Manufacturers & Traders Trust Co. v. Goldman

665 F.2d 43
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedNovember 23, 1981
DocketNo. 81-5010
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 665 F.2d 43 (Manufacturers & Traders Trust Co. v. Goldman) 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
Manufacturers & Traders Trust Co. v. Goldman, 665 F.2d 43 (2d Cir. 1981).

Opinion

FEINBERG, Chief Judge:

This is the second appeal to this court by Manufacturers and Traders Trust Company (the Bank) in an attempt to enforce an alleged security interest, obtained in February 1973, in the property of the bankrupt, Ollag Construction Equipment Corp. (Ol-lag). Karl Goldman, trustee of the bankrupt, has consistently maintained that the security is a voidable preference under § 60 of the Bankruptcy Act. At the time of the first appeal, the trustee had so persuaded Bankruptcy Judge Beryl E. McGuire and District Judge John T. Elfvin. This court, however, reversed and remanded the case for further consideration and additional findings. Matter of Ollag Construction Equipment Corp., 578 F.2d 904 (2d Cir. 1978). This direction has been fully fol[44]*44lowed and the trustee has again been successful, resulting in the appeal now before us. We affirm the judgment of the district court for reasons stated below.

I

Since familiarity with our prior opinion is assumed, we will not once again describe the facts in detail. It is enough for present purposes to note the following: Ollag, an equipment firm, was one of three corporations controlled by four brothers. The other two corporations were Ollag’s parent, Deplan Contracting Inc. (Deplan), a construction firm and Ollag’s principal source of income, and Sheldon Builders Supply Corp. (Sheldon), which owned the real estate on which Deplan and Ollag were located. In the winter of 1972-73, Deplan encountered financial difficulties, causing-concern to its creditors, principally the Bank and The Travelers Indemnity Company (Travelers). Our prior opinion succinctly described both their interest and what then occurred:

Meetings were held to discuss refinancing the stricken business. The principal creditor participants were the Bank and the Traveler’s Indemnity Company (“Travelers”). The Bank held Deplan’s note in the sum of $200,000, collateralized by a security interest in equipment Deplan owned separately from Ollag. It had also obtained a mortgage on Sheldon’s real estate, and payment guaranties from Ol-lag and the Gallos and their wives. Travelers had written performance and payment bonds for Deplan’s projects, and Ollag, Sheldon, and the Gallos had also agreed to indemnify Travelers against liability on these bonds, a fact of which the Bank claims ignorance.
While the discussions continued, the security interest at issue in this case came into being. In February 1973, Leopold Gallo, Ollag’s president, executed at the Bank’s request a chattel mortgage on Ol-lag’s inventory and equipment to serve as security for Ollag’s guaranty of Deplan’s note. The proposed refinancing never occurred.

578 F.2d at 906 (footnotes omitted).

Thereafter, despite Deplan’s efforts, it was adjudicated a bankrupt in early May 1973. Later that month, Travelers filed an involuntary petition in bankruptcy against Ollag, which was adjudicated a bankrupt in June 1973. In the prior appeal, we disposed of the trustee’s attack on the Bank’s security interest based upon state law grounds, but we were unable to rule definitively on the trustee’s claim of voidable preference under § 60. The Bank argued that the trustee had not proved two of the prerequisites of his claim: that Ollag was insolvent when the security interest was given and that the Bank had “reasonable cause” so to believe. Concluding that “there were important factors weighing on the question of Ollag’s insolvency” that had not been considered, we reversed the judgment for the trustee and remanded for specific findings of the value, at the relevant date, of:

(1) Ollag’s physical assets;
(2) Ollag’s right of subrogation to the Bank’s secured claim against Deplan;
(3) Ollag’s rights of contribution against Sheldon and the Gallos as co-guarantors of Deplan’s note to the Bank and co-indemnitors on Travelers’s performance and payment bonds;
(4) Ollag’s expected liability to Travelers under the indemnity agreement covering the performance and payment bonds, assuming that liability is established.

Id. at 909. We also instructed that: [i]f the bankruptcy court determines on remand that Ollag had a negative net worth in February 1973, it should then consider whether, with knowledge of all information available upon diligent inquiry into the Gallo enterprise’s affairs, the Bank would have had reasonable cause to conclude that Ollag was insolvent.

Id.

Thereafter, the bankruptcy judge dutifully complied with this directive, and again found that Ollag was insolvent in February 1973 and that the Bank had reasonable cause to so conclude. The district judge [45]*45again affirmed the decision of the bankruptcy judge.

On appeal, the Bank argues that the lower courts improperly considered certain financial statements of three Gallo brothers, of which more later, and attacks in a number of other respects the findings that Ollag was insolvent and that the Bank should have been aware of it. Were the latter group of issues the only ones before us, we would simply affirm at this point. We pointed out in our prior opinion that “valuation of contingent assets and liabilities is an arduous task, and on occasions only approximations can be made.” Id. The opinions of the bankruptcy judge and the district judge were careful, thorough and sensible. For example, the bankruptcy judge’s use of liquidation value to measure Ollag’s physical assets was reasonable in view of Deplan’s financial downslide in early 1973, since Ollag’s economic well-being was inextricably linked to Deplan’s. See Mitchell v. Investment Securities Corp., 67 F.2d 669, 671-72 (5th Cir. 1933); cf. Kra-vetz v. Joange Building Corp., 341 F.2d 561, 563 (2d Cir. 1965). Similarly, the valuation of Sheldon’s potential contribution on the Travelers bonds at $7,500 was also justified due to the outstanding liens on Sheldon’s properties. The Bank offered no evidence to suggest that it had been “duped” into settling for approximately $7,500 to release its lien, nor did it present credible evidence that the liquidation sale of Sheldon’s properties was anything but bona fide. Nor was the bankruptcy court’s assessment of Ollag’s potential liability to Travelers at $274,000 clearly erroneous under the circumstances. And on the issue whether the Bank had reasonable cause to know of Ol-lag’s insolvency, Ollag received ninety percent of its business from Deplan; this should have indicated that Ollag would be in dire financial condition upon its parent’s collapse. A further examination of Ollag’s balance sheet would have revealed the Travelers bonds. This finding, like the others, was not clearly erroneous, especially considering that the Bank is in the business of assessing credit. In short, despite the Bank’s claims to the contrary, we find sufficient evidence to justify the findings of the two lower courts on the issues that were the subject of the remand.

II

The Bank’s arguments regarding the bankruptcy court’s evidentiary use of certain financial statements require more extended discussion. The dispute concerns statements of three Gallo brothers, which were furnished to the Bank at its request when it was clear that Deplan was in financial trouble.

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Related

Matter Of Ollag Construction Equipment Corp.
665 F.2d 43 (Second Circuit, 1981)

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Bluebook (online)
665 F.2d 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/manufacturers-traders-trust-co-v-goldman-ca2-1981.