In re Union Bank of Brooklyn

96 Misc. 299
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 96 Misc. 299 (In re Union Bank of Brooklyn) 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 Union Bank of Brooklyn, 96 Misc. 299 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1916).

Opinion

Benedict, J.

The petitioner prays that an order may be made herein authorizing and directing him to declare and pay out of the funds of the Union Bank of Brooklyn, now in his possession available for such purpose, a dividend of five per centum upon the claims allowed, less any offsets which may be claimed or ascertained against any of such creditors, and, further, that your petitioner be authorized, in his discretion, to pay the amount of this dividend upon all cla’ms which may hereafter be allowed by him against said Union Bank of Brooklyn.”

[301]*301Notice of the application was given as required by statute, and upon the return thereof before this court the depositors’ committee, orally and in writing, stated their objections to the granting of the application upon the ground, among others, that the amount of the proposed dividend was insufficient, and that a larger dividend should be declared and paid; and requested the court to refer the matter to an official referee to examine the accounts of the petitioner and his predecessors in the office of superintendent of banks, to the end that the court might determine whether a larger dividend than five per centum should not be authorized and directed.

Thereupon the court, by its memorandum filed April 24,1916, stated that, in view of the fact that no accounting had been had of the proceedings of the petitioner or of his predecessors in the office of superintendent of banks from the time when the Union Bank of Brooklyn was taken possession of on April 4, 1910, down to the time of the presentation of the petition for leave to pay the initial dividend to the creditors of the bank, it was not possible for the court to discharge the duty, imposed upon it by the statute, of judicially determining what dividend the superintendent of banks shouM be authorized to pay and to whom it should be paid and the priority and amount of such payment, because the court had not before it sufficient facts to determine, except in a perfunctory way, whether the proposed dividend of five per centum was a proper one to be authorized. The court, thereupon, adjourned the application to a later date to afford the persons in interest an opportunity to present further evidence for oír against the application, and thereby to avoid the necessity, which otherwise would have arisen,'of denying the application for lack- of sufficient information concerning the administration of the trust estate in the hands of the petitioner. •

[302]*302The court, upon the 1st of May, 1916, .at the first adjourned hearing, requested the petitioner to furnish, for the information of the court, a statement in detail showing what disposition had been made by the superintendent of banks and his predecessors in office of each item of property, real and personal, which comprised the assets of the Union Bank on April 4, 1910, the date upon which the superintendent of banks then in office had taken charge of it under the provisions of the Banking Law of the state. And the court also requested that it be furnished with a statement of all pa3rments that had been made by the superintendent of banks and his predecessors in office for and on account of the Union Bank of Brooklyn, and under what authority the payments had been made, and what property remained in the hands of the superintendent at the present time.

As a result of the request so made by the court, the superintendent of banks has, from time to time, at later hearings, furnished the court with the detailed statements requested by it. All these are filed with this memorandum.

Upon the twenty-seventh day of May the petitioner submitted to the court two volumes of accounts which have been marked respectively petitioner’s Exhibits 1 and 2. Exhibit 1 is a copy of the inventory of the assets of the Union Bank of Brooklyn on April 4,1910, as filed- on August 20, 1910, in the office of the clerk of the county of Kings by O. H. Cheney, the superintendent of banks of the state of New York then in office, verified by his oath. 'Upon the copy so submitted to the court, the petitioner had caused to be written memoranda showing the disposition which had been made in the course ‘ of administration by himself and his predecessors in office of each of the items comprised in the various schedules which were contained in the [303]*303inventory, and showing which items had been collected, in whole or in part, and which of them remained in his hands uncollected upon the 1st day of May, 1916.

Exhibit 2, also submitted at the same time, was an account containing, in different schedules, the following:

1. A summary statement of the information given in volume 1.

2. A summary and detailed statement of the cash receipts and disbursements.

3. A summary and detailed statement of all expenses paid during the period from April 4, 1910, to May 1, 1916.

4. A summary and detailed statement of advances made to protect equities during the period from April 4, 1910, to May 1, 1916.

5. Schedules 1 to 10, showing the uncollected loans and bills discounted and other remaining assets as of May 1,1916, with the book values stated in connection with each item, the same book values reported in the inventory of April 4, 1910, being maintained throughout the liquidation and being reflected in these schedules as of May 1,1916.

6. Schedule 11 shows liabilities on the books as of May 1, 1916.

Incidentally, it may be stated, that volume 1 so submitted contains more than 140 pages of folios of figures, and that volume 2 comprises 159 similar pages.

At the request of the court the petitioner supplied the like information to the attorneys for the depositors’ committee, and the court gave to these attorneys a reasonable opportunity, viz.: from May twenty-seventh to June fifth, to examine the accounts.

On the last-mentioned date they requested further time and further information.

Upon June fifteenth, the attorneys for the deposit[304]*304ors’ committee stated to the court in writing certain objections to the statements of account which had been submitted to the court by the petitioner and withdrew in open court all other objections, oral or in writing, which had been presented to the court during the hearing of this application, stating that there were, in the opinion of the attorneys, no other matters that needed to be looked into by the court. A copy of the memorandum of the objections is filed herewith marked Exhibit 3.

The court, at the same hearing, gave to the counsel for the superintendent of banks a statement which it had formulated from its own examination of the accounts submitted, and requested to be furnished with the information pointed out in such memorandum. A copy of the memorandum is filed with this opinion and marked Exhibit 4.

The proceeding was thereupon adjourned until June twenty-first, in order to enable the petitioner to furnish the information called for by Exhibit 4.

On June twenty-first the petitioner filed with the court two ¿dditional statements, the first, marked Exhibit 5, containing a statement covering a portion of the information so requested, and the other, marked Exhibit 6, being a statement concerning the receipts and disbursements made on account of the Metropolitan Holding Company, one of the subsidiary corporations controlled by the Union Bank of Brooklyn.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Held v. Hall
191 Misc. 2d 427 (New York Supreme Court, 2002)
Stern v. Harrison
55 F. Supp. 687 (N.D. Illinois, 1944)
Kinney v. Channel State Bank
288 S.W. 590 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1926)
Kidder v. Hall
251 S.W. 497 (Texas Supreme Court, 1923)
In re the Union Bank of Brooklyn
176 A.D. 477 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1917)
Richards v. Scharmann
97 Misc. 143 (New York Supreme Court, 1916)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
96 Misc. 299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-union-bank-of-brooklyn-nysupct-1916.