Tucker v. Binenstock

165 A. 247, 310 Pa. 254, 1933 Pa. LEXIS 415
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 30, 1932
DocketAppeal, 300
StatusPublished
Cited by53 cases

This text of 165 A. 247 (Tucker v. Binenstock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tucker v. Binenstock, 165 A. 247, 310 Pa. 254, 1933 Pa. LEXIS 415 (Pa. 1932).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Kephart,

Tucker and Binenstoek, the parties to this suit, with four others, organized in 1923 the New Century Realty Company. The purpose of the corporation, as outlined in its charter, was dealing in real estate, but its real purpose was the purchase of a brewery, and it did purchase the property operated by the Class & Nachod Company, a brewing concern. To further their plain, the Atlantic Brewing Company, another corporation, was formed. It leased this property from the New Century Company. The Atlantic Company was to operate the brewery in manufacturing near beer. The stock in the New Century Company was held by the parties hereto and their associates, but within a year the four associates sold their respective interests to the two parties to this ac *256 tion. The original organizers did not hold the stock of the brewing company; it was issued to Maurice A. Tucker, son of the appellee, Daniel J. Kopp, Jr., and James Kammerer. It was contended at the hearing that this stock was held in trust for the owners of the realty company, but in other litigation it was testified that the stock was owned individually. Tucker, Kopp and Kammerer were the managing officers of the brewing company.

Appellee stated that the brewing company began operations shortly after purchase and continued until November, 1926, when it was sold to Feuerstein. See Feuerstein v. New Century Realty Co., 304 Pa. 271. The testimony in this and the Feuerstein Case (admitted in evidence in this case) shows that the Atlantic Company conducted an illegal liquor business, selling beer to the public with an alcoholic content as high as 4% in violation of federal and state laws. This definitely appears from the padlock proceedings before Judge McDevitt in-' stituted by the Commonwealth in December, 1926. The testimony of police officers in that proceeding showed there were large quantities of beer of illegal alcoholic content, as high as 4%, in the brewery on July 24, 1926, and that although the brewery had been libelled by the federal government and was at that time under the control of federal officers who had closed it and placed government seals on its doors, yet a second visit in November, 1926, showed the government seals broken and the beer gone, trucks and railroad cars having been used to remove it, and thousands of gallons of new beer were being brewed in other parts of the establishment. During this period these parties owned the brewery and their agents managed it. This, taken in connection with appellee’s evidence in this case that beer was sold up to November, 1926, resulting in gross receipts of $1,876,-707.50, makes it clear that such sales were illegal. Further, it appeared that the sum of $188,000 was paid to police officers for "protection.” Evidence as to book *257 keeping methods employed by the company substantiates a finding of illegality. Shortly after the brewing company began operations its customers’ names were removed from the books and numbers substituted.

Appellee, Tucker, said that “beer” was sold, and his evidence shows an intimate knowledge of the brewery business, acquired from 30 years’ experience. He stated he had received $89,'737.42 from the brewing company, which was a division of profits from the sale of the beverage from the Atlantic Brewing Company; that the beer was distributed in bulk and sold by barrels and half barrels in New York, Baltimore and Pittsburgh. The purchasers were bottlers, wholesalers, saloon-keepers, and night clubs, who, he supposed, “would sell it out of the keg.” He also testified that “one-half of 1% is not enough alcohol to give the beer the tone. You have to have something in the beer to warm up the stomach to digest the malt and hops.”

In 1924 the federal authorities filed a bill of complaint against the brewing company. In its answer to the bill, the company admitted that it “did not have any permit to manufacture beer in 1924, and that an application by the said company for a permit was refused.” There is no evidence in this case to show that a permit was ever subsequently acquired. See Com. v. Fisher, 96 Pa. Superior Ct. 155, 158; Premier C. & B. Co. v. Pa. Alcohol P. B., 292 Pa. 127.

Typical of the parties’ conduct of their business was the fake transaction by which Binenstock and Tucker eliminated their four associates, when Binenstock pretended to transfer his holdings in the realty company to Tucker to induce Lipschutz, one of the associates, to part with his stock. Appellee admitted the dishonesty of this transaction by his reply to the interrogation of the court that “he was cheating Lipschutz,” and the further question, “You went into the conspiracy to lead Lipschutz to believe you were paying the money? A. Well, yes, if you take it that way.”

*258 Tucker instituted this bill for an accounting by appellant of the receipts and disbursements of the Atlantic Brewing Company from August, 1923, to November, 1926. After hearing, the court below found among other things: “The chancellor was not favorably impressed with the testimony upon the character of the business carried on by the parties to this proceeding; ......the testimony of Miss Martin would indicate that several transactions with unknown persons were at least suspicious. These individuals were not known by name, but by numbers." The court also referred to the special account, reciting the payment for “protection" to police officers, but because the parties sustained the relation of partners, and since appellant, Binenstock, took possession of or received all the moneys of these corporations and made the disbursements, the chancellor found there should be an accounting of the receipts and disbursements of the Atlantic Brewing Company, and also of a specific item of $173,530, rent paid to the New Century Realty Company.

We need not consider all the questions raised in this appeal. We will, therefore, pass over those relating to the findings of the chancellor, not supported by the evidence, that equity had no jurisdiction to decree an accounting of the funds of a corporation in which neither parties to the bill were stockholders, officers or employees, but sustained a relation to that corporation only through a holding company in which both were stockholders. Passmore v. Allentown & R. T. Co., 267 Pa. 356, holds that in any event an accounting should not be decreed where the books of the company have been in the possession of plaintiff in the bill for at least three years prior to the litigation; and further, that a decree for an accounting should not be ordered as between partners where the pleadings do not aver the partnership, the evidence does not sustain it, and where the pleadings and testimony show that the business to be accounted was conducted under corporate management, and the moneys *259 were received through that management, and all the affairs were duly administered as corporate matters. Interesting as all these questions are, we pass to the more important ones affecting public policy.

There is no principle more clearly established than that the law will not enforce an illegal transaction, nor will it be an instrument for distribution of moneys illegally gained: Ad-Lee Co. v. Meyer, 294 Pa. 498, 502. It simply leaves the wrongdoers where it finds them.

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Bluebook (online)
165 A. 247, 310 Pa. 254, 1933 Pa. LEXIS 415, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tucker-v-binenstock-pa-1932.