MacLeod v. Edelman

105 F.2d 995, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 3450
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJuly 20, 1939
DocketNo. 306
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 105 F.2d 995 (MacLeod v. Edelman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MacLeod v. Edelman, 105 F.2d 995, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 3450 (2d Cir. 1939).

Opinions

CLARK, Circuit Judge.

On March 25, 1938, Meiselman, a dealer in furs in New York City, bought from Edelman 421 raw mink skins at $15 each, making a total cost of $6,315. ' He took possession of the skins and gave Edelman a check for $2,000 and two trade acceptances, one for $1,000, due April 25, and one for $3,315, due May 24, 1938. Meiselman immediately offered the furs to Milton Kahn, first at $14 per skin, and then the next morning at $13, asking for a substantial amount in cash and the remainder in good notes. Kahn received the furs into his possession and - then sought Edelman as an endorser on the note he proposed to give. Edelman, recognizing the skins, took possession of them and notified Kahn that he claimed them as his own, whereupon Kahn’s interest in the skins terminated. It being then late on a Saturday morning, Edelman procured certification of Meiselman’s check for $2,000 at the latter’s bank. Having consulted counsel over the weekend, on Monday he procured a cashier’s check for his certified check, thus making sure that it would be paid; then he wrote Meiselman notifying him that the sale was “rescinded, cancelled, and annulled” for misrepresentation; and finally he completed the day’s activities by suing Meiselman in the Supreme Court of New York for rescission of the sale on a complaint wherein he asserted that he had already rescinded it.

Soon thereafter the expected happened, and by April 9, after an" earlier assignment for creditors, Meiselman was in bankruptcy — apparently very much so, since it is asserted that his assets were about $2,000 and his liabilities $100,000. The trustee refused to accept the gage of battle tendered in the state court Suit, but sought a turn over order from the referee in bankruptcy, who after several adjourned hearings granted it. By this time the mink skins were gone, and, Edelman admitting he was a man of substance, the order was for the payment to the trustee of $6,315, the value of the skins. It is from the affirmance of that order by the District Court and its later refusal to reopen the case that this appeal is taken.

In the proceedings below, two sharply controverted issues developed — the first whether the bankrupt made any false representations, and the second as to the terms of the sale as affecting the necessity of a .return of the $2,000 before rescission-could be had. Claimant had the misfortune to have his story disbelieved on both points by both the referee and the court, though the former reacted most strongly against his version of the contract itself, while the court objected the more to his claims as to the misrepresentations. His claim as to the contract did not clearly appear from his complaint in the state court, though it was stated in his letter of rescission of March 28, 1938. Since, however, lawyers congen[997]*997itally hesitate to disclose information in their complaints — a hesitancy not necessarily extended to letters — no point need be based upon that omission. The claim is based on the fact that from an earlier sale of mink skins — one had on March 3 — there were still outstanding two trade acceptances, one of $1,800, due on April 13, and one of $800, due on May 3, 1938. So, as Edelman says, the $2,000 given on March 25 was to pay the $1,800 acceptance in full and $200 on the $800 acceptance, leaving a balance thereon of $600. This is contrary to the testimony of the broker present at the sale and to the invoice, prepared by Edelman’s wife, showing the $2,000 as payment of the balance due on the present sale of the 421 skins. Edelman’s reply is that his wife took her information as to the terms from Meiselman, not from him, since he had stepped out, and with this Mrs. Edelman agrees. In his letter of rescission of Monday, March 28, Edelman returned the $1,800 acceptance, as well as the two given • on March 25, and stated that the $800 acceptance was held for the balance due of $600.

The referee characterized this claim as preposterous on the evidence and held that the $2,000 was a cash payment made on the second sale. Accordingly he ruled that there was no rescission for failure to tender back this sum received. After the referee had indicated that he proposed to make the order and at an adjourned hearing held on July 20, 1938, claimant then did make tender of $2,000 to the trustee, which the trustee refused to accept. The referee held that this tender, coming after the adjudication, was too late.

The claimed fraudulent representations were stated in Edelman’s verified complaint in the state court suit, in his verified answer to the trustee’s petition for the turnover order, and again in his affidavit in the District Court in support of his motion for reargument. They consisted of statements by Meiselman that he was purchasing the skins for the purpose of filling an order which he then had for their immediate resale at a higher price,- and that hfe was a good credit risk, amply solvent and fully capable of paying for the skins upon the dates agreed and intended so to pay for them. The referee held that the proof, including Edelman’s testimony, did not show direct representations, that the affidavits were to be treated as only in the nature of pleadings, and hence that no showing of fraud had been made. With this the District Court agreed and in its original order it made this conclusion the chief ground of its decision. Thereupon the claimant sought a reargument or a remand of the case to the referee for the purpose of taking additional testimony on this issue. The court held, however, that full opportunity to present testimony had been accorded at the various adjourned hearings before the referee and, in again confirming the order, stated that in deciding there were no fraudulent representations it did not intend to hold the belated tender sufficient.

We think that a denial of the opportunity to produce further proof was well within the court’s discretion. Indeed, it would have served no good purpose, for the nature of claimant’s own testimony which would have been produced was already disclosed. The referee and the court had shown the little value they placed upon claimant’s own statements, and the court was entitled under the circumstances to decline to reopen the case to hear more of it. Claimant has not been happy in the claims made upon his own testimony, for the latter has seemed too apt to meet all exigencies to inspire confidence. We sympathize with the view of this testimony held below; the case would have been more persuasive had claimant relied only on the admitted circumstances without trying to gild the lily by his testimony. But even if his story of what the bankrupt said is to be discounted, we feel that this does not justify penalizing him by loss of his case if the facts otherwise disclosed point to questions sufficiently serious to make this summary proceeding unjustified. ' ■ ■

It is now settled that if there is a real and substantial controversy of law or fact as to property held adversely to a bankrupt — “a contested matter of right, involving some fair doubt and reasonable room for controversy” — the bankruptcy court is “without jurisdiction” to adjudicate the matter, but the trustee must have resort to a plenary suit. Harrison v. Chamberlin, 271 U.S. 191, 46 S.Ct. 467, 70 L.Ed. 897, quoting Board of Education v. Leary, 8 Cir., 236 F. 521, 525; In re Quan Weing et al., 2 Cir., 104 F.2d 112. But the mere assertion of an adverse claim is not enough, and the court may enter upon a preliminary inquiry to determine whether the adverse claim is real and substantial or merely colorable. Id.; May v.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In Re Meiselman
105 F.2d 995 (Second Circuit, 1939)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
105 F.2d 995, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 3450, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/macleod-v-edelman-ca2-1939.