201 F. 377 | E.D.N.Y | 1912
Subsequent to adjudication, an action has been started against the bankrupts upon a complaint charging conversion of personal property. This action was brought in the City •Court of the state of New York, and was stayed by this court during the statutory period, upon an affidavit alleging that the action had been brought to recover a sum of money only for advances by the plaintiffs to the bankrupts when in business as copartners, and that ■the debt was dischargeable in bankruptcy. Application has been made to vacate this stay; the creditors asserting that the debt in question
It appears by the record that the bankrupts had secured loans at various times from the creditors who have brought the action in question, and had assigned or pledged as security for these loans certain accounts for merchandise sold; that they entered into an agreement pledging these accounts, by which they bound themselves to turn over any proceeds of the accounts received by them, and also to hold, as the property of the pledgees, any merchandise returned to the bankrupts, in trust for the plaintiffs. Such returned merchandise was to be delivered to the plaintiffs, or, if not, they were to be considered as having sole title thereto, unless the defendants (the bankrupts) should pay to the plaintiffs for these goods so returned, or resell them and pay over the proceeds. If such payments were made, then title was to revest in the defendants. In other words, the accounts were not only assigned to the creditors, but the debtors agreed to act. as bailees for the creditors with respect to any goods which might be returned from customers whose accounts were among those assigned, or to sell such goods as agents for the creditors, and to hold the proceeds for payment of the debt.'
We need not, however, consider the extent to which such a contract would be valid as against other creditors. The affidavits show that from time to time some merchandise was returned and was sold by the bankrujpts in the ordinary course of business, and accounted for to the pledgees as settlements were had. Some merchandise, returned from parties whose accounts had been assigned, had been sold by the bankrupts some two years previous, and the proceeds of the particular sale had not been paid over. The suit stayed was to recover this amount. If such a claim against a person (assuming that he could, in the capacity of bailee, hold property which belonged equitably to a pledgee, but with right in the bailee to sell the same and immediately account for the proceeds, or substitute other goods or proceeds therefor) constitutes a claim dischargeable in bankruptcy, the present motion must be denied.
The creditors cite In re McIntyre, 128 App. Div. 722, 112 N. Y. Supp. 987, in which the court held that a willful and intentional breach of trust, by the selling of pledged shares of stock, was a wrongful conversion by a person in a fiduciary capacity, and distinguished between conversions wrongful in law and those wrongful and intentionally fraudulent. But it has been held that the bankruptcy statute does not' refer, when using the words “fiduciary capacity,” to a debt “founded upon an open contract, or upon a contract express or implied,” even though suit may be brought in trover thereon. Crawford v. Burke, 195 U. S. 176, 25 Sup. Ct. 9, 49 L. Ed. 147.
The bankrupts have cited the cases of Maxwell v. Martin, 130 App. Div. 80, 114 N. Y. Supp. 349, and Matter of Floyd, Crawford & Co., 15 Am. Bankr. Rep. 277, to show that a claim for conversion of personal property, not obtained by false representation or pretense, is provable and is dischargeable in bankruptcy. The creditors argue that a conversion such as is charged herein is a willful injury to personal