American Tube & Iron Co. v. Baden Gas Co.

30 A. 936, 165 Pa. 489, 35 W.N.C. 530, 1895 Pa. LEXIS 1030
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 7, 1895
DocketAppeal, No. 23
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 30 A. 936 (American Tube & Iron Co. v. Baden Gas Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Tube & Iron Co. v. Baden Gas Co., 30 A. 936, 165 Pa. 489, 35 W.N.C. 530, 1895 Pa. LEXIS 1030 (Pa. 1895).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Williams,

This bill was filed by creditors of the Bad.en Gas Company, a corporation organized under the act of 1885, known as the Natural Gas Act. The relief prayed for, and obtained under the decree appealed from, is an adjudication that the defendants are liable to the receiver for the amount of the capital stock of the Baden Gas Company subscribed for by each of them, and that they pay the same over in money for the benefit of the plaintiffs and other creditors of the corporation which is admitted to be insolvent. The defendants admit the fact that they were subscribers to the capital stock of the Baden Gas Company, but insist that their subscriptions were paid in full, in property transferred by them to the corporation, immediately after its organization. The liability of the defendants depends therefore upon their allegation of actual payment; and this can be intelligently determined only upon a careful consideration of the facts and circumstances attending the organization of the gas company, and their legal value.

The fourth finding of fact made by the learned master, adopted by the learned judge of the court below, and conceded on all hands to be correct, informs us that the defendants and others who composed the Baden Gas Company had been previousfy associated in business under the firm name of the Allegheny Oil Company. The master then proceeds in this finding to tell us that “ The Baden Gas Company was organized to take the place of the said Allegheny Oil Company, and the said subscribers, soon after their incorporation, proceeded to sell and transfer the gas property and interests of the said Allegheny Oil Company and 1300,000 of their subscribed stock to the said Baden Gas Company for a price equal to the corporate stock of the latter company, to wit, 1500,000.”

In the fifth finding of fact we are informed that the gas property and interests so transferred consisted of between four and five thousand acres of gas leases including two large producing gas wells, certain rights of way, ordinances for th'e introduction of gas into the boroughs of Freedom, Baden, Sewickley, Osborne, Glenfield, West Bellevue and Bellevue, and contracts for the supply of gas, and certain patents relating to the business of transporting gas. All this property belonged to the Allegheny Oil Company and was transferred by that-[494]*494company and the persons comprising it to the Baden Gas Company. The findings from the seventh to the eleventh inclusive inform us of the plan adopted for the organization of the corporation and the transfer to it of the property of the Allegheny Oil Company described in the fifth finding. The corporation was to be organized under the Natural Gas Act in order to secure the rights and franchises conferred by that act. Its capital stock was fixed at $500,000. The price of the property to be transferred to it was fixed at the same sum. The stock was to be paid for with the property, or the corporation was to pay for the property with its stock, which is exactly the same thing; but this arrangement was made subject to the condition that but $175,000 of the stock so issued should be retained by the members of the firm of the Allegheny Oil Company, while the remaining $325,000 of it should be returned or contributed to the corporation to provide it with a working capital in order to enable it to develop its leases, lay additional pipe lines, and embark in the business of supplying natural gas as a fuel to the city of Allegheny and the towns along its line.

The seventh finding assures us that the $325,000 of capital stock set apart to provide a working capital was actually turned into the treasury of the corporation and used in the manner contemplated. Shares amounting at par to $55,000 were sold for cash at eighty cents on the dollar and the proceeds used in the business of the corporation. The balance of the stock was used in the extension of its lines to Allegheny City; and at the date of the filing of this bill not one share out of the entire amount remained in the treasury undisposed of. But in the execution of the sale from the oil company to the Baden Gas Company and in the payment of the subscriptions to the capital, a clumsy device was resorted to. A half million of dollars was apparently raised on a note signed by the members of the oil company and placed to the credit of the treasurer of the corporation in the Fifth National Bank as payment for the stock. It was checked back to the treasurer of the oil company as payment for the property bought by the corporation from the oil company. The property was then conveyed, the stock issued and disposed of as already stated, and the note taken out of bank. Not a dollar in actual money was used in the [495]*495transaction, and what end was accomplished by all this idle ceremony it is impossible for us to see. But if it did no good we cannot see, in the absence of any finding of fraud intended or practiced, that it did any serious harm. We are to look at it in the light of all that was done in connection with the organization of the corporation for the purpose of gathering therefrom the real character of the transaction. Neither unnecessary formalities nor clumsy devices nor palpable mistakes in methods, should prevent us from looking down to the true character of a transaction and determining the rights of parties in accordance with the facts, rather than the forms or appearances they may seem to wear.

Let us turn then from the method of organization to the facts showing the situation of the parties, their general plan for the development of their property, the necessity for obtaining corporate powers, and the provision made for a working capital with which to enter upon the proposed corporate enterprise. The corporators had been partners. As such they had been engaged in procuring leases and drilling wells in search for oil. In this search they had not been successful; but two of the wells drilled by them proved to be valuable gas wells. This, taken in connection with other developments in the same general region, was well calculated to induce the belief that they were the possessors of a large and valuable gas territory that should be promptly developed 'and utilized or its value would steadily decline by reason of drainage from the operations of others. Thejr could not utilize their gas without transporting it to a market. They could not transport it to advantage except as a natural gas company possessing the powers conferred by the act of 1885. This determined them to organize a corporation under the provisions of that act for the production and transportation of natural gas, and to transfer their gas wells and leases, covering over four thousand acres, to the corporation. When this had been decided on, the first question to present itself was how shall the partnership convey its property to the corporation so as to secure to its members the same relative interest in the stock of the corporation they now have in the partnership property ? The next question was how shall we secure the necessary working capital to enable the corporation to go forward with the work of produc[496]*496ing, transporting and selling natural gas ? In a general way these questions were answered by the adoption of the scheme which the master and the court below have characterized as a sham. The value of the property, rights of way, municipal grants, and patents held by the firm was set down at $175,000; the working capital needed at $325,000. To meet both purposes the capital stock of the corporation was fixed at $500,000.

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Bluebook (online)
30 A. 936, 165 Pa. 489, 35 W.N.C. 530, 1895 Pa. LEXIS 1030, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-tube-iron-co-v-baden-gas-co-pa-1895.