Leo v. Green

52 N.J. Eq. 1
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 15, 1893
StatusPublished

This text of 52 N.J. Eq. 1 (Leo v. Green) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leo v. Green, 52 N.J. Eq. 1 (N.J. Ct. App. 1893).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

The North River Construction Company, a corporation of this state, was adjudged by this court, in January, 1884, to be insolvent, and, in pursuance of the statute, Ashbel Green was appointed its receiver. On the 11th of March, in the same year, the chancellor ordered that all creditors of the company should present their claims to the receiver within four months from that date, proving the same to the receiver’s satisfaction, and, in default of such presentation and proof, should be barred from participating in any dividends from the assets of the company, and prescribed the notice which should be given of the order. The notice was duly given.

On the 7th of September, 1885, nearly fourteen months after the time limited for the presentation of claims had expired, the petitioner, Arnold Leo, presented-a demand for $12,500, with interest from July 1st, 1881, characterizing it money paid and advanced by me to the North River Construction Company.” The receiver was not able to trace such an indebtedness of the company upon its books, and he therefore immediately returned Mr. Leo’s paper with the written objections that it was not presented within due time and that its form did not sufficiently apprise him of its merits. He also notified Mr. Leo that the claim was disputed and rejected by him to the end that appeal might be taken to the chancellor.

On the 20th of July, 1888, the chancellor made a further order that all persons who had presented to the receiver claims, [3]*3which the receiver had disallowed, should prosecute any appeal they might desire to take and bring the same to hearing before the first Monday in December of that year.

Notice of this order was given to the attorney of Mr. Leo in August and to Mr. Leo himself in September, of the same year.

No action was taken by Mr. Leo until December, 1891, when he called upon the receiver with reference to the claim, and was then explicitly informed as to the nature and effect of the orders and notices which have been above referred to. Thereafter, Mr. Leo did nothing until the latter part of September, 1893, when, as the receiver was about to make final distribution of the remnant of the assets of the company then in his hands among its stockholders, he caused a new attorney to serve a notification that he, Leo, intended to prosecute his claim, and that any distribution which would strip the receiver of funds to meet his recovery would be iqade at the receiver’s peril. Later, in October, 1893, the present petition was presented to the chancellor. The receiver has answered it, and the application of Mr. Leo is now heard upon the petition, answer, affidavits filed on each side and the record in the insolvency matter.

The answer exhibits the further facts that Arnold Leo & Company, a partnership, of which the petitioner is a member, was the owner of six hundred shares of the capital stock of the North River Construction Company, and, as such stockholder, was known to and recognized by the receiver. To this firm, as one of his eestuis que trustent, the receiver from time to time made reports of his progress in the administration of his trust'. On the 12th of January, 1885, and the 11th of January, 1886, he sent it reports which referred to the order to limit the presentation of claims of creditors. On March 15th, 1886, he sent it a report which specially stated that he rejected the claim of Arnold Leo, and that no action upon the rejection had been taken by Mr. Leo. On June 3d, 1888, he reported that he intended to ask the chancellor to limit the time within which creditors should appeal from his disallowance of their claims, and in a report dated December 6th, 1888, the order to limit appeals was copied at length.

[4]*4It further is made to appear that the North River Construction Comirany was organized for the purpose of constructing the New York, West Shore and Buffalo Railway Company from Weehawken, in this state, to the city of Buffalo, a distance of four hundred and twenty-five miles, for which it was to be paid by the capital stock and bonds of that company; that its failure was caused by depreciation in the market value of those securities ; that at the time of its failure it had two hundred thousand three hundred and fifty shares of the capital stock of the railway company and also first mortgage bonds of that company of the par value of $10,000,000 and demand notes of the company for $600,000, all of which went to the receiver and constituted the principal part of the assets in his hands; that in June, 1884, a suit was commenced to foreclose the first mortgage upon the railway company’s property, which threatened the destruction of the principal assets of the construction company; that in the emergency the receiver applied to the court in which the foreclosure suit was pending and obtained leave to intervene, and then interposed technical defences for the purpose of gaining delay; that during such delay, to reconcile all interests and gain the active assistance, good will and co-operation of the stockholders of the construction company by securing for them the probability of a partial payment for their stock, he, in June, 1885, called a meeting of the larger creditors of the construction company, and represented to them the situation of affairs and the advantage which would ensue from a compromise of their claims to an amount which would admit of a dividend out of the assets .to the stockholders; that the result of such overture was that practically all the creditors agreed to accept one-half of their claims in full satisfaction of them; that later, in July of the same year, the banking-house of Drexel, Morgan & Company, of New York city, proposed to the holders of the first mortgage bonds of the railway company a scheme by which, upon a sale of the railway to the New York Central and Hudson River Railroad Company, fifty cents upon the dollar of their holdings would be paid; that the receiver of the construction [5]*5company became a party in the negotiation which followed this proposal, and, with the co-operation of both creditors and stockholders of that company, effected a sale of the assets in his hands for $6,000,000 par value of first mortgage bonds of the then newly-organized West Shore Railroad Company, which bonds were guaranteed by the New York Central and Hudson River Railroad Company and sold for a fraction less' than par, and he was enabled, from the proceeds of his sale of those bonds, to pay the creditors of the construction company the full amount they had agreed to accept in satisfaction of their claims, and also pay the stockholders upwards of thirty-one per cent, of the par value of their stock; that, among other stockholders, he paid the firm of Arnold Leo & Company thirty-one per cent, of the par value of their six hundred shares of stock, to wit, $18,600, and that in absence of the compromise with the creditors, Arnold Leo & Company would not have been paid five per cent., to wit, $3,000, on their stock.

It further is made to appear that after Arnold Leo & Company had been paid this dividend upon their stock, and the assets in the receiver’s hands had been so far distributed that he retained only sufficient moneys to answer some unsettled contingent liabilities, they sold their interest in the stock standing in their name, and thereafter, when the receiver had adjusted those contingent liabilities and was about to make final distribution of what remained in his hands, and not till then, Mr. Leo, who had slept upon his claim for more than eight years, made the present application.

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Bluebook (online)
52 N.J. Eq. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leo-v-green-njch-1893.