Judson v. Courier Co.

25 F. 705, 1885 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 155
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJuly 23, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 25 F. 705 (Judson v. Courier Co.) 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
Judson v. Courier Co., 25 F. 705, 1885 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 155 (S.D.N.Y. 1885).

Opinion

Brown, J.

When this cause was before this court upon the first hearing, on the pleadings and proofs, the bill was dismissed upon the merits, because it appeared to the court'that the proofs failed to show that at the time of the tripartite agreement McCune, the representative of the Courier Company, knew that the assignment or conveyance from Queen, which was made in connection with the tripartite agreement of October 27th, was made in fraud of the provisions of the bankrupt act, (section 5128;) and because the facts seemed to show that McCune had no knowledge of any other debts than those provided for, and no notice of the probability of any such debts, and did not omit reasonable inquiry upon that subject in view of the previous assurances made to him by the bankrupt that the menagerie debts, and his debt to Howe, were “all he owed in the world.”

Upon the reversal in the circuit court I do not understand any different view of the law to be expressed by the circuit judge. The ground of reversal, as I understand, was that McCune did not make reasonable inquiry as to the existence of other creditors, and that, not having done so, he is chargeable with knowledge of what, it was thought, he might have ascertained by such inquiries.

Upon the present hearing the defendant Queen has been again examined. McCune having died, his former testimony was used. It now appears, according to the testimony of Queen, what did not appear before, that the subject of Queen’s indebtedness was spoken of between him and McCune at St. Louis at the time of this tripartite agreement. McCune testified that it was not spoken of, evidently having forgotten it. Queen, upon his cross-examination, testifies, in view even of the conversation at St. Louis as to his debts, that it was MeCune’s intention, a^s he understood it, to settle with all the creditors that he knew of; and that he did pay or settle with all that he knew of. Moreover, Queen speaks of showing to McCune the memorandum of his liabilities, which would seem to have been not long before the arrangement with Howe; and this memorandum, as subsequently explained, I understand showed no debts but those covered in the tripartite agreement. These circumstances would seem to me still, as the testimony upon the former hearing appeared to me, sufficient ground for an entirely reasonable and honest belief on the part of McCune that there were no other debts of Queen than those provided for in the tripartite agreement; and as a fact in the cause I must find that he did not, in my judgment, have knowledge of any other debts, and had no reasonable' cause to suspect others, and did not suspect the existence of any other obligations of Queen. The evidence shows that each of the various parties was acting for himself, and that the arrangement finally effected by the tripartite agreement was fair and honorable to all, and honorably carried out by the Courier Company at great trouble and inconvenience, and a large advance of money.

In view, however, of the comparatively small difference in the evidence as it stands now from what it was on the former hearing, and [707]*707considering the different view of the facts, or the different interpretation put upon them, by the circuit court in the former case, I should hesitate to dismiss the bill upon this difference alone. But there is another and controlling reason for doing so. On the former hearing, as the cause was dismissed upon the merits, it was unnecessary to consider what parties might be necessary in order to render an affirmative decree for the complainant. The presence of other parties was certainly not necessary to a dismissal of the bill if the evidence did not show any merits in the complainant. The circuit court, in ordering a new trial upon the merits, pointed out certain defects of parties; and Dinnegar, Colvin, and Cole have accordingly been introduced, for the reason, as I understand, that the Courier Company made title in part through the claims transferred to it from them; and also because they are necessarily interested in any decree that should overturn the tripartite agreement under which they had a pecuniary claim against the Courier Company. One of them has, in fact, recovered a small judgment against the company, based upon the covenants of that agreement.

But the Courier Company in connection with the tripartite agreement also took by assignment from Dinnegar such title to the property in question as Howe acquired from Queen by the bill of sale of October 9th. There is no question upon the evidence that Queen owed Howe at that time at least the $24,000, which, from the proofs in bankruptcy, seem to have been transferred by Howe to Dinnegar. The bill of sale to Howe, together with his agreement for resale to Queen, was a security for the payment of those claims. Howe transferred his title under the bill of sale to Dinnegar, and Dinnegar transferred the same title to the Courier Company as part of the transaction in making the tripartite agreement. The notes for which the bill of sale was security not being paid, the security to which Dinnegar was entitled under the bill of sale transferred to him by Howe was available to the Courier Company, because Dinnegar had transferred it to them in connection with and as a part of the tripartite agreement, and because that agreement thereby became the substituted security provided for the payment of the claims for which the bill of sale was a security; and though the provision for the payment of these claims was not absolute under the tripartite agreement, it was such as was agreed' on by the parties, and gave to the Courier1 Company, for the purpose of executing that agreement, all the rights and powers of Dinnegar or Howe under the bill of sale. I am satisfied from the evidence that the net value of the menagerie property did not exceed the amount of Dinnegar’s claim and lien upon it under the hill of sale thus transferred from ITowe, viz., $24,000; and that the sale of the property made by the Courier Company was as beneficial as possible. Howe’s title under that bill of sale is therefore available to the defendant company as a defense; and that title cannot be disregarded, nor can it be set aside as fraudulent, except upon [708]*708a bill for that purpose, or a bill which at least contains all suitable and necessary allegations for such an adjudication. To such a bill Howe would be a necessary party defendant.

. The transfer to Howe, being a bona fide security, if it was invalid under the bankrupt act, it could only be so under section 5128, because Howe also had “knowledge” that the transfer was in fraud of the act. To such an inquiry and to such an adjudication Howe is a necessary party, because, in the language of the supreme court in the case of Gaylords v. Kelshaw, 1 Wall. 81, “it is his fraudulent conduct that requires investigation.” Miller v. Hall, 70 N. Y. 250. Such an investigation would, in effect, be a substantially new and different cause of action from anything presented by this bill of complaint. The few lines in the present bill denying any title in Dinnegar, and stating that any title which he claimed was fraudulent, are wholly insufficient to be treated as a statement of a cause of action seeking to adjudicate as fraudulent, under the bankrupt act, the transfer to Howe on October 9th. As respects that transfer to Howe, there is not a word in the bill. Howe’s name is not mentioned; much less is there any charge of knowledge on his part that that transfer was in fraud of the bankrupt act.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 F. 705, 1885 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/judson-v-courier-co-nysd-1885.