Schwartz v. Rosetta Gravel Paving & Improvement Co.

34 So. 709, 110 La. 619, 1903 La. LEXIS 685
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 11, 1903
DocketNo. 14,513
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 34 So. 709 (Schwartz v. Rosetta Gravel Paving & Improvement Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schwartz v. Rosetta Gravel Paving & Improvement Co., 34 So. 709, 110 La. 619, 1903 La. LEXIS 685 (La. 1903).

Opinion

Statement of the Case.

MONROE, J.

The plaintiff, as the holder of two shares of stock in the defendant company, filed a petition in the civil district court, setting up mismanagement and misappropriation of funds, and praying that a receiver be appointed. As a more particular cause of complaint, she alleged that the management of the company was controlled by Maurice J. and Samuel J. Hart, who had been the agents of Judah Hart; that whilst acting in such dual capacity they had loaned about $100,000 of the money of the company nominally to Judah Hart, but in reality to themselves, upon a pledge of certain stock of the company, standing in the name of Judah Hart, but which belonged to them, the practical effect being the transfer of their stock to the company at par; that Judah Hart had died, leaving Samuel J. Hart and Helen H. Hart, wife of Maurice J. Hart, as his heirs, and that after accepting his succession, and thus making themselves liable for its debts, they had gone into bankruptcy in New York, making a surrender of practically worthless, property, including the stock of the defendant company, which had been pledged to it to secure the aforementioned loan of $100,-C(00; and that the said Maurice and Samuel I-Iart and others were arranging to so make use of the claim of the company against said bankrupts as to secure their discharge. In the proceedings thus instituted, G. Ad. Blaffer, really acting for the Germania Savings Bank, owner of 50 shares of the defendant’s stock, and represented by Buck, Walshe & Buck as his attorneys, intervened and joined in the prayer of the plaintiff’s petition; and Abraham Rosenfield, Charles Mendelsohn, William Garig, and others, also owners of stock in said company, intervened to oppose the same. Upon the hearing of the application, the plaintiff was represented by Messrs. Lazarus & Luce, as well as by Mr. H. M. Ansley, who had signed her petition, and the following admission was placed of record:

“By Mr. Parrar, representing the Defendant Company: I summoned Mrs. Schwartz here, and Mr. Harry Hall; and Mr. Lazarus said that he would admit what I expect to prove by them, if it was admissible — that Mrs. Schwartz brought this suit at his suggestion, and that he had been employed by the estate of McDonald to contest the Hart insolvency in New York. Are those the facts? By Mr. Lazarus: Yes, sir; I don’t think that the evidence is admissible. It is the truth. I have no desire to conceal it. I advised Mrs. Schwartz to bring the suit after she got her stock, and I advised the Germania Savings Bank to join in; and I represent Mr. Harry Hall, the executor of the estate of McDonald, and I represent the other creditors, out of whom I expect to-make my money.”

In order to complete this portion of the statement of the case, it may be noted here that' the estate of McDonald, of which Harry H. Hall was the administrator, • was the judgment creditor of the estate of Judah Hart, and hence of the bankrupts, Samuel J. and Helen Hart, in the sum of $66,150.48. And for the same purpose we make at this, time the following excerpts from the testimony of Mr. Luce, of the firm of Lazarus & Luce, given at a later stage of the litigation, to wit: “Q. Were you employed by Mr. Hall in this matter, Mr. Luce? A. We were em[622]*622ployed by Mr. Hall, but Mr. Hall said that he had no funds or [for] expenses to carry out such a contest, and consequently we were bound to secure the funds and expenses from the Rosetta Gravel Paving & Improvement Company. Q. Who did Mr. Hall represent? A. He represented Mr. R. T — He was the administrator of the estate of R. T. McDonald in this court, and had a claim for some $66,000. Q. Against whom? A. Against Samuel J. and Helen H. Hart. Q. If I understand rightly, you were employed by Mr. Hall to defend the interest of Mr. McDonald as against the Harts? A. We were not only employed by Mr. Hall, but by the Germania Savings Bank and several others, and we didn’t file the specifications in any form, except for Mr. Hall as administrator. Q. When were you employed by Mr. Hall — before or after the receivership? A. I think— I don’t know. I think we had this claim in our hands before the receivership. * * * Q. And you took this proceeding in order to try to collect that judgment? A. At that time we had control of that judgment, as well as the claim of the Germania Savings Bank, and some five or six other claims. Q. And you brought this suit in the name of Mrs. Schwartz, who represented two shares, in order to attack the Hart interest in the Rosetta Gravel Paving & Improvement Company, did you not? * « * A. We brought the suit in the name of Mrs. Harriet Schwartz, as a stockholder, to provoke the appointment of a receiver. That suit had nothing in the world to do with the bankruptcy proceeding. Q. Was it not directly or indirectly to attack the interest of the Harts, if any they had, in the Rosetta Gravel Paving & Improvement Company? A. I don’t think that that concerns the issues of this case — as to whether it was to attack the interest of the Harts or not. The pleadings show * what it was for, and the evidence shows that the charges made in the pleadings were sustained.”

The witness goes on to say that the estate of Judah Hart and Samuel J. Hart and Helen H. Hart owed the paving company over $100,000, and that the opposition to the discharge of the two latter in bankruptcy, made in the name of Harry H. Hall, administrator, but the .expense of which is ehárged to the paving company, was made with the idea that the results would inure to the benefit of the company, as well as to that of the other creditors of the bankrupts.

Returning now to the facts, in their chronological order, the application of the plaintiff resulted in the appointment of Peter Stifft as receiver for the paving company, and he was thereupon authorized to employ Messrs. Lazarus & Luce as his attorneys. Upon December 4, 1900, he presented a petition to the court, setting forth the condition of affairs as between the company and the bankrupts, Samuel J. and Helen H. Hart, alleging that Charles Mendelsohn held a power of attorney to represent the company in the bankruptcy proceedings, and praying that the same be revoked, and that J. N. Luce be authorized to represent the company at the meeting of creditors, and to vote upon the selection of the trustee, “and upon such other matters as may [might] be brought before said meeting, as well as any other matters as may [might] be necessary in furtherance of the interests of said company.” And an order was made in accordance with the prayer of the petition. Upon January 21, 1901, the receiver presented to the court another petition, alleging that it was necessary for him to borrow money in order to “pay court costs and the expenses of the litigation” connected with the receivership; alleging the indebtedness of Samuel J. and Helen H.

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Bluebook (online)
34 So. 709, 110 La. 619, 1903 La. LEXIS 685, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schwartz-v-rosetta-gravel-paving-improvement-co-la-1903.