Skinner v. Terhune

45 N.J. Eq. 565
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 15, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 45 N.J. Eq. 565 (Skinner v. Terhune) 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
Skinner v. Terhune, 45 N.J. Eq. 565 (N.J. Ct. App. 1889).

Opinion

[566]*566On bill &c., heard by Hon. Henry C. Pitney, advisory master,. who filed the following conclusions:

The defendant, R. P. Terhune, prior to January 1st, 1880, was the owner of the real estate in controversy, situate in Hackensack, consisting of a store-house and dwelling, worth from, $14,000 to $15,000; a foundry, coal-yard and dock-front worth from $8,000 to $10,000; a tenement-house and lot worth from-$2,500 to $3,000; and a plot of building lots worth $2,000 to $3,000; worth in all from $27,000 to $30,000, mortgaged for $15,600, leaving a margin of $12,000 to $15,000.

At that time, however, at a forced sale, it would not have realized so much. He also had a stock of goods in his store- and a plant in his foundry worth about $5,000. Besides this he had horses, wagons, carriages and household goods, and furniture and a cow. He also had seventy-two shares of the par value of $1,800, and worth $1,500, of stock in the Hackensack Q-as Light Company. Also, $20,000 in railroad bonds-of uncertain value. He owed three classes of debts:

First About $5,000 current indebtedness incurred in his-regular business as a foundryman and a dealer in coal, hardware and agricultural implements.

Second. Several thousand dollars (claimed by him to be - $10,000) to his wife and mother-in-law as sole beneficiaries-under his father-in-law’s will, of which he was executor.

Third. A considerable sum (amount not shown) incurred in promoting the building of the railroad whose obligations he held. Among this latter class of obligations, was an indebtedness of upwards of $3,000 for money borrowed from the complainant bank, which indebtedness is the foundation of complainant’s judgment.

The result of the situation was, that he was financially embarrassed and unable to meet his obligations.

On the 1st of January, 1880, Terhune organized the TerhuneManufacturing Company, one of the defendants herein.

The capital stock was $10,000, of which $9,800 was allotted to Terhune, $100 to his son-in-law, Morse, a resident of Brooklyn, and $100 to his daughter, Miss Maria E. Terhune, a mem[567]*567ber of his family. Neither of these two last mentioned paid anything on account of their stock.

Terhune conveyed to the company the whole of the property above named, except the gas stock and the railroad bonds, without regard to its character or the needs of the company.

The consideration named in the deed of the land was $25,000, “subject to mortgages amounting to $15,600.” He also transferred to its account in bank about $1,000, previously standing to his individual account, and he says the conveyance also included his household goods, horses, wagons, carriages and cow. The company, in payment for this property, issued to him and to his son-in-law and daughter the whole $10,000 worth of stock and, as he says, assumed payment of his business indebtedness.

No statement appears to have been made out at any time, none was produced, showing how the balance was arrived at.

No inventory or appraisement of the personal property transferred was produced, although called for, though it was said that one was actually made and was in the hands of counsel. No statement was produced of the amount of business debts assumed. Such brief examination as I could give the books at the hearing threw little light on the transaction.

Of the stock issued to Terhune, $800 were at first issued to him personally, and afterwards transferred to him as trustee, but of whom trustee the certificate does not show. The remaining $9,000 were issued to him as trustee without naming th'e cestui que trust. He says that he held it as trustee of his wife and mother-in-law, but no written declaration of trust appears to have been executed.

He says he thought at that time that he was indebted to his father-in-law’s estate in about the sum of $10,000, but he fails to show how, or to make up a statement showing any such indebtedness. No settlement of his father-in-law’s estate has been made, nor any ascertainment of the state of the account. No receipt or acquittance was taken by him for the shares of stock which he says he held in trust for them.

[568]*568The business of the store and foundry, and coal-yard was continued after this transfer to the manufacturing company, precisely the same as before.

Terhune was the sole manager of the business, and had the complete, unquestioned control of it. No salary was fixed for his services. The arrangement was, that he was to attend to the business, and to receive as compensation his house rent and living, including all expenses of every kind for himself and for his family. He freely made use, at his pleasure, of the funds of the company to pay his outside indebtedness, and for all other purposes, precisely as if he were the individual owner. He continued to occupy the dwelling and to use the horses and carriages, and to deal with every particle of the property transí ferred precisely as he did before the transfer. He says the assignment did not include debts due him, but he collected them, and deposited the money with the company.

He says that, shortly after the organization of the company, he sold his gas stock to the company for moneys which it advanced to him, but the stock was not transferred on the books until the present year. The fact is, that it appears that this stock has been pledged for many years past as security for a loan to a bank for nearly the amount of its value. Whether this pledge was made before or after the organization, does not, as far as I recollect, appear. Terhune continued to act as a director and officer in the gas company, under the ownership of this stock, up to April 1st, 1888.

The Hackensack Savings Bank recovered judgment on its debt November 3d, 1880, and execution on it was' returned unsatisfied for want of property.

In February, 1888, supplemental proceedings were taken on this judgment, and Judge Skinner, the complainant, was appointed receiver, and as such filed the first of the two bills seeking relief against the ownership of the manufacturing company, charging the transfer to be fraudulent and void as against creditors and as to both real estate and personal property, and claiming the first lien thereon for the savings bank judgment. [569]*569Subsequently, a bill was filed by the bank alone with substantially the same prayer.

Upon a preliminary motion for an injunction upon the bill, answers and affidavits, the learned vice-chancellor held, upon the facts thereby appearing, that the complainant was entitled to the relief sought.

Those facts were not materially varied by the evidence at the hearing. Such additional facts as were then developed appear to me to strengthen the complainant’s case. Close examination of the case, after hearing counsel, leads me to the same conclusion with the learned vice-chancellor. The only question is as to the measure and extent of the relief.

Complainant insists that the title to the original stock of goods and plant, or so much of it as still exists, remains in Terhune, and that the newly-purchased goods are also his property, and that all are subject to the lien of the bank’s execution.

Defendants plead the statute of limitations, and say that it bars that part at least of the remedy which seeks to reach the personalty.

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Bluebook (online)
45 N.J. Eq. 565, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/skinner-v-terhune-njch-1889.