126 Misc. 283 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1925
On August 14, 1918, Frederick E. Paradis drew a check on the Peoples’ Bank of Buffalo, payable to the order of the defendant, in the sum of sixty-two dollars and fifty cents, signing the check “ Flexible Armored Hose Corporation, F. E. Paradis, President,” and on February 4, 1919, drew another check on the same bank to the order of defendant in the sum of twenty-two dollars and ten cents, signing the same in the name of the same corporation. These two checks were delivered to the defendant, the avails thereof received by him in payment of the individual debt of F. E. Paradis to the defendant for flowers sold to the wife of Paradis. On April 4, 1921, the Flexible Armored Hose Corporation was adjudicated a bankrupt, and in 1925 the plaintiff, as trustee in bankruptcy, brought this action to recover from the defendant the moneys received by him by means of the two checks above described, alleging that such moneys were the funds of the corporation. Upon the trial it was established that the corporation was organized on April 17, 1917; on December 28, 1917, the
“ Flexible Armored Hose Corporation
“ Buffalo, N. Y.,-19.
“ Pay to the order of-$-
—-— --Dollars.
“ To the Peoples’ Bank of Buffalo, Flexible Armored Hose Buffalo, N. Y. Corporation.
“--President.”
All of the corporation’s financial affairs were under the sole supervision and control of Paradis; of the 429 shares of stock of the corporation 400 were owned by Paradis; each of the persons in whose name the remaining 29 shares of stock stood were officers and directors of the corporation with one exception, and they all consented to and had actual knowledge of the sole management and. control and supervision of the financial affairs of the corporation by Paradis; three of them had 4 shares of stock apparently
( The defendant having received the corporation checks made b'.v Paradis as its president, in payment of the individual indebtedness of Paradis, was bound at his peril to ascertain the authority of/ Paradis to so use the funds of the corporation. (Wagner Trading Co. v. Battery Park Nat. Bank, 228 N. Y. 37.)
j The defendant, at the time of accepting such checks, was cjhargeable with notice of such facts as a reasonable investigation ' Would have disclosed. (Kepner Co. v. Hutton, 179 App. Div. 130; 226 N. Y. 674; Martindale v. Be Kay, 101 Misc. 728; 180 App. Div. 926; 224 N. Y. 585.)
Such an investigation would have revealed the facts herein-before set forth. A finding upon those facts that Paradis did not have authority to make the checks and use the funds thereby paid to the defendant in payment of his individual debt, or that the moneys received by the defendant were the corporate funds . and not the moneys of Paradis, cannot be sustained. There is no fact set forth in the record on appeal inconsistent with the idea that the corporation had in its possession moneys belonging to Paradis and against which he was entitled to draw by means of checks payable to the defendant. There is no fact in the record on appeal that the use of these checks in paying the individual debt of Paradis, assuming they were paid with corporation funds, tends to establish that any creditor of the corporation was injured or deprived of any rights. These checks were paid in February, 1919; the sole evidence that there are creditors of the corporation is the fact of bankruptcy in April, 1921. There was no proof of any indebtedness or insolvency of the corporation in February, 1919. Proof of insolvency in 1921 is not proof of insolvency in
If the facts hereinbefore recited would have repelled the presumption that Paradis was making an unauthorized use of the corporation funds, and would have indicated on the contrary that the use he was malcing of the funds was authorized, and the rights of no creditor have been imperilled, then plaintiff cannot recover. (Cases above cited.)
Judgment reversed and new trial ordered in the City Court, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.