Metcalf v. Moses

35 A.D. 596, 55 N.Y.S. 179
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 35 A.D. 596 (Metcalf v. Moses) 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
Metcalf v. Moses, 35 A.D. 596, 55 N.Y.S. 179 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

Rumsey, J.:

This is an action brought by the judgment creditors of the firm of Lesser Brothers, composed of Tobias, Israel and Simon Lesser, to set aside certain judgments confessed by that firm to the defendants Marcus, Bernard Moses and Tobias Lesser as guardian, respectively, and a transfer of a part of the accounts of the firm to the defendant Morris Adler, and conveyances of real estate by two members of the firm to the defendant Lilienthal, and certain proceedings had in an action brought by one of the firm of Lesser Brothers against the other two members of the firm, in which receivers were appointed who have taken possession of a large amount of the assets of the firm. The trial of the action resulted in a judgment by which each of these transactions, except the appointment of a receiver, was set aside as fraudulent as against the plaintiffs, and judgment was ordered that the defendant Adler, who had received a considerable amount of money from the accounts assigned to him, should pay that money over to the receivers, who should hold it and other moneys still in their possession, subject to the further order of the court. The judgment also set aside the conveyances to .Lilianthal as fraudulent as against the plaintiffs. The plaintiffs appeal from so much of this judgment as directs the transfer to the receivers of the moneys collected by Adler, and as permits the receivers to hold the moneys now in their possession, proceeds of the personal property of Lesser Brothers. The other defendants, except the receivers, appeal from the judgment generally, and the receivers alone appear here as respondents only. [599]*599The action was determined upon the theory that all the transactions which resulted in these several confessions of judgments and transfers of property were part of a scheme devised by Lesser Brothers to hinder, delay and defraud the creditors who were not preferred and to enable the debtors to conceal a large amount of their assets ° which in fact were not turned over to anybody.

The Lesser Brothers were a firm of merchants engaged in the manufacture and sale of clothing in the city of Hew York. So far as appears in the case their business had apparently been prosperous down to the 1st day of October, 1896, and there is nothing to show that down to that time any one connected with the business, or any one dealing with the firm, had any reason to suppose that the condition of the firm was other than vrhat it appeared. The firm had been in business from the year 1885. Tobias Lesser had charge of the financial department, Simon Lesser of the manufacturing department, and Israel Lesser was a traveling salesman engaged in selling goods for the firm, and was in Hew York but a small portion of the time. In the month of January, 1895, the firm had a surplus of $145,739, which, in a year from that time, had increased to $153,866. In January, 1896, the merchandise of the firm was worth $136,582, and the accounts receivable were $121,365, making, with some other items, total assets of $266,044. The total liabilities of the firm at that time were $112,000, of which $40,000 was for bills payable. From the month of January, 1896, down to the 1st of October, 1896, when these transfers were made, there had been no catastrophe, and no reason is shown in the case why there should have been any very material loss of assets. It is quite clear from the testimony of the different members of the firm that Simon and Israel Lesser, at least, had no reason to believe that the affairs of the firm, which before that time had been prosperous, had experienced any change, or that there was any reason why the business should not continue. In fact, it is testified by each member of the firm that Simon himself insisted, at the time the transfers were made, that the business should be continued, and claimed that there was no reason to close it up. The story of the disaster which took place on the second of October is told plainly by Tobias Lesser, who evidently devised it. Unfortunately, however, it is quite evident that in so much of it as gives his reason for believing that the affairs of the firm were in a [600]*600precarious condition, there is no foundation of fact to stand upon, and it is utterly unworthy of belief.

He says that for some time before the first of October he had been seriously annoyed by demands of creditors whose claims were not yet due, insisting that those claims should be paid for the reason, as they said, that the firm was expected to fail; but he gives no reason for any such belief, and he does not suggest that he himself had any such idea. He says that on the first of October he had become so much worried by these claims that he had concluded that the business must be brought to an end, and on that day he advised his brothers of the fact that the business could no longer continue. His brothers say that they received that information on that day, and it is quite clear from the evidence that the information was entirely unexpected by either of ■them. Ho reason is given by Tobias Lesser why the firm should not still be solvent, nor is any satisfactory explanation given of the alleged loss of the surplus, which ten months before had been over §150,000. He says that of the bills and accounts receivable, there were bad debts to the amount of §10,000 or §20,000 ; that the stock had depreciated in value §30,000 to §40,000 ; that that §30,000 to §40,000 worth of goods had been shipped to California for sale, upon which the loss was §15,000 to §20,000 and that the firm had invested in a patent in which they had lost §5,000. He says that these are all the losses they had incurred, and that the debts of the firm had not increased much, if at all, between January and October. It is very doubtful if any such losses were made, but if the amount of them be deducted from the surplus shown to exist in January, 1896, there would still be a surplus of §69,000 which is largely unaccounted for. There was no corroboration of this testimony of Tobias Lesser as to any of these losses. The books of the firm had been spirited away; no one is able to account for them, and no one is able to say what was in them. Hot even the receivers, who took possession of the 'assets of the firm on the third of October, had ever seen them. Ho creditor is produced who demanded his pay before the first of October, and of all the facts above stated as coming from Tobias Lesser there is no single person to corroborate one. Down to the day when the transfers were made, the firm had .been in the full tide of business, receiving large [601]*601amounts of money and paying their accounts as they became due, and every account which fell due up to that time was paid as it matured. The goods were purchased upon credit in the same way as they had been before, and a considerable amount of the liabilities of the firm existing at that time was for goods which had been recently purchased. Yet on the first of October this apparently prosperous firm, whose assets, even taking the worst view of them, should have amounted to nearly $70,000 more than their liabilities, was in such a condition that all their assets would not pay forty per cent of the indebtedness, which was very little more than the amount of indebtedness shown in January, 1896. These facts, of themselves, cast a grave doubt upon the good faith and honesty of the members of the firm in the transactions which took place on the second of October, and afford sufficient ground for the inference drawn by the trial justice that the transactions of that day were had with intent to defraud the then creditors of the firm.

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Related

First Nat. Bank of Cincinnati v. Flershem
290 U.S. 504 (Supreme Court, 1934)
Lilianthal v. Lesser
102 A.D. 500 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1905)
Metcalf v. Barker
187 U.S. 165 (Supreme Court, 1902)
Barker v. Franklin
37 Misc. 292 (New York Supreme Court, 1902)
In re Lesser
100 F. 433 (S.D. New York, 1900)
Metcalf v. Moses
56 N.Y.S. 1112 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1899)

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Bluebook (online)
35 A.D. 596, 55 N.Y.S. 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/metcalf-v-moses-nyappdiv-1898.