Walser v. International Union Bank

21 F.2d 294, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2713
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedAugust 8, 1927
Docket375
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 21 F.2d 294 (Walser v. International Union Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walser v. International Union Bank, 21 F.2d 294, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2713 (2d Cir. 1927).

Opinion

SWAN, Circuit Judge.

The elements of a preference are proved conclusively, and the only question is whether the bank had such knowledge as to make the preference voidable under section 60b of the Bankruptcy Act (11 USCA § 96 [Comp. St. § 9644]). For a decision of this question, it is necessary to review the facts in some detail.

The bankrupt, Harry A. Cohn, was a public accountant, and also engaged in the jewelry business. During 1924 Cohn opened two accounts with the defendant bank, one in his own name, and one in the name of Atlas Audit Corporation, of which he was president. These accounts were small and unsatisfactory, and after two or three months were closed out by order of the bank’s officers, Messrs. Rodriguez and Kaplowitz. Mr. Rodriguez was the vice president and general manager. Mr. Kaplowitz was the cashier. Henry Wollenweber was the assistant cash-; ier, and as such he supervised the accounting department of the hank and the work of its receiving and paying tellers. During 1925 Cohn and Wollenweber became friendly, and the latter permitted Cohn to open accounts with the bank, using fictitious names in order to conceal the fact from the bank’s officers, and to use the accounts to “kite” checks; that is, Wollenweber permitted cheeks to be drawn on these accounts against uncollected deposits and to he paid out of the bank’s money. One of these accounts was in the name of S. M. Barnett, an alias adopted by Cohn’s employee, Mandel, and between September 19 and October 3, 1925, Wollenweber, in the manner above described, paid to Cohn out of the bank’s moneys sums aggregating $55,000. Such payments were made in amounts ranging from $1,000 to $10,000, on checks signed by Barnett and drawn to the order of Vollman & Co. There was never enough balance in the Barnett account to cover a single one of such cheeks, but in all eases Wollenweber paid the cheeks, or ordered them paid by the paying teller, and such payments were subsequently covered by Cohn, either by a deposit of cash, or of checks which were carried as cash by the teller. No entry was made on the books of the hank of any of these transactions. Wollenweber admitted receiving bribes of cash and jewelry from Cohn in return for these accommodations.

The suspicions of Wollonweber’s superi- or officers that he was committing irregularities were first aroused on October 5, 1925, when Mr. Rodriguez received a telephone call from tho Irving Bank-Columbia Trust Company requesting him to redeem a certain cheek drawn upon the trust company and by mistake paid by it, although the drawer’s account was insufficient. The cheek was drawn to the order of Harry A. Cohn, was indorsed by him, and had come through the defendant bank. Rodriguez found that no account in the name of Cohn was carried on *296 the booh? of the bank. The trust company also inquired about the S. M. Barnett account, and Rodriguez ascertained from the books that there was a small account in this name. He then called in Wollenweber, and was told by him that he had cashed the cheek in question to accommodate his friend .Cohn, after telephoning the trust company and being informed by it that the cheek was good. With respect to the Barnett account, Rodriguez says that Wollenweber said that “he had allowed them to make deposits to cover cheeks which had come in through the Federal Reserve Bank exchange.”

The next morning, Kaplowitz, who also talked with Wollenweber on October 5 about the trust company cheek, went early to the bank in order to examine the exchanges before Wollenweber’s arrival. His examination disclosed three checks, aggregating $23,725. One of these was a check for $10,000, payable to the order of Harry A. Cohn, drawn by a man named Rabinowitz, and returned that morning through the Federal Reserve Bank for lack of funds. The other two cheeks, one for $13,410,. the other for $315, were being carried as cash by one of the paying tellers pursuant to Wollenweber’s instruction. The two last-mentioned checks had not been presented for payment to the banks on which they were respectively drawn, because Cohn had promised Wollenweber to make them good on October 5. None of the three checks were credited to the account of any depositor.

Upon lleing confronted with these three cheeks, Wollenweber says he admitted to Kaplowitz and Rodriguez that the cheeks had been delivered to him by an employee of Cohn, and that he had cashed them before collection, and had instructed the paying teller to carry them as cash items. It was, as the defendant contends, "a misappropriation of the bank’s money by Wollenweber, who turned the same over to Cohn on Cohn’s promise to repay the amount before the misappropriation was discovered.

This made Cohn the bank’s debtor in the sum of $23,725. He received the bank’s money, knowing that Wollenweber had no authority to deal with it in this manner. In other words, he converted the bank’s money, and became its debtor, within the meaning of the Bankruptcy Act (11 USCA § 1 et seq. [Comp. St. §§ 9585-9656]). See Crawford v. Burke, 195 U. S. 176, 25 S. Ct. 9, 49 L. Ed. 147; Burgoyne v. McKillip, 182 F. 452 (C. C. A. 8). That the transaction was not entered upon the books of the bank, or that its officers did not know to whom Wollenweber had paid the money — if such be the fact, which will be discussed hereafter — is immaterial on the issue of his indebtedness to the bank.

Upon discovery of Wollenweber’s misappropriation of the money paid out on these three cheeks, the officers demanded that he immediately make restitution. On the same day, October 6, 1925, he paid the bank $15,-000 in cash in the morning, $8,000 in > cash later in the day, and $725 by a withdrawal order on his personal savings deposit in the bank. Of the cash so paid, $19,500 was obtained by Wollenweber from Cohn; $3,500 in cash and the withdrawal deposit of $725" was Wollenweber’s own money.

The petition in bankruptcy was filed against Cohn two days later, October 8,1925. He testified that he was hopelessly insolvent on October 6, when his $19,500 was paid to Wollenweber, and it was stipulated in the case that the trustee in bankruptcy would be able to pay only a small dividend to creditors. Consequently the sole disputed question on the issue of a voidable preference is whether the bank officials knew that the money came from Cohn, and that he was in financial difficulties. This is the issue upon which the case turns.

There is no dispute that Wollenweber knew of Cohn’s insolvency. He met Cohn on the evening of October 5, apparently following his interview with Rodriguez, and told Cohn he would have to take care of the overdrafts amounting to $23,725. Cohn replied that he was on the eve of bankruptcy, but that he would sell jewelry enough to make good the account and protect the bank. Wollenweber says that, when he turned the cash over to Rodriguez on October 6, he told him that he had obtained it from Cohn’s employee, Arnow, who had disposed of jewelry to raise it, and that Cohn was in financial, difficulties and had fled to Newark. If this is believed, there is no doubt that the bank had such knowledge as to make its receipt of the money a voidable preference. The amount of the preference, however, would be only $19,500. What Wollenweber paid out of his own pocket was not a preference.

Rodriguez denies this conversation with Wollenweber. He denies that he knew the money came from Cohn.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 F.2d 294, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2713, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walser-v-international-union-bank-ca2-1927.