Mercantile National Bank v. Heinze

75 Misc. 551, 135 N.Y.S. 962
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 75 Misc. 551 (Mercantile National Bank v. Heinze) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mercantile National Bank v. Heinze, 75 Misc. 551, 135 N.Y.S. 962 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1912).

Opinion

Pendleton, J.

This action is at law to recover some

$450,000 on certain alleged promissory notes. The answer, among other things, sets up by way of counterclaim a cause of action in equity for the specific performance of a certain contract or contracts by plaintiff to release and- discharge the notes referred to in the complaint. The present proceeding is 'a trial of the counterclaim. On and prior to October 14, 1907, the bank, the plaintiff in this action, was-the holder of notes of the defendants aggregating a very large amount. On that day Otto O. Heinze,. one of the' defendants, made an arrangement with an officer of the plaintiff for a further loan of $500,000 to be secured by certain collateral. On the strength of this arrangement two notes of the defendants, for $400,000 and $100,000, re[553]*553spectively, were sent to the bank, and on or abotit the following day, October fifteenth or sixteenth, certain securities, being the collateral agreed upon, wére also sent to the plaintiff bank by the defendants. The bank did not discount the notes or credit the defendants in their account-with the proceeds thereof, but did certify checks of the defendants to the amount of some $400,000, and on or about the same day credited defendant’s account with $500,000 represented by a cashier’s check for that amount drawn to the order of one F. A. Heinze, indorsed by F. A. Heinze and also by defendant’s name put on with a rubber stamp by their bookkeeper. The circumstances of this alleged deposit and whether with the knowledge of the defendants or when they were first informed that the notes sent by them to the bank had not been discounted are matters of some dispute. The securities sent on the fifteenth or sixteenth day of October to the bank, as above mentioned, have been designated in the evidence as the “ disputed collateral.” Defendants were at the time or became shortly thereafter financially embarrassed, and on or about- October 21, 1907, a .petition in bankruptcy was filed against them by certain of their creditors, in which, among other things, the delivery to the plaintiff bank of the above mentioned securities was 'relied on as an illegal preference and an act of bankruptcy. Defendants appeared in the proceeding’s and denied the allegations of the petition. Fending these proceedings and before any adjudication, and in or about October, 190.7, a receiver in bankruptcy was" appointed. Thereafter, and during the winter and summer of 1908, negotiations were pending between the defendants and their creditors looking to a settlement of their affairs, and a formal plan or agreement of reorganization in writing was submitted to the creditors for their consideration, which provided, among other things, for the organization of a corporation to be called the Western Development Company to take over and administer the assets of defendant’s firm on certain terms and conditions therein set forth. Such was'the general situation, when in the early part- of October, 1908, one of .defendants wrote to the bank and its attorney to the effect that some agreement [554]*554for adjustment of their affairs must be arrived at before October seventeenth or they would lose their Stock Exchange ..seat; that they had practically arranged with their important creditors and the others could be dealt with; that plaintiff’s claim was the only large one not arranged for, and unless some basis of settlement with plaintiff could be arrived at by October seventeenth the whole adjustment would fail and the bankruptcy proceedings have to be carried through to a conclusion, and calling plaintiff’s attention to the claim of the receiver and creditors to the “ disputed collateral;” and that unless the bankruptcy proceedings were gotten out of the way plaintiff might lose the collateral. After some negotiations the agreement- of October sixteenth was executed, a copy of which is as follows:

Otto 0. Heinze & Company. Arthur P. Heinze. Memorandum of adjustment. ■ 1. Bankruptcy proceedings must be dismissed so as to leave Otto Heinze & Company and A. P. Heinze free to contract. 2. Otto Heinze & Company must release and relinquish to the Mercantile National Bank all securities now held by the bank as security for the indebtedness. of Otto Heinze & Company .to the bank and vest in the bank a good title to all such securities free from any and all claims of partners, creditors or others. The following is d list of the securities, viz.: 13,150 shares' United Copper common, 820 shares United Copper preferred, 1900 shares American Ice, 1000 shares Ohio Copper, 1500 Butte Coalition. They must also recognize that the indebtedness of Otto Heinze &" Company to the bank is $529,749.15, with interest from December 17, 1907. 3. The bank is also to receive $100,000 par value of the preferred stock of the Western Development Company, not as collateral, but as the property of the bank. 4. Upon the signature of this memorandum the bank will consent to the 'dismissal of the pending bankruptcy proceedings against the firm of Otto Pleinze & Company, and upon the performance prior to January 1", 1909, of the conditions • and agreements set forth in the foregoing first, second and third paragraphs of this memorandum the bank will release the [555]*555firm of Otto Heinze & Company from its indebtedness to the bank. 5. All details and agreements must be satisfactory to Sullivan & Cromwell. 6. This memorandum does not contemplate a release by the bank of the indebtedness to it of Arthur P. Heinze, but in consideration of the release to be given by the bank to the firm of Otto Heinze & Company, as hereinbefore provided, Arthur P. Heinze recognizes that his indebtedness to the bank is $59,526, with interest on $60,000 from September 30, 1907, to October'19, 1907, and that the bank holds as collateral for said indebtedness the following securities, viz.: 3000 shares United Copper common, 10,000 shares Barnes King. 7. By signing this memorandum the bank in no wdy recognizes that the receiver or- trustee in bankruptcy of the firm of Otto Heinze & Company has any interest in the securities above mentioned. We hereby approve the foregoing memorandum and basis of adjustment, and hereby agree to.do any and all acts and execute any and all papers necessary to give effect to the same when and as soon as the pending bankruptcy proceedings against Otto Heinze & Company and A. P. Heinze are dismissed.

“ Bated New York, October 16,, 1908. Arthur P. Heinze, Max IT. Sciiultze, Ti-ie Mercantile National Bank of the Citt of New York, Miles M. O’Brien, V.-P.”

In December, 1908, the Western Development Company was incorporated, and shortly thereafter a formal meeting of the directors was held and resolutions adopted providing for the issue of stock in exchange for property, contracts, etc.,- but no instruments of transfer or assignment were executed until long subsequent thereto and -to any date or dates herein mentioned. On the 11th day of February, 1909, some question having arisen in a conversation between one of the defendants and the attorney for the bank as to whether the agreement of October 16, 1908, was still in existence or had expired by limitation, the attorney -for the bank sent a letter, of which the following is a copy:

[556]*556“ February 11, 1909.

“Arthur P. Heinze, Esq., 42 Broadway, New Yorlc, N. Y.:

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Bluebook (online)
75 Misc. 551, 135 N.Y.S. 962, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mercantile-national-bank-v-heinze-nysupct-1912.