Lunghino v. Rand

247 A.D. 481, 286 N.Y.S. 714, 1936 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8302
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 25, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 247 A.D. 481 (Lunghino v. Rand) 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
Lunghino v. Rand, 247 A.D. 481, 286 N.Y.S. 714, 1936 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8302 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

Thompson, J.

Plaintiff appeals from a nonsuit and dismissal of the complaint at the close of his proofs.

[483]*483He was president and principal shareholder of The Commercial Trust Company, a bank, and treasurer and principal shareholder in The Commercial Share Corporation, an investment affiliate of the bank, of the city of Buffalo, when, early in 1931, at the instance of the State Banking Department, the taking over of the assets and the assumption of the liabilities of the bank were effected by two contracts entered into by the bank with the Marine Trust Company of Buffalo. It is plaintiff’s claim that the turning over of the bank’s assets and business to the Marine Company was without legal or factual justification; that his consent to the contracts and his conduct in inducing other shareholders of the trust company stock to consent to them were procured by fear and coercion induced by threats made against him by the defendants, pursuant to a conspiracy designed to acquire the trust company for the Marine Company. Defendants are the officers of the State Banking Department, then in office, the Marine Company, its president, general counsel, and other officers and attorneys, the president of the trust company, who succeeded plaintiff, and its attorneys. For his damage, plaintiff alleges that the transfer of the assets and consequent closing of the trust company rendered his stock valueless.

The first contract between the trust company and the Marine Company was executed on January 22, 1931. Plaintiff, among holders of more than two-thirds of the stock, signed it, and he advised his associates to do the same. The second contract was made at the instance of plaintiff, with the advice of able counsel of his own choosing. He executed it on February 17, 1931. It provided for postponement of the winding up of the affairs of the bank for forty-five days in order that efforts might be made to obtain additional capital, reorganize or sell the trust company. The contract contained an express provision by which it “ in all respects ratified, confirmed and continued in full force and effect ” the provisions of the first contract. It too was approved by the favorable votes of holders of more than two-thirds of the stock of the trust company, including plaintiff. All the assets of the trust company were acquired by the Marine Company and the liquidation and settlement of its affairs was commenced at the close of the extended period; efforts to reorganize, sell or otherwise arrange the trust company affairs so that its liquidation might be avoded, being unavailing.

Plaintiff was the organizer and active head of the Commercial Trust Company. He was also the organizer and active head of the Commercial Share Corporation. This corporation was formed for the purpose of buying and selling securities. It was operated [484]*484by the trust company under a management contract. Its chief business was the purchase of securities, principally, with funds loaned to it by the trust company upon collateral, consisting almost entirely of the securities so purchased, and their sale, in some instances. It also loaned money in substantial amounts. Latterly its purchases and collateral were confined to stock of the trust company. Plaintiff also owned a one-half interest in S. Lunghino & Sons, a copartnership operating a private bank in Rochester, of which he was a managing agent.

From the time of the organization of the trust company in 1928 to the time of the contract of January 22, 1931, plaintiff had personally acquired and pledged a large number of shares of the trust company and the share corporation stock to secure loans to him of over $1,500,000.

An examination of the affairs of the bank made by the State Banking Department in the latter part of November, 1930, disclosed that the trust company had bought 10,742 shares of the share corporation stock at a cost of over $181,460. It had loaned the share corporation $1,540,000, exceeding the limit prescribed by law. (Banking Law, § 190, subd. 1, ¶ [c].) The share corporation used a large part of these moneys to purchase stock of the trust company and out of them it loaned the sum of $532,000 to plaintiff, which he used for the same purpose. The share corporation had expended $727,000 in the purchase of stock of the trust company, and had loaned on the stock of both corporations, as collateral, $651,000, of which $532,000 was loaned to plaintiff, as above stated. It had loaned $86,000 to S. Lunghino & Sons and, $65,300 to members of the Lunghino family. At that time, S. Lunghino & Sons had pledged all their assets to secure the payment of $243,000 of loans to them, except their cash on hand amounting to $3,763.94, credits in other banks of $3,636.31, bonds and mortgages having a face value of $102,450 covering properties owned by plaintiff or by corporations controlled by him, all but one of which were second mortgages, and on miscellaneous stocks valued at $2,167, 2,391 shares of trust company stock and 15,376.9 shares of the share corporation stock. Their deposits amounted to $277,778.52, and their capital was then found to be impaired to the extent of $88,882.49 by the representative of the Banking Department who made the examination. The share corporation had loaned plaintiff $532,000, principally collateralled by stock of the bank, and the trust company had loaned $383,970 on 33,398 shares of the share corporation stock. The report set the value of the trust company stock at less than sixty dollars a share, and of the share corporation stock at three dollars and twenty-three [485]*485cents a share. Plaintiff owned over forty per cent of the stock of the trust company and forty per cent of the share corporation stock substantially all of which was pledged as security for loans to him.

Plaintiff artificially maintained the market of the stock of the trust company at $130 per share, and the share corporation at fourteen dollars per share, by placing orders with brokers, in various names, at these prices, and causing the purchase of all the shares of stock offered for sale. The moneys used upon such purchases were all obtained directly or indirectly from the trust company and the share corporation. The Banking Department issued orders to stop this practice and to correct other unsatisfactory conditions of the trust company’s affairs, which it found, but plaintiff refused to obey them. Meanwhile, it developed that plaintiff had caused the trust company to set up an account called /the Securities in Transit Account,” and enter various amounts to its credit, upon which the trust company, at plaintiff’s direction, issued treasurer’s checks to brokers on the sale of the share corporation stock to customers, who did not pay for it, thereby violating the order of the Banking Department, and his promise that the trust company would discontinue the financing of purchases of the share corporation stock, as well as wrongfully depleting the assets of the trust company. At plaintiff’s direction, the trust company issued its checks to brokers in payment of the share corporation stock bought on plaintiff’s order, and charged the amounts thereon on its liability ledger to one Montesano, who gave his note with the purchased stock as security. Plaintiff gave his note to Montesano for the same amount, with the identical number of shares purchased as collateral. There were other similar transactions by plaintiff in the name of Montesano, so that it was with ample basis that the bank examiner reported that the sum of $62,185 appearing on the bank’s books as a loan to Montesano was in fact a loan for plaintiff’s benefit, and also that it was short collateralled.

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Related

In re Siebert
99 Misc. 2d 32 (New York Supreme Court, 1979)
Peterson v. State
67 A.D.2d 1054 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1979)
Lunghino v. Marine Trust Co.
163 Misc. 765 (New York Supreme Court, 1937)

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Bluebook (online)
247 A.D. 481, 286 N.Y.S. 714, 1936 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8302, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lunghino-v-rand-nyappdiv-1936.