Smith v. Meyers (In Re Schwartz & Meyers)

130 B.R. 416, 1991 Bankr. LEXIS 1179, 1991 WL 159282
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York
DecidedAugust 7, 1991
Docket18-23933
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 130 B.R. 416 (Smith v. Meyers (In Re Schwartz & Meyers)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Meyers (In Re Schwartz & Meyers), 130 B.R. 416, 1991 Bankr. LEXIS 1179, 1991 WL 159282 (N.Y. 1991).

Opinion

*418 DECISION ON DISCHARGEABILITY

TINA L. BROZMAN, Bankruptcy Judge.

Each of us is prone, at one time or another, to foist blame on others for our own mistaken judgments. When bankruptcy ensues, that is a particular temptation for people left with unsatisfied debts. In these consolidated adversary proceedings, 1 a creditor seeks to declare nondischargeable some $99,000 in debt as against two partners of a partnership with whom she invested her life’s savings on the advice of a friend and romantic interest. Although the loss of a good portion of her money was a personal tragedy, it is not one for which the partners ought be held forever responsible.

The Plaintiff

Harriet Smith is a 54 year old woman, divorced some 15 years ago. Towards the end of her twenty-year marriage, and continuing thereafter, she was employed as a research technician at a local hospital. As time went on, she developed an interest in economics and attended some lectures and classes. She even assisted an author to gather material for a book on banking. Unsophisticated about financial matters during the course of her marriage, she increased her business acumen steadily after her divorce. Throughout the course of the trial she painted herself as a financial naive, yet her relative prowess was revealed when she testified that she had told Martin Rosenblatt, the romantic interest who figures so prominently in this story, that she did not want to be supplying “venture capital.”

Her Friends

Smith met Rosenblatt some twenty years ago. They were neighbors whose children were friends. The two divorced their spouses at roughly the same time and Ro-senblatt began living with Smith’s close friend. The friendships blossomed. In 1977, Smith asked this friend whether she knew someone knowledgeable about investments. Rosenblatt was proffered. Trained as a social worker, he was moonlighting as a salesman at an insurance company. When Smith asked in what manner she ought invest her funds, he purchased from his employer an annuity for her, for which, as she knew at the time, he earned a commission.

After ending his relationship with Smith’s friend, Rosenblatt dated Smith. Their social contacts were frequent. During one of his visits in 1979 he mentioned that he was becoming a salesman for a real estate company, where he would earn more money than previously. Smith testified that he called the company “Schwartz & Meyers,” but Rosenblatt testified that he had technically worked for “Harrow Management.”

The Partnership

Schwartz & Meyers was a partnership of three lawyers founded in 1952 whose business was real estate and related ventures. The partners were Joseph Schwartz, William Meyers and the late Louis Harrow. The same three were partners in Harrow Management, a real estate brokerage and management firm which worked with Schwartz & Meyers.

The Schwartz & Meyers partnership was successful for over 30 years. It borrowed money on a short-term, unsecured basis from a number of individuals, principally family members and friends, but also a few sophisticated, knowledgeable investors, including the partnership’s accountant of over ten years as well as a Nobel laureate economist. The terms of each loan included the partnership’s promise to pay interest at an attractive, above-market rate, and to repay the loan upon 30 days’ demand. The partnership used the proceeds of such loans to invest in various real estate and other ventures. Although Smith has alleged that these ventures were risky, that assertion was disputed by every person with knowledge of the quality and extent of the investments, each of whom testified that the investments were on the whole conservative.

*419 The partnership’s record in paying interest and repaying loans on demand was unblemished for a period of over 30 years. No loan or interest payment was ever missed until late summer, 1984, when, upon the advice of lawyers, the partnership ceased such payments following Harrow’s death and a demand for liquidation by his estate.

Her Investment

Having announced to Smith that he was becoming a salesman, Rosenblatt immediately started to interest her in investing in Schwartz & Meyers. In Smith’s words, he described the partners as “very wealthy;” “very altruistic”; “very conservative.” Further, she testified Rosenblatt told her that “they have acquired a lot of real estate assets through the years.” She admitted that Rosenblatt “didn’t tell me much about their investment,” including how many properties Schwartz & Meyers owned, although he did mention that the partnership had owned property in New York and its environs and that it owned property in different locales. What he was more specific about was his opinion that this type of investment was more liquid than her annuity because, over the years, Schwartz & Meyers had paid one percent interest per month to its investors and had agreed to repay any loan within 30 days of the investor’s request. He also described as “conservative” an investment with Schwartz & Meyers.

Each and every factual statement uttered by Rosenblatt was true when made. Indeed, at the same time Rosenblatt was advising Smith and others to loan money to the partnership, he was himself lending it money, as was his family, and he continued to do so until he left Harrow Management’s employ in 1983.

Without more, Smith decided to make her first investment with Schwartz & Meyers, sending the partnership, via Rosenblatt, $17,000. She was well aware that Rosen-blatt was earning a commission for securing her investment. Between February 1979 and July 1984, Smith made sixteen more investments (including reinvestment of interest) for an aggregate of almost $100,000. She received no information whatsoever (other than confirmation of her investments from Schwartz & Meyers which she did not begin to receive, in any event, until about a year after she made her first investment), yet blindly entrusted to Rosenblatt the investment of her money. 2 Throughout the five and one-half years that she continued to send money to the partnership, Smith received interest payments, many of which she reinvested with Schwartz & Meyers.

Her Decisions

Smith steadfastly maintains that she did not call her loans, and lent additional money, because she was led to believe that her investment was risk free. But her own testimony belies her assertion.

On not one, but two, occasions she asked worldly friends about the wisdom of investing with Schwartz & Meyers. In the face of two opinions questioning whether this type of investment was appropriate for her, she determined to leave her money where it was and to add additional money to the fund. It appears that the motivating factor was her rate of return.

The first friend, a Mr. Armando Pico, advised Smith in 1981 that a certificate of deposit would be a better and safer investment.

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Bluebook (online)
130 B.R. 416, 1991 Bankr. LEXIS 1179, 1991 WL 159282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-meyers-in-re-schwartz-meyers-nysb-1991.