207 A.D. 211 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1923
The Bankers Trust Company, as executor under the will of Alf Hayman, deceased (hereinafter called the defendant), appeals from a judgment awarding to the plaintiffs one thousand two. hundred and fifty shares of Famous Players-Lasky Corporation stock with an allowance against these shares of seventy-five shares for attorneys’ services and fifty shares which were set apart .as an indemnity for the Famous Players-Lasky Corporation for the discharge of certain claims.
Plaintiffs appeal from the judgment in so far as it allows defendant Famous Players-Lasky Corporation to hold and retain fifty shares of the stock awarded to plaintiffs as an indemnity against any liability that may be established by two creditors who assert claims; and secondly, from so much of the judgment as charges against the plaintiffs’ shares seventy-five shares which the judgment directs to be delivered to attorneys who claim compensation for certain services which were rendered; and thirdly, from a denial of delivery to the plaintiffs of the entire one thousand two hundred and fifty shares of capital stock of the Famous Players-Lasky Corporation, which are the subject of the controversy. The defendant’s resistance to plaintiffs’ claim is founded upon the proof that in the settlement of the estate of Charles Frohman, deceased, the plaintiffs exacted a secret advantage for signing the creditors’ agreement which was then entered into with all of Frohman’s creditors; and it urges that equity should not aid them in enforcing it. After Frohman died, his affairs indicated that immediately to wind up his estate would result in depriving his next of kin of any interest in his fortune. It. was doubted whether anything more than payment of creditors could be accom
It is tMs mstrument upon which plaintiffs base their claims in tMs action, and it is because of the secret nature of the negotiations for tMs agreement and its withholding from all the other creditors that defendant claims a fraud was practiced upon the other parties to the agreement, and that no equitable ground of relief can be maintained under such considerations.
In carrying out the provisions of the agreement for the sale of the stock, deposits were made for the purposes of this exchange with' the defendant Empire Trust Company; and after making certain exchanges under the contract of sale, that company still holds 1,250 shares of the Famous Players stock, and 100 shares are still
We conclude that a mere recital of these facts indicates that the conclusions of the learned Special Term that the plaintiffs did not receive any secret advantage for their execution of the agreement with the heirs and creditors of Charles Frohman, and that the plaintiffs have duly performed their part of that agreement, and that they were equitably the owners of 750 shares of common stock of Charles Frohman, Inc., which came to them from this agreement with Alf Hayman for a division of his share of the common stock of Charles Frohman, Inc., which stock is directed to be delivered to the plaintiffs with dividends, are wholly unsound and contrary to law. The equitable principle that one who exacts a secret advantage in consideration of executing an agreement with fellow-creditors will not be heard in a claim for its enforcement, cannot be whittled away by an assertion that no one was injured who was entitled to complain, or that the creditor benefited by the secret agreement belongs to a different class from that of other creditors. Unless the class distinction of such a creditor is disclosed to the other creditors and assented to by them in the agreement wherein they are joined as equals, he may not assert it thereafter. The vice of the agreement is its secret lack of equality.
If any other rule were adopted, the basic doctrine could easily be subverted where a creditors’ agreement itself creates a preference by providing for two classes of creditors, one class receiving security and the other to which is given unsecured obligations. Those unsecured may then make arrangements, disregarding each other’s solemn promise to equally enforce their unsecured claims, with such secured creditors as will give them a part of their security from the estate for the accommodation and advantage to the secured creditors of procuring the signature of the ones favored. In other words, a preferred creditor may share with a common creditor in a creditors’ agreement such preference as he gets without disclosing it, and a common creditor may enforce it if he can show thereafter that he ought to have been a preferred creditor by reason of his assistance to the debtor during his business career. This illustration demonstrates the fallacy of the reasoning which would permit an agreement founded in uberrima fides thus to be thwarted.
In the case of Almon v. Hamilton (100 N. Y. 527) a brief exposition of the moral principle underlying these agreements is set out as follows: “ The law exacts of all the parties to a composition the most scrupulous good faith. It enforces a wholesome morality and inculcates the principles of honest and fair dealing, by defeating any advantage attempted to be gained, either by working upon the necessities of the debtor or by colluding with him. * * * The doctrine is based upon public policy, and the principles of commercial honor, and we should be very unwilling to weaken it by nice distinctions.”
The rule against enforcing agreements conceived in secrecy and concealment is not founded upon a necessary showing that the other creditors are deprived of something which otherwise they would have received, but upon the principle that every one concerned as
A concealed agreement for such advantage is utterly repugnant to the letter and the spirit of the creditors’ agreement, is fraudulent in its nature and is “ avoided by the law.” (Hanover National Bank v. Blake, 142 N. Y. 404.)
The judgment should be reversed, with costs to defendants, and judgment directed for the defendants, with costs.
Claeke, P. J., Dowling, Finch and Martin, JJ., concur.
Judgment reversed, with costs, and judgment directed for the defendants, with costs. Settle order on notice.