Koechl v. Leibinger & Oehm Brewing Co.

26 A.D. 573, 50 N.Y.S. 568
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 26 A.D. 573 (Koechl v. Leibinger & Oehm Brewing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Koechl v. Leibinger & Oehm Brewing Co., 26 A.D. 573, 50 N.Y.S. 568 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

Hatch, J.:

■ The defendant Leibinger & Oehm Brewing Company is a domestic corporation. Heretofore, and on the 19th day of May, 1897, it. made and executed a general assignment, without preferences, for the benefit of its creditors, and the assignee therein named entered upon the discharge of his trust. Subsequent to his qualifying as assignee, he presented a petition to the Supreme Court asking leave to sell at public auction the whole of the assigned property. An order authorizing him so to do was made by the court, and the property was sold for the sum of $55,000. The plaintiff is a judgment ■creditor of the defendant corporation, and lie seeks by this action, begun some two months prior to the sale, to have the said assignment set aside as having been made in fraud of the rights of creditors, and for the purpose of hindering, delaying and defrauding such ■creditors in the due enforcement and collection of their demands.'

The action is at issue, and will soon be reached for trial. The injunction asked is for the purpose of restraining the defendant assignee from distributing the whole of the proceeds of the sale ■during the pendency of the action, and requires him to keep sufficient of the funds in his hands to satisfy the plaintiff’s judgments in the event that he succeeds in the action, and establishes his right to have his judgment paid and satisfied out of the property of the corporation. The amount which the plaintiff asks that the assignee retain for this purpose is the sum of $12,500. The plaintiff’s judgments, independent of interest, amount to the sum of $9,471.53. It is the claim of the plaintiff that the corporation was, at the time of the execution of the assignment, insolvent, and that it had been so insolvent for a long time prior thereto, to the knowledge of its officers, directors and attorneys:; that 'being so insolvent its officers, directors and attorneys conceived a scheme to make a fraudulent disposition of a portion of its property by distributing the same among its officers and attorneys, and, after such distribution, to make and execute an assignment of its remaining property for distribution among its creditors, without preference; that in pursuance of such fraudulent purpose it delivered to its secretary bonds, owned by it, and secured by mortgage upon its property, in the sum of $4,000, and to its attorneys a' like number of the same series of bonds', of the same amount, secured' by the same mortgage. Immediately [575]*575upon the transfer and delivery of these bonds it executed and delivered the assignment.

The plaintiff further claims that if he establish such facts upon a trial, he becomes entitled to have the assignment set aside as fraudulent, and to have the amount of his judgments satisfied out of the property of the -corporation, without regard to the rights of other creditors, except such as have prior specific liens.

We shall, therefore, consider, in the first instance, whether the facts upon which the plaintiff relies establish a prima faeie case of fraud; and, if so, whether. the legal result which flows therefrom entitles the plaintiff to the preliminary injunction and to the application of the property in satisfaction of his judgments, if he succeed upon a trial in establishing his claim as averred in his complaint. In August, 1896, the plaintiff loaned to the corporation, by an exchange of checks, $3,000. The plaintiff’s checks were paid, but the corporation’s checks remained unpaid, and plaintiff was requested by Moesmer, the secretary, and Leibinger, the president,' not to deposit the checks, -as they could not be paid. They were never paid, and now constitute the basis for two of the judgments averred in the complaint. In October, 1896, the plaintiff made a further loan of $6,000, secured by the promissory notes of the corporation, payable upon demand. - This loan was made to tide it over a difficulty, and at the time when it was made the plaintiff talked with the president and one of the directors about the affairs of the company, and stated to them that the company was probably insolvent, and had no chance of recovering itself. There is no denial of any of these statements or transactions by any of the defendants. Moesmer, the secretary, had also loaned the company during 1896, as he says, upwards of $6,000, and this money was due and unpaid sometime prior to the assignment, and prior to the transfer of the bonds secured by the second mortgage. This evidence, when coupled with the fact that-it was subsequently found necessary to make this assignment, and that the whole property sold for only $55,000, is practically conclusive of the fact that the corporation was insolvent for nearly a year, at least, prior to its general assignment. (Brown v. Montgomery, 20 N. Y. 287; Rasin v. Ammidown, 15 Hun, 422; Toof v. Martin, 13 Wall. 40.) Leibinger and Moesmer were respectively president,-secretary and directors in [576]*576tike corporation, and so remained at the time of the transfer of the bonds and the execution of the assignment. . They must, therefore, have known of this condition of the corporation.- At least, upon the papers now before -us, it appears that they were cognizant of thé - transactions and of the inability of the corporation to pay its commercial paper. In the absence of explanation by the defendants, • the plaintiff became entitled to' have the court find that the corporation was insolvent at the time when the transactions were had..

The declaration'of the defendant Moesmer that he had no idea that the company was insolvent when the bonds were delivered to him, in the absence of a denial upon his part of the facts above adverted to, is entitled to no consideration,.as he is shown to have had knowledge of the transactions, the dishonor of the corporation’s paper, and its inability to pay its debts. The papers -further disclose that the property of the corporation Was incumbered by a first mortgage for $35,000 or $38,000. In the spring- of 1897 the- corporation concluded to place a second mortgage upon its property, and by resolution of its stockholders authorized the board of directors to sell the bonds,. to maintain and extend the business of the company by securing tax certificates' for customers, and in such other manner as they may consider to the interest of the company.” This mortgage secured bonds to the amount of $50,000. It. is in dispute as to how many of these bonds had been issued prior to the'execution of the assignment. The assigned has set out this mortgage, in the schedules, as constituting a lien for $29,000, and in his petition to the Supreme Court for leave to sell the property, he stated that this mortgage Was alien for that amount. . ■

It is the claim of the defendants that bonds to this amount were issued- sometime prior to the execution of the assignment, and it is claimed by the plaintiff-that'$8,000 of them were issued on or about the day of the assignment, and he avers that such issuance was a part of the fraudulent scheme. It is undisputed that upon the books of the corporation there appeared an entry under' date of May 30, 1897, the day after the assignment, showing that Moesmer surrendered on' that-date certain past due notes óf the eorpoL ration which he held, and that he received therefor four of- the second mortgage bonds. The date in the book had been changed from .May twentieth to May first, and the bookkeeper stated to the [577]*577attorney for the plaintiff that the change was made by Moesmer’s direction after the assignment was made.

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Koechl v. Leibinger & Oehm Brewing Co.
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Bluebook (online)
26 A.D. 573, 50 N.Y.S. 568, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/koechl-v-leibinger-oehm-brewing-co-nyappdiv-1898.