92 F. 274 | 2d Cir. | 1899
The Natehaug Silk Company was a manufacturing corporation for the manufacture and sale of silk goods, was incorporated under the laws of the slate of Connecticut, and had its principal place of business in “Willimantic, in that state. Its capital of $200,000, in August, 1888, was increased to $250,000 in February, 1893. J. Dwight Chaffee was its president and general manager from its organization, in 1887, and managed entirely the manufacture and sales of goods, without any oversight by the directors. The by-law of the corporation, from and after February 3, 1891, was as follows:
“The hoard of directors shall annually elect a general manager, who shall hare entire charge of the business and affairs of said company, subject, to Ute order and approval of the board of directors.”
O. H. K. Eisley was cashier of the First National Bank of Willi-mantic, having a capital of $100,000, was a director in the silk company, and took care of its financial business so far as the raising of money was concerned, and before 1890 the company owed the bank beyond the limit of $10,000, allowed by law. On January 3, 1890, at the suggestion of Eisley, and as security for the payment of this debt, Chaffee made an ordinary absolute bill of sale to the bank of silk goods amounting to $2(5,610.24. Those goods remained, as before, in the possession of the silk company, and were sold by it to its customers in the ordinary course of business. It was a part of the verbal agreement that the silk company could sell the goods and replace them by other manufactured goods. In the spring of 1892 the silk company owed the bank about 8200,000. In January, 1891, the debt of the silk company to (he hank had increased to about $300,000, and, upon request of Eisley, Chaffee executed, as security for this indebtedness, two bills of sale to the bank, of manufactured goods of about $66,000 in value. Each bill contained the following statement:
“The goods represented by this bill are pledged to the First National Bank oí 'Willimantie, as security for loans made by said bank to the Natehaug Silk Company. The Natehaug Silk Co.
“J. 1>. Chaffee, Front.
“Charles Fenton, Treas.”
The goods represented by these bills were placed in the storeroom and vault, respectively, of (lie silk company. It was said that the storeroom was built especially for this purpose, and (hat there were two keys, one of which was kept by Risley, who also had the combination of the vault safe. The goods were stored in the rooms oi*
Testimony was given to show that, before Risley’s death, he was instrumental in submitting to the creditors of the silk company, and in lodging in the public offices in which statements were required by statute to be annually lodged, false statements of the financial condition of the silk company. This testimony was offered in support of the theory that Risley was the agent of the bank, and that the bank and the silk company had conspired to lure the creditors to sell goods to an insolvent company for the purpose of securing to the bank the fruits of the fraud. We are not inclined to believe that the bank directors knew or had reason to know of the falsity of these
Inasmuch as the bank obtained no valid title by virtue of the bills
There are in this case peculiar circumstances, which demand the attention of a court of equity. A mass of silk company notes belonged to the bank, which steadily increased in amount, and for which renewals seem to have been quite uniformly given, with no reasonable expectation of payment. A renewal was a mere form, and ordinary rules of banking seem to have been lost sight of. On April 26, 1895, the silk company yent into the hands of a receiyer, by its consent, because it was hopelessly insolvent,- and from that time its control of payments of its debts ceased. The debts for which the renewal notes now in question were given were equitably the debts of the company; and to declare, by decree of a court of equity, that, under the circumstances of the case, an attachment for their security was-invalid, because made a few days before their actual maturity, partakes of the character of an inequitable exercise of authority. Patrick v. Montader, 13 Cal. 434. ' We are the more inclined not to place-the decision upon this ground because we think that the plaintiffs are entitled to adequate relief by reason of the conduct in behalf of the defendant, which was, as against the plaintiffs, inequitable. The 107 cases which were originally in the care of Thompson in Greene street, as the bank’s goods, went to Brooklyn, although the exact number which went there on May 25th is not clearly stated in the record.. While creditors were inquiring with'a sheriff at Greene street in regard to these goods, for the purpose of attachment, they were removed from place to place by the order of Dooley’s counsel, were-stored in his name, and were attached, in the suit of the bank against the silk company, by his direction. The attempted attachment by the complainants of the 45 cases in Greene street was prevented by their removal to Brooklyn. The counsel for Dooley distrusted the validity of the bills of sale, and desired to secure the bank by the aid of legal proceedings. The receiver of the bank had an equal right with other creditors to take legal steps to secure its debt, but had no right to take unfair steps. The removal of the 45 cases to Brooklyn, and the storage of the property in the name of Mr. Paige, so that it could be in a measure secreted, for the purpose of preventing, the complainants from completing their attachment of these cases, was an unfair step. Hadden & Co. first appeared as attaching creditors on May 21st. At this time, 62 boxes had been attached in the Dooley suit, and 45 were in Greene street. The removal of these boxes after May 21st, to prevent the completion of the Hadden & Co. attachment, was an unfair advantage in this race between creditors, and compels -a court of equity to declare that the complainants should haye a prior lien upon the cases which were in Greene street when the sheriff’s bond was being prepared. There is no apparent equity in giving priority to their attachment upon 107 cases, but they are entitled only to a prior lien upon the goods which they attempted to attach, — an attempt the success of which was foiled by a removal of the goods.
Decree of the court below should be reversed, with costs of this-court, with, instructions to decree priority of lien to the complain
I will briefly state the reasons for my concurrence in the opinion of Judge SHIPMAN. The case resolves itself into a question of priority of liens between judgment creditors of I he Natchaug Silk Company having executions levied upon 107 boxes of silk in the storehouse of the Brooklyn Storage & Warehouse Company, and its decision depends upon the priority of the liens acquired by (he attachments in the actions in which judgments were recovered. For the reasons fully stated by Judge SHIPMAN, the title to these gopds, at the time they were removed to the storehouse from New York City, was, as against the creditors of the silk company, .still in that company; the transfer from the company to the bank being fraudulent, and that made by Chaffee, its general manager, when it was moribund, being ineffectual, in the absence of express authority from, or subsequent ratification by, the directors. Of these .goods, 45 boxes were removed by Dooley, the receiver of the Willi-mantic Bank, and stored in Brooklyn clandestinely, for the purpose of defeating a levy upon them under the attachment in the complainant s’ action until Dooley could procure an attachment and levy upon them through the instrumentality of Pangburn. A creditor having property of a debtor in his possession or under his control cannot thus defeat the rights of another creditor who has been in the meantime using proper diligence to attach it. A race of diligence between creditors is legitimate, but it cannot be won by the abuse of legal remedies. I cannot doubt that the contqilainants could recover of Dooley in an action on the case, for his acts in frustrating their attempted levy. A court of equity, under such circumstances, should postpone his lien to tlieirs.
Because the attachment in the Pangburn suit- was valid, its lien cannot be displaced in favor of the complainants, as respects the goods ■removed before their attachment was obtained. The Pangburn suit was a proceeding by Dooley, the receiver of the bank, to procure an attachment against the silk company, which could not have been procured in an action in his own name, and by means thereof to levy upon the goods before other creditors of the silk company could do so. A1 though Pangburn was only a dummy, it was not a fraud upon the statutes of New York, nor upon creditors, for Dooley to make a formal assignment of the demands of the bank to a resident of New York, and prevail upon him to bring an action and obtain an attachment. An attachment could not have been obtained in an action brought by a nonresident against a foreign corporation, but what Dooley did was a legitimate device for obviating the difficulty. Me-