West v. Wilcox

1 Balt. C. Rep. 636
CourtBaltimore City Circuit Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1897
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Balt. C. Rep. 636 (West v. Wilcox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Baltimore City Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
West v. Wilcox, 1 Balt. C. Rep. 636 (Md. Super. Ct. 1897).

Opinion

HARLAN, J.

The plaintiffs in this ease are two of the former directors of the Merchants and Mechanics’ Insurance and Savings Association, a corporation against which a bill for a receiver had been filed by one Evans in this Court in September, 1894. Receivers were appointed under this bill on June 19, 1895. It appears from the evidence that all of the directors were endorsers upon certain notes of the said Association, and that a short time before the receivers were named, the other directors, acting upon an under[637]*637standing existing among themselves, at the time they became endorsers, instructed the defendant, Wheeler, who was one of the directors and the Sccreary and General Manager of the Association, to make arrangements to transfer as many of the members or policyholders of the Association as possible to some other like Association for the best consideration obtainable, and secure the proceeds thereof to the liquidation of the notes on which they were endorsers. Policyholders cannot, of course, be so transferred without their own consent, and whether any, or how many, can be induced to transfer must depend upon circumstances, and very largely upon the influence that can be exerted with them by the persons engaged in the transaction. But the agents, in fact, are frequently able to transfer quite a large proportion of their patrons, and the association to which the transfer is made, seems to pay quite liberally for the new business thus brought to it.

The amount of the weekly payments of the members so transferred is called a debit, and when members are so transferred from one company to another, the transaction is designated as the transfer or sale of a debit.

Wheeler testifies that this was to be done “secretly,” and that he was directed to make no minutes of the conferences at which the directions were given, “for the reason that they did not want the matter of the sale to appear as act of the board of directors, but as an act of his own,” * * * “for fear of an order being passed directing that the money be paid to the receivers instead of to himself, or to the creditors for whom they were endorsers.” At all events, AVheeler, in pursuance of the plan, did arrange with the Home Friendly Society for a transfer of the debit on June 12, 1895, by a contract, whereby he was employed as agent of the Home Friendly Society, to be paid.

“A, fifty dollars per week, regular salary,” and “B, in addition to the amount to which he is entitled under clause A, an amount, by way of salary, equivalent to sixteen times the amount of the net weekly increase of collectible debit, to be paid in equal monthly instalments, the first instalment to be paid on July 7, 1895, and an instalment to be paid each thirty days thereafter.” (Defendant’s Exhibit, Exam. No. 1.)

The amount of the debit which he succeeded in transferring was $193.30. (Test., p. 59 and p. 95), and the amount 1 o which he became entitled under clause B, of this contract, was therefore sixteen times $193.30, or $3,092.80. It had been arranged between Wheeler and the other directors that this money should be paid to Theodore F. Wilcox, who would receive it and liquidate the indebtedness, i. e., pay the notes of the association endorsed by the president and directors of the association — '(West Test., pp. 78, 79), and accordingly Wheeler on June 17, 1895, gave to Wilcox an order on the Home Friendly Society for the money to become due under this contract, and this order was accepted by the Home Friendly Society, June 19, 1895. Wilcox had agreed to receive the money, and apply it to the paying off of the notes (Talley, Test., p. 51).

On June 19, 1895, as before stated, the receivers were appointed, and directly thereafter, on June 20, 1895, made claim to this money and obtained an order nisi restraining Thomas It. AVheeler and Theodore F. AVilcox from making away with, or in any manner, disposing of any money or evidence of indebtedness received on account of the contract between Wheeler and the Home Friendly Society, and restraining the Home Friendly Society from paying over to Thomas R. Wheeler or Theodore F. Wilcox, or any other person than the receivers; any money or evidence of indebtedness on account of said contract. Wheeler employed W. S. Garr and R. B. Tippett as counsel to resist this claim of the receivers, and a demurrer to the petition on which this order was passed was entered.Gonferences and negotiations were had between the receivers and the counsel of Wheeler, who also acted for Wilcox and the Home Friendly Society, although employed and to be paid by Wheeler, and these conferences resulted in a new arrangement being made as to the money to be paid for the debit transferred to the Home Friendly Society. The Home Friendly Society, after the proceedings by the receivers, set up some claim that Wheeler had broken his contract, and that it was no longer liable under the accepted order. The new arrangement was consented to by the receivers, by the Home Friendly Society, by Wheeler and by [638]*638Wilcox, and was brought about by Mr. Tippett, who acted for and represented all the three latter. But it must be noted that none of the note creditors except Wilcox, and none of the endorsers, except Wheeler, was a party to this arrangement.

On the application of the receivers an order was passed dismissing their former petition, and on the day the order was filed, October 19, 1895, and in pursuance of the new arrangement the Home Friendly Society drew its check for $700.00 to the order of “Theodore Wilcox, Trustee,” which check was endorsed by Wilcox to R. B. Tippett, and the proceeds thereof were applied by Tippett as follows: $200 to Mason as. attorney for the receivers; $100 to Wheeler, and the balance, $400, to Carr and himself as attorneys for Wheeler. At the same time that the check was given the Home Friendly Society passed its five several promissory notes, each dated September 4, 1895, and all payable to the order of Thomas R. Wheeler, for the amounts, and maturing as follows:

' One for $500, payable on or before January 18, 1896.

One for $442.80, payable on or before March 18, 1896.

One for $250, payable on or before April 18, 1896.

One for $200, payable on or before May 18, 1896.

One for $350, payable on or before July 18, 1896.

One for $600, payable on or before November 18, 1896.

These notes, with the exception of the one for $200, which is in the hands 'of Tippett, were endorsed by Wheeler, and were turned over to Theodore F. Wilcox, to be by him held and collected, and the proceeds applied according to directions received from Wheeler and communicated by his counsel to Wilcox. Under these directions a part of this money was to be applied to some of the notes which were provided for by the first arrangements, but a part was to be otherwise applied, and $700 had already been diverted — $600 to the payment of counsel fees and $100 to Wheeler’s own use. The object of the present proceeding was to stop this alleged unlawful diversion of the funds arising out of the transfer of the debit from the purposes for which they were originally intended, and to undo the same so far as it has been accomplished. The plaintiffs, as endorsers on the notes, and now the holders of the bulk of them, ask that Wilcox account for so much of the fund ($700) as has been collected and misapplied, and that the balance be collected and applied to the payment of said notes.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Balt. C. Rep. 636, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/west-v-wilcox-mdcirctctbalt-1897.