a stock brokerage business, and one of the members thereof, namely, Frederick W. Johnson, one of the individual assignors herein, was then a member of the New York Stock Exchange, which is a voluntary, unincorporated association. Among the creditors of the assignors, as copartners and individuals, at that time, were those described in subdivisions “ a ” and b ” of class 2, as above stated. All of these creditors, as named in the referee’s report, subsequently presented to the assignee, in response to his published notice, duly verified claims against the estate assigned herein for the full amounts then due and owing to them by the assignors. Subsequent to the said presentation by said creditors of their respective claims, the membership of the said assignor Johnson in the New York Stock Exchange was, in accordance [267]*267with the constitution of that association, transferred, and the proceeds thereof were distributed, by the committee named in the constitution for that purpose, among the individual and copartnership Stock Exchange creditors of the assignors herein pro rata to the amounts of the respective claims of said individual and copartnership “ Stock Exchange creditors ” as liquidated and allowed by said committee. The result of that distribution was that all of said Stock Exchange creditors,” both individual and copartnership, received fifty-two per cent, of the original amounts of their respective claims, as stated by them to the assignee. The matter now presented to the court for determination is the basis or amount upon which the distributive shares of the said individual and copartnership “ Stock Exchange creditors ” in the balance now in the hands of the assignee shall be computed. With reference to this question the assignee claims: First. That the firm or copartnership creditors of the assignors herein, one of the members of which firm or copartnership was also a member of the New York Stock Exchange, were not “ members ” of the said Exchange, and were not entitled to any share in the proceeds of the transfer of the membership of the individual assignor Johnson; and that, therefore, they may now prove for the full amounts of their respective claims, but that the sums already received by them respectively from the committee of the Exchange must be deducted from all dividends declared or allowed them upon the present accounting of the assignee and payable from the balance now remaining in his hands. This claim the referee overruled, to which finding the assignee excepted. Second. That all the “ Stock Exchange creditors,” both individual and copartnership, who have resorted to, and have received their pro rata shares of the proceeds of the transfer of the membership of the assignor Johnson mqst deduct the amounts so received by them respectively from all dividends declared for or allowed them out of the general assets of the assigned estate and payable from the balance now remaining in the hands of the assignee. This claim the referee also overruled, to which finding the assignee also excepted. Third. That in no event can any “ Stock Exchange creditor,” individual or copartnership, who has received a share of the proceeds of the assignor Johnson’s membership, receive out of the general assets of the assigned estate a dividend on a sum in excess of the original amounts of .their respective [268]*268claims, less the amounts respectively received by them from the said committee of the said Exchange. This claim the referee sustained, to which finding the said creditors excepted. All of the many exceptions of the assignee as filed in this court are embodied in his claims, as above stated, and may and will be considered and determined in the decision of these claims without a specific enumeration and specific treatment thereof.

The first claim of the assignee acting for the general creditors is based upon the two contentions: First, that by the constitution of the New York Stock Exchange, under the authority of which the membership of the assignor Johnson therein was transferred, and which, being assigned and accepted, formed the contract between the said assignor and his fellow-members with reference to the rights and liabilities incident to said seat or membership, the right to share in the proceeds of the transfer of the membership of a member of the said Exchange is confined solely to “ members ” thereof; and second, that within the meaning and language of that constitution a partnership creditor of the assignors, a member of which partnership was also a member of the Exchange, was not itself a “ member ” thereof. In support of this position the attention of the court is called to many and varied provisions of the constitution and rules of the Exchange, stating the qualifications for membership, defining the qualifications, rights and duties of officers and committees, providing for the disposition of the membership of a deceased member, and regulating the formation of partnerships by members, in all of which the word member ” used therein can refer only to an individual. Of this there can be and is no doubt, and attention may, therefore, be given to other articles and sections of the constitution and rules.

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Bluebook (online)
37 Misc. 264, 75 N.Y.S. 312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-final-accounting-of-hayes-nysupct-1902.