Irving Trust Co. v. Deutsch

2 F. Supp. 971, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1566
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedDecember 9, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 2 F. Supp. 971 (Irving Trust Co. v. Deutsch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Irving Trust Co. v. Deutsch, 2 F. Supp. 971, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1566 (S.D.N.Y. 1932).

Opinion

WOOLSEY, District Judge.

I dismissed the bill of complaint, without costs, as against the defendant Arthur D. Mendes and Royce G. Martin at the conclusion of the trial; it had previously been dismissed on an interlocutory motion for lack of proper venue in this district as against the defendant Malcolm R. White.

The hill of complaint herein is now dismissed, without costs, as against the other defendants remaining in the cause.

I. By way of introduction to the focal questions which have to be decided in this cause, and as illustrative of the somewhat unstable financial and commercial situation to which, on its formation, the bankrupt company succeeded, the following very general summary of the circumstances which led to its genesis*will, I think, be of value:

A. About 1919 a Mr. Brightson, who was the president of the Sonora Phonograph Company, and, in a period of four or five years, had built it into a successful concern, was introduced to Messrs. Hayden, Stone & Go. During the last previous three- or four years the business of the company had been expanding very rapidly. In the last year or two prior to 1919 1 it had been making very good profits, and in 1919' it found that it needed additional working capital to finance its growing business.

*973 Mr. Brightson was unable himself to provide this additional capital, and Messrs. Hayden, Stone & Co., on looking into the business, decided it was in good condition, and bought 10,000 shares of a new preferred stock issue, most of which was sold to customers of Hayden, Stone & Co. at $100 per share, producing approximately $1,000,000 for the additional capital needed by the company.

Within a year or two after this first financing, the phonograph business went into a slump, and the profits of the Sonora Phonograph Company were much reduced. It then needed further funds, this time not for the purpose of expanding its business, but because it had run short of working capital due to overproduction and inability to market its products.

Thus, within two years after the issue of the preferred stock above referred to, the Sonora Phonograph Company, which will hereinafter be referred to as Old Sonora, was in difficulties, and Hayden, Stone & Co., to help it out, and with the hope of protecting their customers who had bought the preferred stock, also bought a block of common stock.

The business, however, did not improve in the succeeding years. Mr. Brightson himself got into financial difficulties, and finally Hayden, Stone & Co. were forced to buy in some of his stock in the company which, had been deposited with them as collateral for loans made to him individually.

As the business of the Old Sonora continued to be poor, it had to borrow money. Finally a committee had to be formed by the banks which had lent this money in order to protect their loans. Hayden, Stone & Co. cooperated with the banks, helped to select a new president for the company, and tried to work it into a better financial and business position.

Within two or three years, Mr. Martin, the new president of the company, was able largely to liquidate the surplus inventory and to get the bank loans down to a nominal figure. Tho banks then withdrew from the situation leaving Hayden, Stone & Co. as the controlling financial factor therein.

During this period the Old Sonora still was without enough capital, and Hayden, Stone & Go. had to advance money to it whilst they were trying to work out some plan by which the company’s business could be continued to advantage. As a result, by the middle of August, 1927, Hayden, Stone &■ Co. had advanced to the Old Sonora $400,-000.

At that time Hayden, Stone & Co. owned 70,000 shares of Old Sonora common stock which had cost them $500,000, also 36,914 shares of Old Sonora common stock bought from Brightson, and had purchased for themselves approximately 2,400 shares of the preferred stock at various prices from $80 to $30 per share.

Hayden, Stone & Co. were, therefore, personally quite heavily involved in the Old Sonora, and, in addition, their clients had bought its preferred stock through them and dividends thereon had not been paid for some years.

B. The first contact between Mr. Deutsch and Hayden, Stone & Co. involving O'ld Sonora in any way seems to have occurred in 1925, when Mr. Hoyt, of Hayden, Stone & Go., who had met Mr. Deutsch and know that he was vice president of the BrunswickBalke-Collender Company, in charge of its radio and music division, spoke to him with regard to the affairs of the Old Sonora, which, owing to the fact that its product had not kept up with tho development in sound reproducing and recording devices, was, as noted above, then in an unstable financial situation.

At that time Mr. Iloyt had some talk with Mr. Deutsch regarding his attempt to reorganize Old Sonora and suggested that Mr. Deutsch should come in as president; but Mr. Deutsch did not then wish to leave his own organization in which he and his family had long been interested.

During the late spring or early summer of 1927, however, Mr. Deutsch approached Mr. Iloyt regarding the reorganization of tho Old Sonora, and stated to Mr. Hoyt that he was not quite Satisfied with, the situation in his own business, and wondered whether something might be done in the development of' the Old Sonora along the lines of their earlier discussion of 1925'.

This conference resulted in the negotiations which, led eventually to the creation of the Acoustic Products Company, Inc., by which name the now bankrupt company, of which the plaintiff is trustee, was known during the period with which we are principally concerned in this litigation.

C. During the exploration of the possibilities which, might he worked out with the Old Sonora, it was considered, inter alia, whether an attempt should be made to purchase the music and radio division of the Brunswiek-Balke-Collender Company, of which Mr. Deutsch previously had charge. *974 This plan, however, was quite promptly dropped.

Later, Mr. Deutseh told Mr. Hoyt of a patent situation which he had discovered, and which he considered might offer an opportunity to Old Sonora to go into the radio and other electrical sound reproduction fields. The patent referred to was an invention of Dr. Miller Reese Hutchison which was known as the melodon.

The melodon was an electric loud speaker of great apparent potential value. It was first shown to Mr. Deutseh and Mr. Hoyt at the apartment of Mr. Harris Hammond, one of the defendants herein. On that occasion Mr. Hoyt also met the defendant Mr. Biddle.

Mr. Hammond, Mr. Biddle, and Dr. Miller Reese Hutchison, who' will be hereinafter referred to as the Bid-Hamson Group, had some time before this formed two companies, one, the Premier Laboratory Company, principally for experimental purposes, and the other, the Bid-Hamson Corporation, which, among other patents, owned the melodon.

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2 F. Supp. 971, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1566, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/irving-trust-co-v-deutsch-nysd-1932.