In re the Final Accounting of Leventritt

40 A.D. 429, 58 N.Y.S. 256

This text of 40 A.D. 429 (In re the Final Accounting of Leventritt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of 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 the Final Accounting of Leventritt, 40 A.D. 429, 58 N.Y.S. 256 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

Rumsey, J.:

On the 30th day of November, 1896, Herman F. Bindseil made an assignment for the benefit of his creditors to George M. Leventritt, the respondent in this matter. The assignee qualified on the next day and the assignment and schedules were filed at the same time. Late in the afternoon of December first the assignee took possession of the store. He continued in possession of the store [430]*430’ and the goods, collecting the accounts and selling the goods until the 22d day of December, 1896, when he made a sale of all the stock to Sophie F. Bindseil, the wife of the assignor. ' The goods were delivered to her in pursuance of the agreement of sale. After the sale the assignee continued to collect the accounts, and on the 17th of January, 1898, he made out his account as assignee, presented, it to this court and obtained a citation to the creditors-to appear and attend an accounting. At that time the appellant, Joseph Ullmann, who owned nearly two-thirds of the total liabilities of the estate, appeared and filed certain objections to the accounts. A referee was appointed to state the accounts, who made his final report, which upon a hearing was confirmed by the court, and from the order confirming it this appeal is taken.

The several objections taken by the appellant will be considered in their order.

By -the first objection the creditor seeks to surcharge the account of the assignee by adding to it what he should have received -for the stock of merchandise which came into his possession. It is-claimed by the creditor that the sale of the stock, which was made to Sophie F. Bindseil, w;as made in the interests of the assignor, and for the benefit of his wife and against the wishes of Ullmann and under his protest, and that the assignee did not procure for that stock the best price that he could. This contention was overruled by the -referee. Bindseil was a dealer in fur garments and the stock • of goods which was transferred to the assignee consisted of furs and garments finished, and in various stages of completion, of the nominal value of $28,842, but actually worth $15,898.22, as shown by the schedules.

The assignee took possession of the store late in. the afternoon of December first. It was opened again the next morning, and sales at retail were made of the stock. Nominally the business was in. charge of the assignee, who says that he visited it two- or three times daily, -but practically, as it is to be inferred from all- the evidence, the whole matter was left in the control Of Bindseil and his wife, assisted by the same persons who had been in the Bindseils’ employ before the assignment. ' ■■

Shortly after the assignment 'was made, Ullmann, whose advice had- been asked by the assignee as to the manner of sale of the [431]*431stock, made a careful inventory of it. He is a dealer in furs and well acquainted with their value. Im making that inventory lie-estimated only the value of the furs which were in the store, and which-had entered into the making of the garments, disregarding the trimmings and linings, and the work of making the garments,, and upon that basis he fixed the actual value of the stock of goods at $11,200. This inventory was made four or five days after the assignment. Mr. Ullmann was insisting upon an early sale of the goods, for the reason that, it was expensive to continue in the occupation of the store, with the considerable number of people who seem to have been employed in it, and for the reason, besides, that the month of December was especially the season for the sale of' goods of that kind, and they would be apt to realize much better-prices if then sold than if the sale were to be delayed. In this matter the assignee seems to have agreed yfith him, and he says that he made efforts to sell the goods during the month of December, calling attention of various people to the fact that he had such a stock of goods for sale, and asking them to make an offer for their purchase. He says that he received an offer of about $5,000 for the goods from .Ehrich Brothers, who were 'dealers in that class of merchandise. Whether that offer was the result of a previous examination of the goods by Ehrich Brothers or not, he does not know. He also says that he received offers from two other persons, but he-is unable to state the amount of either one, or the time when lie-received the offer. So far as appears, these three offers were all that he had for the goods, and he made no effort to obtain any further-offer from any one except by writing to certain persons advising-them of the fact that he had such goods for sale. Ullmann after-having made-his estimate of the value of the goods, offered $8,500-as of the time of the assignment. He was told in reply to that offer that another person had bid $500 more. When he asked who the other person was, the assignee refused to tell him, nor could he get any further information in regard to the- matter, except a general statement that. a larger bid than his had been made. When he wasasl^ed to make a further bid for the goods, he replied that the goods-should be put up at auction so that all persons who desired to buy could be confronted with the bidders, and he refused any longer to be-a party to a blind auction such as the assignee said that he was carry[432]*432ing on. In fact there seems to have been no bidder except Ullmann ■and the unknown person who was said to have offered $500 more than Ullmann did, and as a result of the whole transaction, the property was "said to have been sold to Mrs. Bindseil on the 22d of November, 1896, at a private sale, for $.9,375,'as of the date of the assignment. The effect was that she received the benefit of all the sales which had been made from the time of the assignment down to the time of the alleged sale to her, and was. called upon to pay the difference between the amount of those sales and $9,375, which', in some way was fixed at $8,467.31, malting the nominal amount of sales credited to her something over $907. How this amount was reached does not precisely appear, because it is stated that the total ■ amount of the goods sold at retail from the first of December to the twenty-second of that month was something over $1,298.

But this discrepancy is comparatively immaterial. The important ■matter is that Mrs. Bindseil received upon her bid a credit for $907 as the proceeds of goods sold during the month, and was not charged -or did not pay the expenses of those sales, so that substantially the assignee gave to her, in addition to the goods, the expense of making, the sales of which she had the proceeds. That expense was not inconsiderable. It seems, from the statement furnished by the assigriee, that the total expenses of administering the trust down to the time of making his account were $8,141.79. Among the items for those expenses were attorney’s fees, $1,000; rent, $833.33; wages preferred, $271.94. This item of wages preferred represents ■undoubtedly the .amount of the wages which were due to the ■employees at the time of making the assignment, and it is fair to assume that it represents all of the wages then due. In addition to that, it appears that the assignee paid wages to the amount of $664.35, and that the miscellaneous expenses were something over $872. ■ More or less of those expenses were caused by keeping open the store during the month of December, but just how much, it is impossible accurately to say. But the expenses in wages alone of ¡selling goods to the amount of $1,398 was $664.85, and it is fair to ' .assume, from an examination of the account, that the other expenses ■of running -the store during that time were not less than $100.

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40 A.D. 429, 58 N.Y.S. 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-final-accounting-of-leventritt-nyappdiv-1899.