69 F. 687 | N.D. Cal. | 1895
The bill in equity was filed January 15, 1895. A temporary restraining order and an order to show cause why an injunction should not, issue as prayed for in the bill were made on January 19, 1895. An amended bill was filed April 22, 1895, in which the Puget Sound National Bank of Seattle, state of Washington, was made a party. It is sought, in and by this bill, to prevent Harris Lewis, I. J. Lewis, and D. S. Davids, or the Puget Sound National Bank, purporting to be the assignee of these parties, from receiving, and the insurance companies from paying to the above-named parties, certain moneys due on several policies of insurance upon goods and merchandise belonging to the firm of Davids & Co., composed of Harris Lewis, I. J. Lewis, and D. S. Davids, said firm owning a store in Seattle, state of Washington, and carrying on business under the name and style of “The Famous. Davids & Co., Proprietors,” and which goods and merchandise had been damaged by fire; and it is further sought to have such sums of money as are due upon said policies of insurance declared and adjudged to be trust property in the hands of Harris Lewis, I. J. Lewis, and D. S. Davids for the benefit of Herman Shainwald, as assignee of the bankrupt firm of Schoenfeld; Cohen & Co., and of the creditors of said firm, such property being claimed to be the proceeds and profits of the assets of said firm' held by Harris Lewis,
To fully and clearly understand the purposes and scope of this action, it will he necessary to refer somewhat fully to the allegations of the bill. It is averred: That on the 25th of June, 1877, and for a long lime prior thereto, Louis S. Schoenfeld, Isaac Newman. and Bimon Cohen were copartners doing and carrying on business in the city and county of Ban Francisco, state of California, under the firm name of Schoenfeld, Cohen & Co., each having- an equal one-third interest therein, as dealers in toys, notions, and other goods, wares, and merchandise. That on the said 25th of June, 1877, the property of the firm consisted of goods, wares, and merchandise in said city and county of the value of about $40,000, outstanding accounts due said firm of about $18,000, and bills of lading for goods on the way, consigned to said firm, of about $10,000. That on said 25th of June, 1877, the debts of the firm amounted to $50,0-12.12, of which sum $2,000 was due the defendant Harris Lewis, on a” certain promissory note executed by the firm to him, and no other or greater sum whatsoever. That on or about said 25th of June, 1877, said Harris Lewis, Isaac Newman, and Louis B. Bchoenfeld, with the intent, object, and design to defraud the said Oohen and the creditors of said firm, conspired, combined, and confederated together to make and issue certain promissory no1.es of and in the name of (he firm, without receiving or requiring any consideration therefor, and to have said Lewis .bring a suit against said firm, based in large pari: upon the apparent, hut false and fictitious, indebtedness thereby created, and, in such suit, to cause to be levied au attachment upon all the property of said firm, and io have said Lewis obtain a judgment in said suit, and to have all the property of said firm sold at sheriff’s sale under an execution issued upon such judgment. That in pursuance of said fraudulent conspiracy, and in the execution thereof, the said Schoenfeld and Newman did make, execute, and deliver to said Lewis the said false, fictitious, and fraudulent notes of said firm, and said Lewis did bring and commence a suit thereon in the district court of the Nineteenth judicial district of the state of California, for said city and county, and did therein cause all of said property of said firm to be attached, and did obtain á judgment in said suit against said firm, upon said fictitious indebtedness, for the sum of $31,000, interest and costs, and did cause an execution to be issued upon such
The present bill, after reciting (he issuance of a temporary restraining order, and an order to show cause, in case No. 221, and the issuance of an injunction in case No. 231, contains averments substantially as follows: That Harris Lewis lias at all times refused, neglected, and failed, and still does refuse, neglect, and fail, to pay or discharge or satisfy the decree of November 5, 1880, in said suit numbered 221, as originally rendered and subsequently revived, either in whole or in part; and lias at all times failed, neglected, and' refused, and still does fail, neglect, and refuse, to surrender or deliver up to said assignee, or to said receiver, either in whole or in part, or at all, the aforesaid property and assets of .said firm of Hehoenfeld, Cohen & Co., or the proceeds thereof, or any of the interests thereon, or profits thereof; and has at all times retained, and still does retain, the same, and all thereof. That, at divers times, property and sums of money have been received by said assignee and said receiver from persons other than Harris Lewis, which have been applied on account of said judgment and decree in suit No. 221, and which have reduced said judgment and decree to the balance of $69,829.25, still remaining due and unpaid. That neither (he receiver nor the assignee has ever received from said Harris Lewis any of the property or proceeds of property included by said