
    Albert B. Gross, Max Gross and William M. Engel, Copartners Doing Business as Gross, Engel & Company, Plaintiffs, v. Louis Metzger & Company, Defendant.
    (City Court of the City of New York, Trial Term,
    January, 1915.)
    Assignment for creditors — accounts previously assigned — composition agreement not signed by such assignees and they were not listed as creditors — action to recover full amount of claims due assignor from defendant — offset — estoppel.
    Prior to making a general assignment for creditors the assignor to whom defendant was indebted in the sum of $3,778.42 for merchandise sold assigned to various firms all except $1,500 of such indebtedness. The assignor assigned a composition agreement with defendant and its creditors on a forty per cent basis without specifying therein the amount due him, and, despite its knowledge and due notice, defendant did not have the composition agreement signed by the firms' to which the assignor had transferred portions of the original indebtedness, and did not list or schedule the assignees thereof as creditors, and, upon suit being brought to recover the amount of their respective claims, defendant was compelled to pay the claims in full. Held, that in an action against defendant by the assignees of the $1,500 which the assignor assigned after the composition agreement defendant was not entitled to offset the amount paid by it in settlement of the other claims in full and above what would- have been paid had the assignee been brought in under the composition agreement against plaintiffs’ claim of forty per cent upon the $1,500 which was unassigned at the time of the composition agreement and represented by the assignor’s signature thereto.
    That neither the assignor nor his subsequent assignee was estopped from asserting against the defendant the assignor’s right to receive under the composition agreement forty per cent on the sum at that time remaining due to him from defendant.
    The fact that defendant through its failure to list proper claims, of which it had due notice, and failure to procure the signatures of such debtors to the composition agreement, was obliged to pay such claims in full rather than on a forty per cent basis gave no right to recoup such losses out of the assignor’s dividend on the amount remaining due to him from defendant.
    Action on the Commercial Calendar of the City Court of the city of New York to recover an unpaid balance due under a composition agreement of the defendant’s creditors. Judgment for the plaintiffs.
    Benjamin Berger, for plaintiffs.
    Olcott, Gruber, Bo'nynge & McManus (Irving L. Ernst, of counsel), for defendant.
   Ransom, J.

The plaintiffs are entitled to judgment herein for $600.39, with interest. On October 31, 1913, defendant made a general assignment for the benefit of its creditors. During the preceding summer, Edward Friedman, assignor of the plaintiffs, had sold merchandise to the defendant, on account of which $3,778.42 remained unpaid on October thirty-first. Prior to that date, Friedman had assigned to various firms items representing all except $1,500.95 of defendant’s indebtedness to him, and defendant had received due notice, by. registered mail from the assignees and by conversations- with Friedman, of such assignments. On November 22, 1913, Friedman signed a composition agreement with the defendant and its creditors, on a forty per cent basis, without specifying therein the amount due him, although in a statement of account sent in by Friedman to the defendant, at the latter’s request, a day or two after October thirty-first, Friedman set out all of the transactions and “ business relations ” between himself and defendant, and did not indicate in the face of this statement that, as he had adviséd defendant orally, portions of the indebtedness remaining from such transactions had been assigned by Friedman. Despite its knowledge and due notice of these assignments, defendant did not have the forty per cent composition agreement signed by the firms to which Friedman- had assigned portions of "the account and ' did not list .or schedule these assignees as creditors. The latter accordingly sued defendant for the full amount of their respective claims, rather than merely forty per cent thereon, and defendant had no alternative but to pay these claims in full. Defendant now asserts -the- right, in this suit by the assignees of the $1,500.95 (which Friedman assigned after the composition agreement was signed), to offset the amount " which- it paid in settlement of these claims in full, •over and above what would havé been paid had they been brought in under the composition agreement, against the plaintiffs’ claim of forty per cent upon ■ the $1,500.95 which was unassigned at the time of the composition agreement and was in fact represented by Friedman’s signature thereto.

I do not find that Friedman or his subsequent assignees are in any way estopped from asserting 1 against the defendant Friedman’s right to receive, under the composition agreement, forty per cent on -the sum at that-time remaining due to him from the defendant. The fact that the defendant, through its own failure to list proper claims of which it had due notice and failure to procure the signatures of such debtors to the composition agreement, was obliged to pay such claims in full rather than on a forty per cent basis, gives no right to recoup such losses out of Friedman’s dividend on the amount remaining due him. Harloe v. Foster, 53 N. Y. 385, does not impress me as an authority to the contrary, inasmuch as that case dealt with the effects of fraud and misrepresentation and the creation of a secret preference, through the fraudulent acts of one participant in the composition. The creditor fraudulently put his signature to the composition agreement for a claim which he had previously transferred, and he did this without either the debtor or the other creditors knowing of such transfer. In the case at bar, Friedman did not sign the composition agreement for any specified amount of indebtedness, the defendant undoubtedly had full knowledge of the assignment of all except $1,500.95 of the original indebtedness, and it appears from proceedings relative to the bankruptcy receivership that the other creditors had or were chargeable with notice, prior to November twenty-second, that Friedman’s claim was not $3,778.42, but some sum approximating $1,000.

Judgment for the plaintiffs is directed accordingly.  