126 N.Y.S. 844 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1911
This action is brought by plaintiff, a judgment creditor of the Manhattan Consumers Brewing Company, for a sequestration of its property and to compel the defendant Manufacturers and Traders National Bank of Buffalo to account for moneys received by it, being the proceeds of the sale of the real and personal property of the judgment debtor. The plaintiff had judgment in his favor upon the trial upon the theory that the payments made to the bank were made when the brewing company was insolvent and with the intent of giving a preference to the bank over the other creditors of the corporation.
The brewing company was organized in 1900, and its principal place of business was located in the borough of Manhattan, city of New York.
It has been found as a fact by the learned trial court that the
The court has found that at the time of the various payments to the bank the liabilities of the defendant brewing company exceeded its assets and that that was known to the officers of the brewing company. It has also found that the sale of the brewing company’s property and the discontinuance of its business were brought about by the desire of the defendant bank to recover the moneys loaned by it to the brewing company which it had begun to loan from the time of the organization of that company. At the time of the payments to the bank there were unsatisfied judgments in favor of others than the plaintiff, but those have since been discharged. There is no express finding that the brewing company was insolvent at the time these payments were made nor at any other time, nor is there any finding as to how long the condition of an excess
It seems clear that the intent to create a preference in favor of one creditor over another must be present before this section becomes Operative. The infirmity of the plaintiff’s claim is that this record is lacking in any proof that at the time when the various
The judgment roll in the action in the City Court wherein plaintiff recovered judgment is not printed in the case on appeal; all that appears therein is the statement upon the trial of this cause of plaintiff’s counsel that the cause of action was upon an agreement by which plaintiff was to procure a customer for defendant in the purchase of its beer, and that for plaintiff’s services defendant promised to pay plaintiff the sum of twenty-five cents on each barrel of beer, ale and porter sold to such customer; and that pursuant to such agreement there were sold by the brewing company to that customer, between the beginning of April, 1904, and the end of March, 1905, beer, ale and porter amounting to 4,602 barrels, by reason whereof plaintiff became entitled to the .sum of $1,150.50. It was not indicated whether the agreement was oral or in writing. That action was commenced July 5, 1905, after the making of the last of the transfers by the brewing company. A judgment was recovered November 22, 1905, for the full amount of plaintiff’s claim, with interest. There is nothing to indicate how much of this claim thus reduced to judgment was for beer sold' after the date when the brewing company discontinued business; nor does it appear when or upon whom the summons in that action was served. There is no suggestion that plaintiff’s claim thus sued upon was ever brought to the attention of either the brewing company or the bank before the transfers were made. In this condition of the record it seems clear that without knowledge upon the part of either of them of any claim of plaintiff to be a creditor, there could have been no intention upon the part of either to prefer another creditor over him.
We are not unmindful of the fact that the procedure herein followed is a method of effecting the practical dissolution of a corporation without resorting to the procedure required by law to that end; but we are not now concerned with the question of the liability of the directors of .the brewing company, but only with the effect of the transfers made by it under the conditions disclosed by
The judgment appealed from must, therefore^ be reversed and. a new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide the event.
Ingraham, P. J., Scott and Miller, JJ,, concurred; Clarke, J., dissented.
Judgment reversed and new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide event.