Reconstruction Finance Corporation v. Goldberg

143 F.2d 752, 1944 U.S. App. LEXIS 3188
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJune 28, 1944
Docket8497
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 143 F.2d 752 (Reconstruction Finance Corporation v. Goldberg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reconstruction Finance Corporation v. Goldberg, 143 F.2d 752, 1944 U.S. App. LEXIS 3188 (7th Cir. 1944).

Opinion

MAJOR, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a decree, entered December 17, 1943, following a hearing on plaintiff’s motion for a summary judgment, pursuant to Rule 56 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, 28 U.S.C.A. following section 723(c). The decree was predicated upon a finding that the defendant was the owner of a pro rata portion of 930 shares, in the aggregate, of bank stock in Central Republic Trust Company (formerly Central Republic Bank and Trust Company), a banking association of the state of Illinois, which stock was registered in the name of a nominee, one Robert W. Martin.

The original bill of complaint, filed November 19, 1934, named Martin as the registered owner of said 930 shares of stock on certain dates on which large sums of money were advanced by plaintiff to the bank. A decree was entered on May 1, 1937 upon this original complaint against numerous holders of stock, including Martin, and ordered that Martin pay to the receiver the sum of $93,000, plus interest and costs. That decree contained the following reservation of jurisdiction:

“In addition, this decree shall be without prejudice to any future hearing or proceeding in this cause, * * * against any or all persons who may be liable in any manner on account of shares of stock of said bank * * * which any persons at any time owned * * * and for the purpose of any such future hearing or proceeding in this cause this Court expressly retains jurisdiction of this cause.
“Plaintiff, with leave of this Court, may amend and supplement its bill of complaint or file such other pleadings in this cause as may be necessary, at any time hereafter, *755 against any of the defendants in this cause or against any other persons referred to in £his" paragraph * *

Subscquently, it was discovered that Martin was not the real owner of the bank stock but was merely a nominee for a trust designated as the “Illinois Securities Syndicate,” comprised of thirty-six members who subscribed $495,000 for investment by Max Goldberg (instant defendant) and two others as the Managing Committee. The agreement among other things provided: The Managing Committee should hold legal title for all funds and property with powers and subject to the limitations of said agreement declared; the entire management of the Syndicate and its properties should be in the Managing Comittee; the Committee should receive compensation to be paid prior to distribution of assets to Syndicate members; the Committee members might in their individual capacities be members of the Syndicate, and if they were, should in addition to their compensation as Committee members share in the proceeds of the Syndicate on the basis of their subscription to the Syndicate; and on termination of the Syndicate, or from time to time prior thereto, as the Committee might elect, the Committee should distribute to Syndicate members all of Syndicate assets in the proportion which they respectively subscribed to the Syndicate.

The agreement also contained what is referred to as a standard exculpatory clause, which in effect provided that neither the members of the Managing Committee nor the members of the Syndicate should be personally liable for any debt incurred or for any contract or undertaking made by the Managing Committee, and, further, that in every contract or undertaking entered into by the Managing Committee reference was to be made to the Syndicate agreement and should provide that any person contracting with such Committee should look only to the funds and property held by them under this agreement as security for the performance of said contract and for the payment of any debt, damage, judgment or decree that may become due and payable by reason of the execution of such contract.

.The defendant Goldberg, as stated, was one of a three-member Managing Committee of the- Syndicate and was also a member of the Syndicate, having subscribed $100,000, or 100/495ths of the total amount subscribed by the Syndicate membership for investment by the Managing Committee. The bank stock was purchased by the Managing Committee with the Syndicate funds. The stock dividends Paid by the bank to Martin as record owner were transmitted by the latter to members of the Managing Committee in their capacity of such managers,

On July 8, 1941, an amendment was filed to the original complaint, in which Goldberg and six other Syndicate members were made parties-defendants. The amended complaint related certain facts concerning the Syndicate agreement and the subscriptions thereto, including that of Goldberg, as heretofore noted, and alleged alternatively that Goldberg was the actual and beneficial owner of 100/495ths of the 930 shares of bank stock registered in Martin’s name; or that the Syndicate members were co-partners and as such were the actual and beneficial owners of the 930 shares of such stock; or that the Managing Committee were the actual or beneficial owners of said bank stock.

Defendant moved to dismiss the conaplaint for want of equity or, in the alternaj-ive, for summary judgment in his favor, Defendant by answer alleged numerous defenses wh¡ch may briefly stated as f0n0ws: (1) denying that he was the beneficial owner of any of the stock and alleging that the Syndicate was a valid trust under the Illinois law; that the trust was the beneficial owner and not the defendant; that the defendant was not liable either as a “share holder,” “partner,” or “trustee” because of the provisions in the trust agreement exempting him from any personal liability; (2) that plaintiff elected to hold the registered owner liable when it knew that he was a mere nominee for the Syndicate, and that by such election defendant was released; (3) that plaintiff, by collecting certain sums from other members of the Syndicate had released the defendant; and (4) that plaintiff was guilty of laches in delaying action for four years after it knew of the alleged beneficial ownership of the stock by members of the Syndicate, thereby permitting defendant’s position to become changed,

In addition to the pleadings, certain affidavits, depositions and admissions were before the court, which we see no occasion to describe. At the time of the hearing of plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment, twenty-six members of the Syndicate, in- *756 eluding six named with the defendant in plaintiffs amended complaint, had paid their proportionate part of the decree against Martin plus certain of the interest thereon, and twelve were deceased, bankrupt or nonresident. There remained unpaid on said decree the sum of $41,706.01. The judgment against the defendant was in the amount of $18,787.88, plus interest on said sum from May 1, 1937. This amount represented the same proportion of the judgment against Martin as was represented by Goldberg’s investment in the Syndicate.

It will be noted that plaintiff alleged three theories upon which it sought to fix defendant’s liability, (1) as a shareholder in the trust, (2) as a partner, and (3) as a trustee. Defendant makes much of the point that the court erred in denying his motion to require the plaintiff to elect on which of these so-called inconsistent remedies it predicated its right to recovery. We think there is no merit in this contention.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
143 F.2d 752, 1944 U.S. App. LEXIS 3188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reconstruction-finance-corporation-v-goldberg-ca7-1944.