Stein v. George B. Spearin, Inc.

184 A. 436, 120 N.J. Eq. 169, 19 Backes 169, 1936 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 74
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedApril 25, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 184 A. 436 (Stein v. George B. Spearin, Inc.) 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
Stein v. George B. Spearin, Inc., 184 A. 436, 120 N.J. Eq. 169, 19 Backes 169, 1936 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 74 (N.J. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

By consent of counsel, two separate actions brought by complainant, one against George B. Spearin, Incorporated, et al., and the other against F.H. McGraw Company et al. (hereinafter referred to as Spearin and McGraw, respectively), involving similar facts, were heard and tried together; the relief sought in each being a decree setting aside the assignment therein challenged and adjudging the moneys paid and/or received thereunder to be due and owing to complainant as receiver of Terminal Warehouses, Incorporated (hereinafter referred to as Terminal).

Without dispute, the testimony discloses these essential facts and circumstances: On February 6th, 1930, under circumstances *Page 171 hereinafter adverted to, a so-called fixed fee construction contract was entered into between Terminal (formerly Terminal Development Company) and the Pennsylvania Railroad Company (hereinafter referred to as railroad company) for the demolition of the latter's "Pier D" at Jersey City, the construction of a new one in its place, the removal of the piles in the then existing dock and the performance of the dredging and engineering work necessary in connection therewith.

Pursuant to a prior arrangement between them, Terminal shortly thereafter apportioned and assigned this work as follows: to defendant Spearin, the removal of the old docks and old piles, the sinking of the new piles, the construction of the new dock, the installation of the hardware and the performance of the excavating, concrete and steel reinforcement work; to defendant McGraw, the superintending, accounting, field clerk, field engineering, communications, masonry, concrete, finish, carpentry, finish hardware, finish cement and finish plaster work. Each of said defendants, in turn, undertook and agreed to perform the work thus allocated and assigned to it.

Although all of the work required by its said contract was completed in September, 1931, the railroad company refused to honor the requisition for final payment of $28,971.21 which Terminal shortly thereafter made upon it. Its position undoubtedly was actuated merely by its desire to withhold from Terminal, of which William J. McMillan was president, any money which in turn might directly or indirectly be used by him in financing the controversy then existing between it (the railroad company) and Penn Dock Warehouse Company of which he also was president. By reason thereof McGraw and Spearin were unable to receive the sums of $10,137.57, $13,613.35 and $1,567.62 due them as their respective shares of that payment. Upon their assuring it that neither of them, the Pier "D" contract excepted, was in anywise connected with Terminal, the railroad company paid said sums to them respectively, but only after each had first procured and delivered to it a separate assignment from Terminal for each of said amounts. *Page 172

It is these assignments, dated February 15th and March 1st, 1932, respectively, that complainant — based upon a decree of this court dated March 8th, 1932, adjudicating Terminal insolvent and appointing his predecessor as its receiver — argues (a) were made by Terminal while insolvent or in contemplation of insolvency, (b) effected an unlawful preference in favor of McGraw and Spearin over Terminal's other creditors, and (c) are, under section 64 of the General Corporation act, utterly null and void as against those creditors, citing Hoagland v. UnitedStates Trust Co., 110 N.J. Eq. 489; Nugent v. Lindsley,97 N.J. Law 268; First National Bank of Lyndhurst v. Bicachi Smith,106 N.J. Eq. 333. That contention, however, presupposes and assumes the existence of all the essential facts upon which it is based.

Aside from the file in the case of Henry Janssen SecuritiesCorp. v. Terminal Warehouses, Inc. (Docket 88-614), and the above mentioned decree of insolvency therein entered, complainant produced no relevant or competent evidence tending to establish the insolvency of Terminal on the dates of those assignments. Tested by the principle that insolvency once established is presumed to continue forward, but not backward, from the date of its establishment (Glauberman v. Bergenline Trust Co.,108 N.J. Eq. 531; Martin v. Gwynn, 90 Ark. 44; 117 S.W. Rep. 754;Nevers v. Hack, 138 Ind. 260; 37 N.E. Rep. 791; Dinius v.Lahr, 36 Ind. A. 425; 74 N.E. Rep. 1033; Oklahoma National Bank v. Cobb, 52 Okla. 654; 153 Pac. Rep. 134), it may be well questioned whether that file and decree constitute sufficient competent proof of Terminal's insolvency on the dates of the assignments in question. Be that as it may, it is unnecessary to pass upon that question; since the conclusions hereinafter reached are based upon other grounds.

Complainant asserts that McGraw and Spearin are mere creditors of Terminal. In support of this assertion, he points to no evidence other than the contract between the railroad company and Terminal. He lays particular stress upon that provision thereof whereby all payments thereunder are to be made by the railroad company to Terminal. From this alone *Page 173 he proceeds to intriguingly spell out and deduce a relationship of debtor and creditor so between Terminal on the one side and McGraw and Spearin on the other. That reasoning, however, overlooks and completely ignores the very arrangements and agreements made between Terminal, McGraw and Spearin themselves, pursuant to which that contract was made and executed in its present form.

It is entirely uncontroverted that as early as January, 1929, Terminal, McGraw and Spearin, by their respective presidents, discussed the possibility of their jointly procuring the contract from the railroad company for its then contemplated Pier "D" construction project. Subsequently, at a conference on December 16th, 1929, Terminal's president apprised the others of the railroad company's willingness to award a contract for that work and inquired of each whether their respective companies would join with his in undertaking and performing it; each of them to finance such part thereof as would be apportioned and allocated to it and for which each was to be reimbursed out of the contract proceeds in addition to receiving one-third of the entire contract fee. With that arrangement all were in accord. In January, 1930, they were informed by the railroad company's engineer and representative, that, for matters of convenience to itself, it couldn't enter into a contract with the three of them jointly, but would do so with whichever one of them they selected, who then, in turn, could apportion the work between them, receive the payments for all and make distribution thereof amongst themselves in accordance with their own independent arrangements. Terminal having been selected for this purpose, the contract was made between it and the railroad company, paragraph XII of which significantly reads:

"It is understood and agreed that the actual expenditures incurred in the cost of the work for the pier construction proper are to be those of George B. Spearin, Incorporated, and for the shed construction those of F.H. McGraw Company, both of New York, N Y, to whom it is the intention of the `contractor' to assignthese items of work.

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Bluebook (online)
184 A. 436, 120 N.J. Eq. 169, 19 Backes 169, 1936 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stein-v-george-b-spearin-inc-njch-1936.