Allen v. Nat'l B. of C. T. Co. of Prov.

27 A.2d 603, 68 R.I. 331, 1942 R.I. LEXIS 75
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 31, 1942
StatusPublished

This text of 27 A.2d 603 (Allen v. Nat'l B. of C. T. Co. of Prov.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen v. Nat'l B. of C. T. Co. of Prov., 27 A.2d 603, 68 R.I. 331, 1942 R.I. LEXIS 75 (R.I. 1942).

Opinion

*332 Moss, J.

This is the same suit in equity in which we handed down an opinion dated April 18, 1941, and reported in 66 R. I. 373, 19 A. 2d. 311. In the opinion we denied and dismissed the appeal of the complainant from a decree of the superior court sustaining the respondent’s demurrer, based on ten grounds, to the original bill of complaint. Our conclusion was based solely on the fourth, eighth and ninth grounds of demurrer, the others not being discussed by us.

Thereafter the complainant/ by leave of the superior court, filed an amended bill of complaint; and a demurrer thereto by the respondent was sustained by- that court. The complainant then filed a motion for leave to amend paragraph 12 of the amended bill; and this motion was granted by the superior court, in a decree from which the respondent took an appeal to this court. The bill was amended according to the leave granted; and a demurrer, based on ten grounds, to the second amended bill was sustained on all these grounds by a decree of the superior courf j’ from which the complainant took an appeal to this court.,; The cause is now before us on these two appeals.

As stated at the beginning of our former opinion, this suit was brought on July 1, 1939 against the present administrator of the estate of Crawford Allen, who deceased in 1872, to compel payment of a claim against that estate, for $100,000 and accrued interest, which was filed December 14, 1938 and was disallowed by the respondent as administrator. This claim was based on an alleged statutory liability by the *333 deceased for a debt of the Woonsocket Company, a former Rhode Island corporation, which debt is alleged to have been incurred by it when he was its sole stockholder and to have been payable by it to Charles B. Allen, who was the complainant’s father and from whom the right to collect the unpaid balance of such indebtedness is alleged to have passed to the complainant.

In the original bill of complaint in this cause it was alleged that on June 23, 1880, as of November, 1879, Charles B. Allen obtained a judgment against the Woonsocket Company for $141,696.76, and costs; that before service of any execution on this judgment that corporation made an assignment for the benefit of its creditors; that on this indebtedness he received, from the assignee and from some source not definitely known, sums that reduced the indebtedness on this judgment to a net amount of substantially $100,000.

It was also alleged in the original bill of complaint that when the final account of the assignee had been allowed, on June 5, 1888, and distribution had been made thereunder, no property of the Woonsocket Company “was available to pay the balance of $100,000 then due said Charles B. Allen on his judgment debt against said Woonsocket Company as evidenced by an instrument in writing dated June 1, 1885, signed by the Allen’s Print Works and delivered to said Charles B. Allen”, a copy of which was annexed to the bill of complaint as an exhibit, and is annexed as “Exhibit A” to the present second amended bill of complaint in this cause.

This instrument was an acknowledgment by the Allen’s Print Works, a Rhode Island corporation, that it was then indebted to Charles B. Allen in the sum of $100,000, to be paid to him not under five years from the date thereof and subject to the prior payment of all its other debts then existing and certain other debts and expenses that might be incurred by it; and it agreed to pay in the meantime interest on that sum at the rate of 5% per annum, at the same time as it should pay interest to its other creditors. It was stated, *334 on information and belief, in the original bill of complaint, that this instrument “represents the balance due as of the-date of said instrument to Charles B. Allen on his judgment debt against said Woonsocket Company.”

The complainant then based his asserted present right, to enforce against the estate of Crawford Allen the unpaid balance of that judgment debt, upon a transfer by Charles B. Allen to his wife, and a later transfer by her to the complainant, of the above-described acknowledgment of indebtedness, such transfers being then alleged by the complainant to have been made with the intent of conveying thereby the unpaid balance of that judgment debt.

The alleged right of Charles B. Allen to enforce against the estate of Crawford Allen the former’s judgment debt against the Woonsocket Company, which debt was and is alleged to have been for indebtedness incurred by that corporation when Crawford Allen was the owner of all its capital stock, was based in the original bill of complaint, and is>now based, on the special act of the general assembly of this state which was passed in 1832 and under which that corporation was created. That act provided that under certain circumstances a stockholder in that corporation would be liable for debts incurred by it.

In our former opinion we held that the superior court properly sustained the demurrer to the original bill of complaint upon the objections thereto presented in the fourth, eighth and ninth grounds of demurrer. One sufficient reason that we gave for so holding was that we could not conceive how an assignment and transfer by Charles B. Allen to his wife of the acknowledgment of indebtedness by the Allen’s Print Works to him could have carried with it to her the judgment indebtedness to him of the Woonsocket Company, or any right which he might then have had to collect such judgment indebtedness from the estate of Crawford Allen, no matter with what meaning and intent that transfer was made.

*335 In the complainant’s second amended bill of complaint, which is now before us, he has completely abandoned his original contention that by reason of his father’s transfer to his mother of the said acknowledgment of indebtedness and her transfer of that acknowledgment to him, he acquired the right to collect from the estate of Crawford Allen the unpaid balance of the original judgment debt of the Woonsocket Company to his father.

In place of that vital contention in his original bill of complaint, the complainant in his second amended bill now relies entirely on allegations set forth in paragraphs 20 to 27, inclusive, to the effect that, by reason of a certain agreement between the complainant and his brother and sister after the death of his father and by reason of expenditures of certain moneys by the complainant at the request of the administrator of the estate of Charles B. Allen, that administrator “did transfer and turn over” to the complainant all of the assets of the estate of Charles B. Allen, then remaining; and that thus the complainant, as stated in paragraph 27 of his second amended bill, “acquired and now holds and possesses any right which Charles B. Allen, in his lifetime, or his estate, may have had against the Estate of Crawford Allen to enforce the stockholder liability of Crawford Allen for the unpaid balance of the original judgment obtained by said Charles B. Allen against the Woonsocket Company, as aforesaid.”

But this last allegation, as to the right which the complainant acquired from the' administrator of the estate of Charles B.

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27 A.2d 603, 68 R.I. 331, 1942 R.I. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-natl-b-of-c-t-co-of-prov-ri-1942.