judgment and decree of November 5, 1880, in suit No. 221, and neither said receiver nor said assignee ever learned or discovered, nor had any notice or knowledge of, the identity, location, character, whereabouts, or situation of any other of the property of which said Kalph L. Hhainwald was so appointed receiver, nor of any property winch could be subjected to the payment of said decree in suit No. 221, until within less than three months prior to ¡be commencement of this action. That said Harris Lewis at all times secreted and concealed from both said receiver and said assignee the identity, location, character, whereabouts, and situation of all such property, and kept the same in the names of other persons than Harris Lewis, and thereby prevented both said receiver and assignee from discovering the same; and said receiver and said assignee have even now only discovered a small part and portion of said property, to wit, that in the bill described, and certain other property, all of which, taken together, is insufficient in amount and value to satisfy and pay the decree in said suit No. 221. That said Harris Lewis has secreted his money, property, and effects with the purpose of defrauding said assignee and said receiver, and of preventing the same being seized or levied upon or applied towards
it is further averred: That Harris Lewis duly paid the premiums on said policies, and that said policies were delivered to Harris Lewis, and were in force on October 1, 1894, and at: the time of the fire hereinafter mentioned. That on the 1st: day of October, 1894, while said goods, etc., were so insured as aforesaid, they were in part consumed and damaged by fire, while in the store and building in said Beattie. That the losses, etc., have been ascertained and apportioned among the several insurance companies on the several policies as follows: From the Eoyal Exchange Assurance Company, $7,270.41; from the Home Insurance Company, $7,270.41; from the Liverpool & London & Globe Insurance Company, $2,423.47; from the Fire Association of Philadelphia, §1,988.78; from the American Fire Insurance Company, $1,-454.08; from the Westchester Eire Insurance Company of New York. $1,454.08; from the Orient Insurance Company, $969.39; from the National Fire’Insurance Company, $969.39; from the Western Assurance Company, §1,000; from the Scottish Union & National Insurance Company, $2,000,—making in all the sum of $26,750. That all the insurance was effected and the losses adjusted under the name of “Davids Sc Co.” That said losses and the money due from said several insurance companies, under said policies, by reason of said fire, really and in equity belong and are due to Herman Shainwald, as assignee aforesaid, and to Ralph L. Bhainwald, as receiver aforesaid, and should be paid to them, to apply upon said judgment in case No. 221. That these several insurance companies threaten and are about to pay over to Harris Lewis, or to said Davids & Co., or to their agents, etc., the several amounts due under the policies aforesaid, and will do so unless restrained and enjoined by this court. That if said moneys should be paid over to
The allegations of the bill conclude with the averment that Ralph L. Shainwald, the receiver, is now, and for several years last past has been, a,way from and outside, and a nonresident of, said Northern district of California, and has been during said time, and is, in and a resident of the state of New York, and outside the jurisdiction of this court, and for that reason is not made a party to this suit; and complainant prays that process issue to malee said Ralph L. Shainwald, as receiver, as aforesaid, a party hereto, if he should come within the jurisdiction of this court.
The prayers of the bill are (1) that each, and every of the respondents, other than Harris Lewis, be required to make discovery of money, estate, effects, credits, and other property of the said Harris Lewis, or in which he may have an interest, they, and each of them, may' have in their possession, or under their control, or in the possession or control of either oí them; (2) that they, and each of them, and their agents, attorneys, and employés, be enjoined and restrained from surrendering, delivering, parting with, or otherwise incumbering or disposing of to said Harris Lewis, or to any person or persons other than said Herman Shainwald, as assignee, as aforesaid, and said Ralph L. Shainwald, as receiver, as aforesaid, any money, estate, effects, credits, and other property of the said Harris Lewis, or any interest which he may have in the same; (3) that they be adjudged and decreed to surrender, pay over, and deliver the same to the complainant, as assignee, or to the said Ralph L. Shainwald, as receiver, and that the same be applied on account of the said decree in said suit numbered 221, and upon the decrees reviving, or to revive, the same; (4) that all the assets, stock, effects, and property of or invested in the store called “The Famous,” or “Davids & Co.,” and all moneys due on account thereof, by reason of said insurance or otherwise, and all other moneys and proceeds above referred to, be declared and adjudged 1o be the proceeds and results of the property of Bchoenfeld, Cohen & Co., fraudulently obtained by Harris Lewis, and that the same be transferred or delivered up to the complainant, or to Ralph L. Shainwald, as receiver, and that said Davids & Co. be adjudged and decreed to consist and be composed solely of the said Harris Lewis, and that the said D. S. Davids and I. -L Lewis be adjudged to be trustees of all the property of the so-called firm of “Davids & Co.,” etc.; (5) that each of said insurance companies be required to pay over to the complainant, or to Ralph L. Shainwald, as receiver, all moneys due or payable for insurance on the goods and property aforesaid; (6) that all assignments and transfers of property and moneys of said Davids & Co., or of the business of “The Famous,” and of said insurance companies, to John Doe or Richard Roe, or to any other person, be declared to be null and void, and
