Lippincott v. Shaw Carriage Co.

25 F. 577, 1885 U.S. App. LEXIS 2298
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Indiana
DecidedNovember 21, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 25 F. 577 (Lippincott v. Shaw Carriage Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Indiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lippincott v. Shaw Carriage Co., 25 F. 577, 1885 U.S. App. LEXIS 2298 (circtdin 1885).

Opinion

Woods, J.

A particular statement of the numerous exceptions filed by the parties is not deemed necessary here. Omitting many details of evidence, I give so much of the master’s report as is thought to ■have an important bearing upon the questions to be decided. Except in some particulars which will be indicated, the facts of the case as stated by the master are well supported by the evidence. The report is as follows:

The bill was filed by Ezra Lippineott and others, merchants, in behalf of themselves and all other creditors who might come in and pay their share of the costs, etc., against the Shaw' Carriage Company, the Eirst .National Bank of Indianapolis, Benjamin C. Shaw, Irwin Bobbins, Thomas C. Bedding, William B. Bedding, E. A. W. Davis, trustee, William H. Morrison, trustee, E. A. W. Davis, John L. Ketcham, Jane M. Ketcham, William H. Morrison, Samuel Miller, William Needham, Peter Ditmars, Peter J. Banta, partners under the firm name of the Indiana Banking Company, William J. Holliday, John W. Murphy, James E. H. Tompkins, and George Tousey. The object and prayer of the bill is to set aside certain alleged preferential mortgages executed by the defendant the Shaw Carriage Company to the defendants the Eirst National Bank of Indianapolis and the Indiana Banking Company, and also to set aside-certain mortgages executed by the respondent Shaw individually to E. A. W. Davis, as cashier of the Indiana Banking Company, on or about the seventh day of May, 1879, on the ground that they were without consideration, and were fraudulent and void.

The evidence discloses the following facts:

In December, 1873, the Shaw Carriage Company was incorporated. * * * In January, 1879, Shaw, who had been treasurer of state of the state of Indiana for four years, and whose term would expire February 8,1879, was a defaulter to the amount of, say $127,000, which he had used, or appropriated to his own use, in his own business, contrary to law. As the time approached for settlement he made efforts to make good his deficit. Early in January he applied to the banks of Eletcher & Sharpe and Woollen, Webb & Co., of Indianapolis, and obtained for the company loans of $30,000,—$20,000 from Eletcher & Sharp, and $10,000 from Woollen, Webb & Co.,—and about the same time procured a loan of $10,000 from the Meridian National Bank -for the company. He obtained these loans upon a statement that the company had been or was about to be pushed or crowded by the Indiana National Bank, where it had formerly kept its account, by the new management which had sueceded Mr. Tousey, the former president, and that he desired the money to enable him to close the company account with that bank. This was not true; the amount the company owed the Indiana National Bank at that time was nominal, if anything. The plain motive for obtaining these loans was to enable him to settle his account as treasurer of state. He still lacked over $80,000 to enable him to settle with the state.

The defendants Davis and Bobbins, and Mr. Franklin Landers, who is not a defendant, were among the sureties on his official bond, and the evidence shows that they all knew that Shaw was short in his accounts with the state to a large amount. Landers, who assisted Shaw in making his settlement, indorsed his note for $5,000. He says he talked with Davis about the deficit, and about settling it up. Shaw says he talked with Landers and Bobbins about it. To enable Shaw to raise the balance needed, Bobbins, treasurer of the company, made the notes of the company payable to Shaw and Bobbins, which were indorsed by them before delivery. These notes amounted to $82,000, and were negotiated on February 5th and 8th, at the Indiana Banking Company’s bank, for certificates of deposit for that sum, which were made payable to the Shaw Carriage Company. In that transaction Davis [579]*579acted for the Indiana Banking Company, and knew that the object was to enable Shaw to raise money with which to settle with the state.

The evidence also shows that of these notes about $14,000 was accommodation paper, in excess of any indebtedness of the company to Shaw. This accommodation paper was taken up by Shaw, May 7th or 8th, by his returning to the carriage company its own paper in the hands of the Indiana Banking Company, having given his individual paper, secured by mortgage on his individual property, in payment thereof. With a view to this loan there liad been prepared a statement of the company’s condition, its assets and liabilities, which was exhibited by Bobbins to Davis in January, 1879, by which it appeared that Shaw claimed, as due him from the company, $102,000. By that statement the assets of the company were put at $227,000; consisting of $72,000 for the factory and machinery on Gatling street, in the city of Indianapolis, $61,000 of work done and in course of construction, and $68,000 of raw material, and the balance notes, accounts, etc. According to the testimony of Davis that statement showed over $140,000 of valuable assets, which lie believed could be converted into money in a short time, consisting of the following items:

Building and warerooms, $66,300

Materials and lumber, - 61,956

Accounts, - 2,489

Notes, - 9,213

Cash, - 147

$140,105

This, it will lie seen, differs about $20,000 from the statement as given by Bobbins of the condition of the company as it existed in the May following. Mr. Davis says that at the same time Mr. Shaw stated to him that lie (Shaw) was 'worth $Í50,000. From January to May the company purchased $12,000 -of raw material, and the first appraisement or inventory made after the mortgages wore executed, and the receiver took possession, put the value of the whole property at $115,000. The January statement showed $169,000 of debts, most of which was due to Shaw, or on time loans by banks.

The evidence shows that part of the notes making up the amount of $82,000, which wore discounted by the Indiana Banking Company on the fifth and eighth of February, were payable on demand,—a form of paper that the company had never before executed in its bank dealings. Mr. Bobbins says ho lias no idea why they were so made; and in view of this fact, and of the condition of the company as shown by the statement made in January, it is difficult to believe that these notes were discounted in the ordinary course of banking business.

Upon the whole evidence, the master is constrained to believe that the motive of the entire transaction, on tho part of the banks as well as Shaw, was not to raise funds to assist the company in carrying on its business, hut to provide a way by which Shaw might escape the disgrace and punishment which might result from the exposure of his manner of dealing with tho public funds. In March or April, 1879, $17,000 of the $82,000 of notes discounted by the Indiana Banking Company were transferred by the Indiana Banking Company to tho First National Bank of Indianapolis without indorsement. In March, 1879, some of the other notes held by the Indiana Banking Company against the Shaw Carriage Company became due, and were neither paid nor renewed, nor was any payment or renewal requested. In April other notes of the same character, and held by the same bank, became due, which were treated in the same way.

Shaw testifies that in March, or early in April, ho saw that the estimate of the company’s property, as made in the January statement to the'bank, was [580]*580greatly in excess of its true value, and he immediately informed Mr. Davis and Mr. Morrison of that fact, Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
25 F. 577, 1885 U.S. App. LEXIS 2298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lippincott-v-shaw-carriage-co-circtdin-1885.