Jerome Fried and Nazareth Fairgrounds & Farmers Market, Inc. v. Benjamin Margolis, Ida Mae Margolis, Sarah Kason, Bernard L. Ungar and Williammck. Shongut, Arnold A. Weinstein, Jerome Fried and Irving J. Wolf v. Nazareth Fairgrounds & Farmers Market, Inc.

296 F.2d 670, 1961 U.S. App. LEXIS 3222
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedNovember 9, 1961
Docket27000
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 296 F.2d 670 (Jerome Fried and Nazareth Fairgrounds & Farmers Market, Inc. v. Benjamin Margolis, Ida Mae Margolis, Sarah Kason, Bernard L. Ungar and Williammck. Shongut, Arnold A. Weinstein, Jerome Fried and Irving J. Wolf v. Nazareth Fairgrounds & Farmers Market, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jerome Fried and Nazareth Fairgrounds & Farmers Market, Inc. v. Benjamin Margolis, Ida Mae Margolis, Sarah Kason, Bernard L. Ungar and Williammck. Shongut, Arnold A. Weinstein, Jerome Fried and Irving J. Wolf v. Nazareth Fairgrounds & Farmers Market, Inc., 296 F.2d 670, 1961 U.S. App. LEXIS 3222 (2d Cir. 1961).

Opinion

296 F.2d 670

Jerome FRIED and Nazareth Fairgrounds & Farmers Market,
Inc., Appellants,
v.
Benjamin MARGOLIS, Ida Mae Margolis, Sarah Kason, Bernard L.
Ungar and WilliamMck. Shongut, Appellees.
Arnold A. WEINSTEIN, Jerome Fried and Irving J. Wolf, et
al., Appellants,
v.
NAZARETH FAIRGROUNDS & FARMERS MARKET, INC., et al., Appellees.

Nos. 415, 429, Docket 26962, 27000.

United States Court of Appeals Second Circuit.

Argued Aug. 17, 1961.
Decided Nov. 9, 1961.

Alex L. Rosen, New York City, for appellant-appellee Nazareth Fairgrounds & Farmers Market, Inc.

Harold Harper, New York City (Harper & Matthews, New York City, Vincent P. Uihlein, New York City, of counsel), for appellant Jerome Fried.

Armende Lesser, New York City, for appellee William McK. Shongut.

Arnold A. Weinstein, New York City, pro se.

Melvin Lloyd Robbins, New York City, for appellants Wolf and others.

Leonard Franklin, New York City, for appellees Herbert Danciger and Melvin S. Danciger.

Before MOORE, FRIENDLY and SMITH, Circuit Judges.

MOORE, Circuit Judge.

The two cases (Nos. 26962 and 27000) consolidated on this appeal both involve the resolution of stock claims in Nazareth Fairgrounds & Farmers Market, Inc. (the Debtor), a corporation being reorganized under Chapter X of the Bankruptcy Act, 11 U.S.C.A. 501 et seq. No. 26962 involves five stock claimants (54 shares) and is an appeal from an order of the District Court which reopened the proceedings on a petition to review a decision of the Referee denying the stock claims of the five claimants therein. No. 27000 is an appeal from an order of the District Court settling and allowing the stock claims of the thirty-six claimants (262 shares) therein.

The Debtor was organized on August 7, 1951, as part of a plan to transfer the ownership of a farmers' market in Nazareth, Pennsylvania, a parcel of some 32 acres and buildings, from a group consisting of Edward Malakoff, Maurice Malakoff, Milton Zoloth and Morris Soble (the Philadelphia Group) to John Malakoff (Malakoff). Prior thereto on April 17, 1951, the Philadelphia Group through a controlled corporation, Richard Realty Co., purchased this property from its then owner, Nazareth Fairgrounds, Inc., for $66,000. John Malakoff had one-quarter interest in the original purchase of the property by the Philadelphia Group. On May 14, 1951, for corporate and tax reasons Richard Realty Co. conveyed the property subject to mortgages to Kipling Realty Co. (also a Philadelphia Group controlled corporation) for $100.

