Rogosin v. City Trust Co. of Passaic

151 A. 834, 107 N.J. Eq. 79, 1930 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 57
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 18, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 151 A. 834 (Rogosin v. City Trust Co. of Passaic) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rogosin v. City Trust Co. of Passaic, 151 A. 834, 107 N.J. Eq. 79, 1930 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 57 (N.J. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

This case is distinguishable from the unreported case ofDembrow v. Realty Security Corporation (Docket 77, p. 160), in which I filed a memorandum of opinion July 10th, 1930. In the case sub judice, Finery Underwear Company, Incorporated, had a depositor's account with the City Trust Company of Passaic. A relationship of debtor and creditor existed between said parties. The Finery Underwear Company, Incorporated, was adjudged insolvent by this court on June 23d 1927, and complainant was appointed receiver. The bill of complaint herein has subjoined thereto a consent signed on June 22d 1927, by the defendant Goldstein and another officer of the corporation, to the appointment of a receiver. The corporation was indebted to the defendant, City Trust Company of Passaic, in the sum of $5,000 on a promissory note dated April 27th, 1927, which by its tenor would mature July 27th, 1927. Said note was endorsed by the defendant Goldstein and another officer of the corporation. On June 15th, 1927, six weeks before the time when said note would mature, and eight days before the adjudication of insolvency and appointment of receiver, the trust company, upon the oral direction to its cashier by the defendant Goldstein, who was president of the insolvent corporation, charged the account of said corporation with the amount of said note. At the same time the trust company credited said account with the sum of $34.15 for interest rebated. The action of the defendant-president was without the knowledge of other officers or stockholders. He was not expressly empowered by the corporate by-laws to authorize the disbursement of corporate funds. It appears from the proofs herein that said note was a renewal of an original indebtedness of $5,000 contracted by means of a promissory note discounted by the corporation *Page 82 with said trust company about eight months prior, the original note having been renewed from time to time without reduction in amount. When said account was opened a copy of a resolution adopted by the board of directors of the corporation relating to the withdrawal of funds from said account was filed with the trust company. Such resolution provided that withdrawal of corporate funds should be upon the check of the corporation signed by two of its officers. The trust company had in its files a signature card evidencing like withdrawal requisites. On June 16th, 1927, the defendant-president Goldstein, and another officer of the corporation, withdrew the sum of $1,600 each from the funds of the corporation deposited to its credit with the defendant trust company, and on June 21st, 1927, withdrew the sum of $500 each therefrom. Such withdrawals were ostensibly intended to reimburse them for loans previously made to the corporation. When such withdrawals were made, and when the defendant trust company charged the above-mentioned note of $5,000 against the account of the corporation, only $35.92 remained to the credit of said account. Goldstein well knew when he withdrew said moneys, and when he directed the cashier of the trust company to charge the account of the corporation with the amount of the aforesaid note of $5,000, that the corporation was insolvent. The trust company was chargeable with knowledge, and could have readily ascertained upon inquiry and the exercise of due diligence the insolvency of said corporation, or that it contemplated insolvency. See Jessup v. Thomason, 68 N.J. Eq. 443. The corporation's available assets when the aforesaid withdrawals were made were insignificant, its liabilities were considerable, and its legitimate credit was exhausted. The corporation had practically suspended its business from and after June 1st, 1927, as a result of the embezzlement by one of its officers of considerable of its funds. Such embezzlement was ascertained by the officers of the company a few days prior to Decoration Day, 1927. The embezzler was arrested. The affair became one of public notoriety. The circumstances under which the aforesaid withdrawals of $4,200 by the defendant Goldstein *Page 83 and another officer of the corporation were made were so unusual that the transaction should have put the trust company on inquiry as to the reasons therefor. The withdrawals were made in cash and some, if not all, of the money were turned over to the cashier of the trust company who gave in return therefor a cashier's check. The proofs herein show that the method resorted to by the trust company of charging the account of the corporation with the amount of the aforesaid note was unusual. It was so unusual as to put the cashier of the trust company upon inquiry, if he were diligent, as to why the usual formalities of payment by check of the corporation signed by two of its officers were not complied with. The unusual circumstance of the oral direction by the defendant-president Goldstein of the insolvent corporation, to the cashier of the defendant trust company to charge the account of the corporation with the amount of the promissory note, which by its tenor was not due, and upon which note Goldstein was an endorser, and the charging by the trust company of the amount of said note against the account of the corporation without a requisite check therefor, must be deemed as imputing to the cashier of the trust company, and thus to said company, knowledge or reasonable cause to believe that the debtor-corporation was insolvent, or that it contemplated insolvency, and that the charging of the amount of said note against the account of the corporation would effect a preference unauthorized by law. All previous withdrawals had been by check of the corporation with signatures of officers as required by the resolution and bank signature card hereinabove mentioned. When prior promissory notes became due payment thereof was made by check of the corporation containing requisite signatures of officers. The proofs herein evidence that the defendant Goldstein sought to obtain an unlawful preference in payment of indebtedness owing to him by the corporation, and that the trust company sought to obtain an unlawful preference of the sum of $5,000 on the note aforesaid before payment of such note was due, when the debtor-corporation was known by said parties to be insolvent or contemplating insolvency, and thus to circumvent the prohibition *Page 84 against preferences contained in section 64 of the Corporation act. Section 66 of the Corporation act, insofar as it relates tomutual dealings and just set-offs, cannot avail the defendant trust company in the case sub judice because the time for the payment of the note of $5,000 charged against the account of the insolvent corporation had not matured, and the corporation at the time had not been adjudged insolvent. The proofs herein show that at all times between June 1st and June 23d 1927, the corporation was hopelessly insolvent. The audit of the corporation's accountant evidences that on May 31st, 1927, the liquid assets of the corporation were approximately sixty-five per cent. of its liabilities. The audit made by the receiver's accountant evidences that on June 23d 1927, the date when the bill of complaint was filed and receiver appointed, there was a deficit of $10,258.60. That the president of the corporation had in mind its insolvency is somewhat evidenced by the fact that on June 10th, 1927, a series of checks which had been made out in payment of creditors were voided at the direction of president Goldstein, although a number of checks bearing the same date for small amounts were issued to favored creditors in and about the city of Passaic. The total of the voided checks amounted to $2,590.90.

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Bluebook (online)
151 A. 834, 107 N.J. Eq. 79, 1930 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rogosin-v-city-trust-co-of-passaic-njch-1930.