As was previously stated, on January 19, 1895, a temporary restraining order, and an order to show cause why an injunction should not issue as prayed for, were granted upon the original bill. The question now presented to the court for determination occurs upon the return to the order to show cause, and is whether or not the order should be continued. Harris Lewis and D. S. Davids (I. J. Lewis not having been served) and the several insurance companies, through their respective counsel, have appeared specially, and deny the power of the court to issue the injunction prayed for in this case, or, indeed, the jurisdiction of the court to entertain the case at all. The Puget Sound National Bank was not named until the filing of the amended bill, being then substituted for John Doe. The corporation being domiciled at, and a resident of, the state of Washington, it was sought to bring it before the court by serving an alias subpoena on a law firm of this city. An affidavit had been made by one Robert Levy to the effect that Messrs. Rothschild & Ach, attorneys at law, practicing in the city and county of San Francisco, and elsewhere, had been retained to represent the Puget Sound National Bank in this controversy. Upon this affidavit, the court made an order that a substituted service be made on the company by serving the alias subpoena on the law firm designated. Service was also made upon one of the directors of the corporation, who was within the district. Rothschild & Ach appeared specially, and moved to set aside the service on them, on the ground that the court was without jurisdiction to enter such order. This question has been fully argued, and the court has arrived at the conclusion that the motion to set aside the substituted service should prevail. The reasons therefor will be found indicated in my opinion upon the motion to set aside the substituted service.
Taking these objections up in their order, I am of opinion that the complainant has unquestionably (he right to sue. His statutory right is found in sections 5046, 5047, Rev. St U. S. He is the duly-appointed and qualified and acting assignee of the estate of the bankrupt firm of Schoenfeld, Cohen & Co. The fact that a receiver has been appointed in suit No. 2:11, upon the creditors’ bill, to receive all of Harris Lewis’ property, and that the legal title to all of Lewis’ property, real and personal, and the profits, incomes, and gains thereof, wTas, by the order of this court, vested in Ralph L. Sliaimvald, does not impair or diminish the independent right of the assignee to bring any and all suits which concern the estate or trust of which he has been appointed assignee. While it may he conceded that the receiver has the legal title to Lewis’ property, yet the complainant, as assignee, has an equitable title which he may enforce in a court of equity. The appointment of a receiver, and the passing of the legal title to him, to assist in the collection of the assets of the estate of the bankrupt firm, which were decreed to be held in trust by Harris Lewis by the judgment of this court in suit No. 221, as revived in No. 241, does not: interfere with the paramount rights, powers, and duties of the assignee in preserving, protecting, and collecting the assets of the estate. Such fact does not have the effect to render him a mere supernumerary, nor should it hamper Mm in any way from doing his whole duty. Besides, a sufficient ■showing' is made in the bill, under equity rule 22 of the supreme court of the United States, to excuse the failure to make the receiver a party.
As to the second objection, viz. that the court has no jurisdiction of the subject-matter of the action, I also entertain no doubt. The jurisdiction of this court as a court of bankruptcy, conferred by the bankruptcy act (Act March 2,1867), and reproduced in section 4972 of the Revised Statutes, extends, among other things; to: “Second. To the collection of all the assets of the bankrupt,”—and: “Sixth. To all acts, matters, and things to be done under and in virtue of
The third objection, viz. that the complainant has an adequate remedy at law, is answered by the fact that the bill seeks a discovery, a subject peculiarly of equitable cognizance. Moreover, it is sought to impress a trust character on certain personal property, and this alone would give the court jurisdiction as a court of equity. Oelrichs v. Spain, 15 Wall. 211, 228. Furthermore, the complainant holds the equitable title to the assets of the firm for the benefit of the creditors thereof, and this suit seeks to reach property claimed to constitute such assets.
