Olney v. Baird

15 Misc. 385, 37 N.Y.S. 815, 73 N.Y. St. Rep. 401
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1895
StatusPublished

This text of 15 Misc. 385 (Olney v. Baird) 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
Olney v. Baird, 15 Misc. 385, 37 N.Y.S. 815, 73 N.Y. St. Rep. 401 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1895).

Opinion

Beekman, J.

The .Sargent Granite Company, a business corporation, duly organized and incorporated under the laws til the state of New York, having become insolvent, an fiction 'was instituted against, it on behalf of. certain.of its judgment creditors for a sequestration of its property, and in that suit the plaintiff has been appointed .receiver. No assets' have .come into .his hands, and he now brings this action against the defendants for the purpose of -recovering the property of the •corporation, of-which the defendant Matthew - Baird claims Ownership under the -following state.of facts:

On 'or about April 1, 1890, the Sargent Granite Company ;was organized as a- corporation, under the General'Maiiufac- ' turing Act. (Laws of' 1848) -of the state.’ of New York'. Its capital was fixed at $20,000, represented by .200. shar.es, of .•which all-but five were issued for property .which w;as transferred to it; In .order, to. obtain money with which to [387]*387carry on its operations, the company borrowed from one 0. F. Schramme the sum of $10,000, and for the purpose of securing him gave him a bill of sale of all its property, which bill of sale, although absolute in form, was. intended by the parties to operate only as a chattel mortgage. Mr. Schramme also held about 100 shares, or onef half of the capital stock of the company. Being desirous of severing his relations with the company, he entered into negotiations with the defendant Matthew Baird, and it was finally - agreed between them that Baird should take a transfer and assignment from Schramme of his stock and the indebtedness of the corporation to him upon payment' of the amount of sai'd indebtedness, which was then about $9,900." The understanding was that Mr. Baird should take the position of Mr. Schramme in the company, with all the rights as against it- which the latter then enjoyed. This transaction was consummated about the 57th day of August, 1890, and the stock in question was transferred to Baird, and the bill of sale was also delivered to him at the same time. FTo formal assignment of the latter was ever executed, and whatever view may be taken in-respect to its validity in law as a 'chattel mortgage, it was sufficient in the hands of Mr. Schramme, and, under the arrangement between himself and Mr. Baird, also in the hands of the latter, to constitute at. least a preferential equitable charge upon the assets of the corporation in favor of the holder. At that time the corporation was not insolvent, nor had it refused to pay its notes or other obligations when due. The determination of the effect of this bill of sale, however, is not within the issues of this action. The transaction was the outcome of an understanding which had been arrived at between Mr. Baird and Frank T. Sargent, who was then the president of the corporation. The understanding was that Mr. Baird should acquire Mr. Schramme’s interest, as above stated; that he would also from time to time advance such money as might be needed for the operations of the company ; that all of the products of the company should be consigned to him; that [388]*388the proceeds of the sale of such products should be collected by him, and that interest on balances should be credited or allowed, as the case might be, at the rate of six per cent per annum.. It is claimed by Hr. Baird that in addition to this it was also understood and agreed that the company, for the pui.pose of securing his advances, would from time to time1 give him bills of sale of everything it had, and assignments of all moneys due it upon contracts. This, however, is denied by Hr. Sargent. I feel constrained to accept his version of the 'matter; among other reasons,-because it seems more in accord with the probabilities of the case, as well as with the subsequent conduct of the parties. Although Hr. Baird, during a period of some twenty months after he came into .the company, had made advances which brought the company into his debt to the extent of something over $100,000, no bills- of sale were ever made to him, nor apparently did he request that they . should be given, and subsequently, when such transfers were made, in some cases, under resolutions passed by the trustees reciting the reasons for their action in that regard, no reference of any kind was inade to any previous understanding or agreement, such as the defendant Baird claims to have existed. It is not-necessary for me, therefore, to consider whether such an agreement, which it is conceded never received any formal sanction by vote of the trustees, would have been valid.

Immediately upon Hr, Baird’s becoming a stockholder of the corporation, he vva's elected a trustee and also treasurer. Ho bank account, however, was opened in the natne of the .company, but all of its moneys, from whatever source, -were received by him .and deposited to his individual account. A ledger account was kept by him with the company, in Which' he charged it with the moneys which were advanced by him, ■and which were from time to time paid out to meet thecurrent expenses of the corporation, and credited it with the moneys collected by him on its account. It may be said in. . passing that Baird had peculiar facilities for handling the product of the company, in view of the fact that he' was a contractor doing a very extensive .business'in this city with the [389]*389different departments of the city government, which required the use of granite either for the paving of streets dr the construction of piers and bulkheads on the water front.

In the month of March or April, 1882, he seems to have become alarmed about the financial condition of the company, and requested Mr. Frank T. Sargent, who was still its president, to execute to him a bill of sale of its property, to be held by him as security for his debt. .Mr. Sargent testifies that at first he refused to do so, claiming that it would be unfair to the other creditors, but that upon threat being made by Mr. Baird to wind the company up, he yielded, and the paper was accordingly executed and delivered, and on or about the 9th day of May, 1892, was recorded in the clérk’s office in the city of Belfast, in the state of Maine. Mr. Baird denies, that he made any such threats. Some three days prior to the date of this bill of sale a special meeting of the-trustees of the company was held, at which the resignation of Mr. Baird as treasurer and trustee was received and accepted, but no other action of any kind was taken, nor was any authority whatsoever given to the president to make the bill of sale in question. The. resignation of Mr. Baird was obviously prompted by prudential motives, in view of the fact that his security under the bill of sale would have been very much impaired, if not entirely destroyed, by the fact of his being an officer of the company at the' time of its execution and delivery.

On the eighteenth day of May following, and for the same reason, lie. took the further step of divesting himself of all of his stock in the company, which he transferred to one George L. Harrington. During all the time that Mr. Baird was connected with the company, either as stockholder or creditor, Mr. Harrington was his superintendent in his personal business, and when the stock was so transferred to hinrlie was told by Baird that he could have whatever there was of it after the indebtedness of the company to him (Baird) had been paid, and at the same time he directed him, out of the shares so transferred,' to give nineteen shares to William J. 'Clark, twenty shares to one William H. Keyes, and ten shares [390]*390to one Babcock.

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Bluebook (online)
15 Misc. 385, 37 N.Y.S. 815, 73 N.Y. St. Rep. 401, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/olney-v-baird-nysupct-1895.