Katz v. Kowalsky

295 N.W. 600, 296 Mich. 164, 134 A.L.R. 179, 1941 Mich. LEXIS 361
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 6, 1941
DocketDocket No. 114, Calendar No. 41,357.
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 295 N.W. 600 (Katz v. Kowalsky) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Katz v. Kowalsky, 295 N.W. 600, 296 Mich. 164, 134 A.L.R. 179, 1941 Mich. LEXIS 361 (Mich. 1941).

Opinion

Butzel, J.

Plaintiff, assignee of Daniel J. Alpert, her brother, sued in assumpsit on an arbitration award dated January 31, 1931. The award grew out of Alpert’s disputed claim for legal services and expenses in representing defendant for several years in tax title litigation. Alpert and defendant agreed to submit their differences to arbitrators, and they awarded Mr. Alpert $10,000 ; he gave his written consent to accept tax titles and tax leases in lieu of the cash award, but, defendant never attempted to fulfill the obligation. Defendant pleaded that he filed his petition in bankruptcy on February 11, 1931, that he subsequently obtained a discharge, and that the obligation was properly scheduled in Alpert’s name because defendant had no knowledge of the assignment to plaintiff. Alpert admitted having knowledge of the bankruptcy proceedings shortly after they were instituted. The trial court expressed his difficulty in weighing the highly conflicting testimony consisting mainly of witnesses who were interested, but found for plaintiff on all disputed questions of fact, finding specifically that on January 31, 1931, Alpert personally served a copy of the assignment on defendant, and *167 from this he concluded that the debt was not discharged by defendant’s bankruptcy because of the failure to schedule plaintiff as a creditor. There is nothing in the record to indicate that plaintiff personally had ‘ ‘ notice or actual knowledge ” (11 USCA, § 35) of the bankruptcy proceedings.

Defendant contends that the finding that he had notice of the assignment is against the great weight of the evidence; he also contends that Alpert was plaintiff’s attorney with full charge of protecting plaintiff’s interests, and that his actual knowledge of the bankruptcy proceedings should be imputed to plaintiff to make the discharge operative on plaintiff’s debt. Plaintiff contends that there is no proof establishing an agency between plaintiff and Alpert during the period that the claim could have been proved and allowed, and that even if the great weight of the evidence revealed such a relationship, Alpert’s knowledge of the bankruptcy cannot be imputed to .plaintiff.

Plaintiff is a resident of Connecticut. She testified that just before the assignment was executed, Alpert was having financial difficulties and needed $4,000 immediately. Benjamin Alpert, anothfer brother, telephoned plaintiff in Connecticut and urged her to loan Daniel the $4,000; she agreed to do so on the understanding that Daniel would assign to her as security his award against defendant. Accordingly the funds were promptly forwarded to Benjamin, who unquestionably disbursed them for Daniel’s benefit. Benjamin insisted that the award be assigned immediately, and he demanded that his brother Daniel promptly serve a copy of the assignment on defendant. The trial court found that such copy was served on defendant before he filed his. petition in bankruptcy; it is undisputed that Daniel was scheduled as a creditor, but plaintiff was not. .

*168 Daniel admitted that he knew of the bankruptcy proceedings in time to participate therein in behalf of his sister, but did not inform her of the fact. He testified:

“When I learned of his petition in bankruptcy, I went down and examined the schedule to see what the listings of his creditors was, to see whether my sister was listed or not, and I found that he did not list her. * * * I examined the schedules probably the latter part of February. I went down there several times and checked into it. ’ ’

He admitted being “vitally interested” in’whether his sister was scheduled, and stated:

“Well, I know the law on bankruptcy sufficiently to know that if I would inform her of bankruptcy proceedings, she would be bound by those proceedings, she would be called upon to file her claim. Yes, I know that is the law. ’ ’

When asked why he did not tell his sister about the bankruptcy proceedings, he explained:

“Because as a lawyer I knew if she obtained knowledge" of the existing bankruptcy proceedings, that she would be bound to participate in them, too, and I felt if she had no knowledge of it, her claim against Kowalsky under that award would not be extinguished by this discharge in bankruptcy. ’ ’

On the question of the weight of the evidence, we share the trial court’s doubts and bewilderment in making findings from the testimony. There are many unexplained, and perhaps inexplainable, discrepancies in the proofs produced for plaintiff. The stenographer who testified that she accompanied Daniel when he served the assignment first stated that she was Daniel’s regular stenographer; later it was shown that at this time she had a full-time *169 job in a lawyer’s office in another building. Then she explained that, although she had this full-time job, she spent a part of her lunch hour almost every day at Daniel’s office in order to get more practice in dictation and legal stenography. Daniel’s testimony is likewise highly inconsistent. He insisted that after January 31, 1931, he acted for his sister in connection with the award because after the assignment it belonged to her. Yet he filed in his own behalf an affidavit dated December 10, 1931, in a proceeding to establish a lien on the tax titles which were the subject of the litigation in which he had represented defendant. In this affidavit, Daniel swore that

“Esidore [sic] Kowalsky was indebted and is now indebted to this deponent in a large sum of money and that an arbitration was had * * * and that a final award was made.”

Furthermore, in January, 1932, slightly less than a year after the assignment, Daniel wrote one of the arbitrators asking him to arrange to make delivery to him of the tax titles under the award and agreement. "When asked to explain for whom he wrote it, he insisted that the letter spoke for itself; then he explained that his brother asked him to do it; when asked again for whom he was acting, he repeated that “the letter speaks for itself.”

In concluding that the copy of the assignment was served on defendant in January, 1931, the trial court recognized some of these discrepancies but commented that he was “not dealing with the average or garden variety of litigants in this matter but had to deal with an attorney as the principal witness for the plaintiff and his former client.” Although we have the same doubts as to the facts, the trier had the witnesses before him and, under the circum *170 stances presented by tbe record, we cannot hold that the finding of the trial court is against the great weight of the evidence.

We must determine whether Daniel’s knowledge of defendant’s bankruptcy proceeding may be deemed that of plaintiff. 11 USCA, § 35, provides:

“A discharge in bankruptcy shall release a bankrupt from all his provable debts, except such as * * * have not been duly scheduled in time for proof and allowance, with the name of the creditor, if known to the bankrupt, unless such creditor had notice or actual knowledge of the proceedings in bankruptcy. ’ ’

See, also, Wineman v. Fisher, 135 Mich. 604;

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Bluebook (online)
295 N.W. 600, 296 Mich. 164, 134 A.L.R. 179, 1941 Mich. LEXIS 361, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/katz-v-kowalsky-mich-1941.