The fourth objection, viz. that the court has not jurisdiction over the respondents, is important in so far as the absence of the Puget Sound National Bank of Seattle, the pretended assignee, may be deemed fatal to any, further proceedings against the remaining respondents. This is really the only question of any serious moment in the case, and, for the sake of convenience, it will be considered further on in connection with the objections urged by the insurance companies to the jurisdiction of the court because of a defect of parties.
The last objection presented by counsel for Lewis and Davids is that the ‘ complainant has been guilty of laches. Section 5057 of the Revised Statutes is cited. It provides:
“That no suit, either at law or in. equitj% shall be maintainable in any court between an assignee in bankruptcy, and a person claiming an adverse interest, touching any property or rights of property transferable to or vested in such assignee, unless brought within two years from the time Avhen the cause of action accrues for or against such assignee.”
There is, however, a well-settled qualification to this rule, viz. that, where there has been fraud in concealing the cause of action, the right to sue runs only from the date of the discovery of the fraud, or, what is held to be the equivalent of knowledge, being in possession of facts which ought to put a reasonable man on inquiry. As was said in Yancy v. Cothran, 32 Fed. 687, 689, in interpreting the above section:
“The courts have, however, ingrafted on this act the recognized rule, as to statutes of limitation, that if the facts on which any right of action is based*699 have been fraudulently concealed by the parties in interest, or if the fraud is of such character as conceals itself, the statute will only commence to run from the date of the discovery of the fraud, or of such information as, if diligently followed up, would discover it.”
The following cases are cited to sustain this proposition: Carr v. Hilton, 1 Curt. 390, Fed. Cas. No. 2,437; Bailey v. Glover, 21 Wall. 342; Upton v. McLaughlin, 105 U. S. 640; Rosenthal v. Walker, 111 U. S. 185, 4 Sup. Ct. 382. See, also, Martin v. Smith, 1 Dill. 85, 102, Fed. Cas. No. 9,164; Cook v. Sherman, 20 Fed. 168.
The complainant asserts in his bill that the fraudulent concealment by Harris Lewis of the assets of the bankrupt him, or of their proceeds, was not discovered until three months previous to the «ringing of this action. He therefore brings himself within the limitation of the rule referred to, and the court, for the purposes of this motion, must so consider it.
We now recur to the fourth objection, presented by Lewis and Davids, which is substantially the same as that raised by the insurance companies, viz. the defect of a necessary .party,—the Puget Sound National Bank of Seattle. It is claimed that Davids & Co. has assigned said policies of insurance to the Puget Sound National Bank for a consideration; that such assignments were made in the months of November and December, 1894; that, as this court has not jurisdiction of the assignee, no order made in this proceeding will be binding on said assignee, or in any wise protect these respondents, or any of them, from the demand of said assignee under said assignment. It is further claimed, as to two of the respondent insurance companies,—the Royal Exchange Assurance Company and the Home Insurance Company,—that the moneys in their hands due to said Davids & Co., or their assigns, and the debt due and owing from it to said Davids & Co. under their polices of insurance, in said order to show cause mentioned, were, in the state of Washington, attached by writ of attachment duly issued out of the superior court of the state of Washington, county of King, in a suit pending in said court, wherein the United States Clothing Company was plaintiff, and Davids & Co. were defendants; the said writ being intended for the purpose of securing to the United States Clothing Company payment to it of a demand by it made and asserted against said Davids & Co. It is claimed that the United States Clothing Company is an indispensable party, and that because it is a resident of another state, and not amenable to the process of this court, it cannot be made a party unless it should appear voluntarily. With respect to this claim, it is sufficient to say that it does not appear how funds in the possession of the companies in San Francisco could be attached by the service of a notice of garnishment on the agent of the companies at Seattle. If, as is alleged in the hill, the funds out of which such insurance r moneys are to he paid is within the jurisdiction of the court, it has plenary power to enjoin the payment thereof, and preserve the fund intact until the rights of the respective parties have been adjudicated upon. The further contention is also made tliat, since the policies of insurance are made out
“It Is certain that the court will, In many cases, interfere and preserve property in statu quo during the pendency of the suit in which the rights are to be decided, and that without expressing, and often without having the means of forming, any opinion as to such rights. * * It is true, the court will not so interfere if it thinks that there is no real question between the parties; but, seeing that there is a substantial question to be decided, it will preserve the property until such question can be regularly disposed of.”
See, also, Glascott v. Lang, 3 Mylne & C. 455.
The court must accept the averments of the bill as true until the contrary is established. As they appear, they are sufficient to justify the continuance of the restraining order. The objections to the bill and order are, therefore, overruled, and the further hearing of the order continued.
Fed. Cas. No. 17,148.