Taylor v. Fram

243 F. 733, 1917 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1164
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedJune 18, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 243 F. 733 (Taylor v. Fram) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor v. Fram, 243 F. 733, 1917 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1164 (E.D.N.Y. 1917).

Opinion

CHATFIELD, District Judge.

The bankrupt ran a shoe store near the wholesale store of a firm in which his brother was a partner. Being in debt to this firm, he made a contract like that approved in Ludvigh v. Am. Woolen Co., 231 U. S. 522, 34 Sup. Ct. 161, 58 L. Ed. 345, under which he was to receive goods on consignment, sell them at not less than invoice price, and account weekly for those sold. The goods which he ordered were billed as if purchased. His stock gradually increased, and he did not sell or did not account for all the goods which had been delivered to him. A month -before bankruptcy he gave a statement, in whiph he included all these goods in his stock, which he valued at $1,500, and in which he said nothing about consigned goods. At about the same time the defendants refused to let the bankrupt have any more goods, and began an investigation which resulted in an examination of his stock a day or two before he went to the defendants’ attorneys and made an assignment under the state law for the benefit of his creditors. On the morning upon which this assignment was made, by defendants’ orders, he put into cases and shipped by a moving van, to a store in Manhattan then in the possession of the defendants, goods [735]*735which were checked- up by a clerk of the defendants, to the value at cost price of $429.73. The bankrupt is also shown by the testimony to have placed a cash register in this van, hut there is no evidence that it was ever received by the defendants, and its whereabouts have not been proven.

Jt appears that, when the agreement to receive goods on consignment was made, the bankrupt owed the defendants the sum of $331.30, and also $100 to the wife of one of the defendants. When the defendants delivered the last item of goods, on the 13th of November, 1915, he had received an additional amount of $1,432.76, and had been credited, in money and merchandise, with the sum of $968.80, which included the sum of $100 repaid for the loan above mentioned. The books show that, when the so-called consignment agreement was made, no- change was made in the'method of entering items in the ledger, but the account was carried along until the 1st of September, 1916, when a different person seems to have begun making the entries. The old totals were then stricken out, and the account balanced in red ink, in the new handwriting, as of the date of the consignment agreement. No change, however, in the general style of bookkeeping, was made and the defendants continued to credit returns and payments to the general account, without any attempt to keep track, in the ledger, of any particular consignment, or the return of the merchandise included therein. The figures of the books show $431.30 due upon May 25, 1915, and an additional amount of $1,432.76 due November 13, 1915, making a total of $1,864.06. The credits by merchandise and money amounted to $968.80 up to December 11, 1915, and $429.73 in merchandise returned on the morning upon which the assignment was made, total $1,398.53, of which $100 went to the repayment of the loan.

The bankrupt testifies that he never made a return showing what consigned goods he had sold or how much of the consignment he still had on hand. He also testifies that he did not return the cost price foy all the sales made, and the- figures show that his total indebtedness increased from May to December, by the sum of $134.23. The defendants never demanded from the bankrupt a statement of what he had oil hand or of what he had sold. One defendant was the bankrupt's brother and the other two are his brothers-in-law. They made no attempt to collect the previous indebtedness, and evidently had knowledge of his financial condition when he, made the assignment. Their own counsel acted as his attorney in so doing. The $100 repaid- on the previous loan was credited to the account for consigned goods, and when the shoes from the stock were returned to the defendants they totaled substantially one-third of all the goods delivered to the bankrupt between May and- December; but the defendants had never questioned him, nor obtained a statement from him as to- the so-called consigned goods which remained in his hands until it was evident that he was ■insolvent.

[1] It appears that the goods received from the defendants were marked, either by their clerk or by the bankrupt himself, with letters showing the cost price to him and by the initials in ink, “B. S. M.,” the initials of the Boston Shoe Market, under which name the defend[736]*736ants did business. The shoes in the bankrupt’s stock came from various manufacturers, and were still in the boxes of those manufacturers, but were in no way labeled so that those dealing with the bankrupt could learn, upon ordinary inquiry or inspection, that they were the stock of the Boston Shoe .Market. If goods were sent to a dealer under a consignment, and- if title is to1 be reserved in the consignor, the goods should be so marked or identified, or of such character that they would not deceive innocent parties dealing with the consignee upon the strength of his having these goods as a part of his ordinary stock.

[2] As between the bankrupt and the consignor, all goods which can be identified, and as to which passing of title had not occurred, would still be property of the consignor. The creditors of the bankrupt and the trustee in bankruptcy would get no better title than the bankrupt himself. The decision of Ludvigh v. Am. Woolen Co., supra, is to the effect that the bankrupt cannot defeat a claim of title, even by fraudulent acts on his own part with respect to the consigned goods, unless the consignor has so acted with respect to the goods as to enable the bankrupt to hold them out to persons dealing with the bankrupt and using proper care in so doing, and which persons were injuriously affected through those acts and conditions which the consignors might have reasonably expected would follow from their own methods in putting out the goods or in dealing with the bankrupt. In the present case, the balance of the stock was estimated by a dealer at $543.21. It was sold at auction for $299.84, and appraised at approximately the same amount.

Taking the bankrupt’s own figures in his statement to creditors, the trustee has charged that the defendants removed at least $1,000 worth of goods; but the testimony is clear to the extent of showing that the wholesale price of the goods returned to the defendants was $429.73. As these goods were taken back by them at that valuation, their marketwalue to the defendants was evidently that much. If an execution had been levied against the bankrupt, and the goods returned to the defendants had been seized under the execution, the bankrupt would have had no title, and the levying creditor would succeed only to his rights. If solvent, the defendants would have been able to compel the sheriff to leave in the hands of the bankrupt those goods which they could show had come from them and were held by the bankrupt under the consignment agreement. But if the bankrupt were insolvent, and if the sheriff had levied upon these goods, the alleged consignors could not obtain the goods, if it could be shown that they had been guilty of an act which would indicate the passing of title, or the assumption of the relation of creditor and debtor, between the alleged consignor and the bankrupt.

[3]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
243 F. 733, 1917 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-fram-nyed-1917.