In July, 1951, John Malakoff orally agreed (so found by Examiner and trial court) to purchase the Philadelphia Group's interest in the property for $66,000 plus an undetermined amount, alleged to have been $30,000. The Articles of Incorporation of the Debtor which were executed on August 1, 1951, provided for an authorized capital of 200 shares with a stated capital applicable thereto of $120,000. The first meeting of the directors of the Debtor authorized the purchase of the Nazareth property from Zoloth and Soble for twenty shares of the corporation's stock and the assumption of all obligations by the corporation, including amounts shown as loans payable to the Philadelphia Group. About August 8, 1951, stock certificate #1 for 10 shares was issued to Milton Zoloth and certificate #2 for 10 shares was issued to Morris Soble. On October 17, 1951, a contract was executed between John Malakoff and Zoloth and Soble whereby Malakoff purchased their 20 shares of stock for $32,853.08;. $2,853.08 was paid on execution of the contract and the remaining $30,000 was to be paid in 10 monthly installments of $3,000. Title to the stock was to pass on the execution of the contract but the stock was to be held in escrow until the payment of the $30,000. On October 17, 1951, Zoloth, endorsed stock certificate #1 over to Malakoff and on October 22, 1951, Soble endorsed certificate #2 to Malakoff. On June 17, 1953, Malakoff endorsed these certificates over to the Debtor, and executed a release of all claims against the Debtor.

The certificates and corporate books were not turned over to Malakoff until December, 1952, although he had been managing the business since October, 1951.

In April, 1951, Malakoff started to solicit investments in the Nazareth enterprise, promising investors a 20% return on their capital. Generally, shares were offered at a rate of $1,000 a share, although some investors paid only $600 a share.

Between April 1, 1951, and February 15, 1952, Malakoff received from investors in the Nazareth venture $79,025 and paid to the Philadelphia Group $77,010.84; the latter figure includes $11,032.84 received in payment of an insurance claim for windstorm damage. However, at no time did the amount that John Malakoff paid to the Philadelphia Group exceed the amount which he had already collected from investors. Until he became insolvent in June, 1953, Malakoff paid monthly 'dividends' to the investors based on a 20% annual return on their original investments. These 'dividends' were paid in Ponzi-like1 manner out of new money received from investors in the Nazareth Market. The corporation did not have a profit from which dividends could have been paid during this period. Shares of stock were issued to the claimants herein on and after February 2, 1953, and none can be said to have been issued in a regular manner, that is, upon receipt of consideration passing directly to the Debtor. Moreover, the consideration for which the stock in Nazareth was issued was not the same in all cases: some investors gave Malakoff cash or checks; others received their interest in Nazareth by releasing funds which Malakoff held for them as proceeds from other ventures; others accepted Nazareth stock from Malakoff in exchange for stock in other Malakoff ventures that had proved worthless; and some of the claimants received interests in Nazareth in satisfaction of Malakoff's personal debts to them. In substantially all cases the certificates were not issued to the stock claimants at or about the time they allegedly gave consideration to Malakoff as an investment in Nazareth. Altogether 316 shares were issued, 116 more than were authorized, to the 41 claimants herein. On September 28, 1953, the Debtor filed a voluntary petition for reorganization under Chapter X of the Bankruptcy Act. To achieve a reorganization of the Debtor which, insofar as stock issuance and ownership are concerned, never had been properly organized, the trial court had to determine as a basic issue: who, if any, were entitled to participate in the stock of the reorganized Debtor. The Court referred the task of making this investigation to an Examiner (Bankruptcy Act of 1898, 167, 168; 11 U.S.C.A. 567, 568). Testimony (some 10,000 pages) was taken concerning the circumstances under which the stock claimants had purportedly invested in the Nazareth Market or claimed to be entitled to participate as stockholders of the Debtor. In a detailed and painstaking report (236 pages), the Examiner carefully sifted the issues fundamental to the resolution of stock participation.

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296 F.2d 670, 1961 U.S. App. LEXIS 3222, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jerome-fried-and-nazareth-fairgrounds-farmers-market-inc-v-benjamin-ca2-1961.