Asheville Lumber Co. v. Hyde

172 F. 730, 1909 U.S. App. LEXIS 5843
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Middle Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 13, 1909
DocketNo. 227
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 172 F. 730 (Asheville Lumber Co. v. Hyde) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Middle Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Asheville Lumber Co. v. Hyde, 172 F. 730, 1909 U.S. App. LEXIS 5843 (circtmdpa 1909).

Opinion

ARCHBALD, District Judge.

This is a bill brought by certain creditors of the Bloomsburg Lumber & Manufacturing Company, on behalf of themselves and others, to charge the defendant with money of the company paid out by him as treasurer, in fraud, as it is said, of their rights. The Bloomsburg Lumber & Manufacturing Company was incorporated under the laws of Pennsylvania, somewhere about January 1, 1904, to conduct a lumber and planing mill business, with a capital of $41,000, of which $16,000 was paid in, in cash; the balance being represented by real estate put in at $25,000. The money paid [731]*731in was exhausted in the purchase of machinery and material, and within four or five months, in consequence, the company was compelled to borrow $10,000 for working capital, which was secured at different banks on notes indorsed by the defendant and two other directors. The defendant was treasurer of the company from the start, and on May 1, 1906, was made general manager, and given full charge. The business was a losing one from the beginning, running $-1,000 behind the first year, and $(>,000 the second; and on January 15, 1906, when an account seems to have been taken, the indebtedness amounted to $33,-000, which was increased by July to $13,000, at which time the banks, not being satisfied with the outlook, gave notice that the loans which they were carrying must be paid. On August 20, the accustomed pay day, the company was not able to meet its July pay roll, and some 10 clays later a hill was filed against it in the common pleas of the county upon which the defendant was appointed receiver. Meantime the defendant, as treasurer, had been collecting in and realizing upon the available assets of the company, getting together in this way some $10,000, which he used, to take care of the notes at bank, on which he and the other directors were indorsers, and also to pay himself for salary and advancements, all of which he did on his own responsibility and 'without consultation with the other directors. The payments so made were as follows :

August 18. 10 mouths' salary.$1,000
“ 30. First National Bank of Catawissa. 1,000
24. First National Bank of Bloomslmrg. 4,000
“ 30. First National Bank of Berwick. 2,000
“ 28. Money advanced by defendant personally. 51ñ
“ 30. Fanners’ National Bank of Catawissa. 1,000
Total.....$10,01.",

This drained the treasury of every dollar, and the day after the last payment the hill for the appointment of a receiver was filed. It is to recover for the benefit of creditors generally the money so paid out that the present suit was instituted. The contention is that, the company being hopelessly insolvent, the defendant had no right to take advantage of his position, as general manager and treasurer, to prefer himself and pay off the indebtedness due to him individually and the obligations for which he and the other directors were liable, and that, having done so, it was a breach of trust and a constructive fraud, for which he is answerable to creditors.

The doctrine which is thus invoked, while not of universal acceptance, is the better, if not the prevailing, rule. 7 Am. & Rug. Encyc. Taw (2d Ed.) 743, 744; 10 Cye. 1255; Morawetz. Corp. § 787; Thomp. Corp. §§ 6503, 6501. It is that of the Pennsylvania and the federal courts, and is therefore controlling here. It was expressly held in Hopkins5 Appeal, 90 Pa. 69, that where the officers of an insolvent corporation, to whom it was indebted, took notes and got judgment by default in their own favor, on which execution was issued and the property of the company sold, it ivas a fraud in law, which gave them no preference over other creditors in the distribution of the proceeds, which should therefore go equally to all. And in Kerstetter’s Appeal, [732]*732149 Pa. 148, 24 Atl. 163, a similar decision was made; the rule, as laid down in Morawetz on Corporations, § 787, that the directors of an insolvent corporation who have cláims against it must share ratably with other creditors, and cannot secure to themselves any advantage or preference over them, by using their power as directors, being expressly approved. ■ “If on the discovery of the insolvency of the corporation,” it is said, “its officers were at liberty to appropriate its entire assets in satisfaction of their demands against it, outside parties dealing with it would be utterly devoid of protection. The law does not intend or allow such an appropriation, by persons intrusted with the management of 'the corporation.” And Mechanics’ Building- Association’s Estate, 202 Pa. 589, 52 Atl. 58, and Pangburn v. American Vault Co., 205 Pa. 83, 54 Atl. 504, are to the same effect. “The established rule,” as it is said, in the former, “is that a director of a corporation may advance money to it, and may take from it a mortgage or other security, like any ordinary creditor, * * * but that when the corporation has become insolvent he. cannot thus secure himself for past advances.”

There is nothing to call this in question in Mueller v. Fire Clay Company, 183 Pa. 450, 38 Atl. 1009; it being found in that case that, at the date of the judgment confessed to secure the notes on which the directors were indorsers, the company was solvent, and that the judgment was not given to prefer the directors, but in order to satisfy the demands of the banks, and as a condition to the extension of existing loans, which was essential to the continuance of the company’s business, and not with the idea of stopping it. The rule that the directors of an insolvent corporation may not take advantage of their position to the detriment of other creditors, as declared in previous cases, was at the same time in terms approved; such action, as it is said, being constructively fraudulent, and the burden being on the officers preferred to show that it was fair and consci’onable. And the case of Cowan v. Plate Glass Co., 184 Pa. 1, 38 Atl. 1075, is no different.

The same rule prevails in the federal courts, of which one or two-examples will be sufficient. Thus, in Koehler v. Iron Company, 2 Black (U. S.) 715, 17 F. Ed. 339, it was held that a mortgage executed by the officers of a corporation in failing circumstances to secure an existing indebtedness due to themselves, in abuse of their authority, was not enforceable. “Directors cannot thus deal with the important interests intrusted to their management,” as it is said. “They hold a place of trust, and by accepting the trust are obliged to execute it with fidelity, not for their own benefit, but for the common benefit of the stock-' holders of the corporation.” So where, in Drury v. Cross, 7 Wall. 299, 19 L. Ed. 40, the directors of an insolvent railroad, who had indorsed its notes, which were secured by its bonds, procured a foreclosure of the trust mortgage and a sale of the road, with its equipment, which they assisted the purchaser to acquire for an inconsiderable sum, the transaction was held to be tainted with such fraud as made the purchaser liable to creditors of the company for the value of the property obtained.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Robar Development Corp. v. Minutello
408 A.2d 851 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1979)
In Re Calton Crescent, Inc.
80 F. Supp. 822 (S.D. New York, 1948)
McConnell v. Sprouse
13 Tenn. App. 291 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1931)
Heim v. Jobes
14 F.2d 29 (Eighth Circuit, 1926)
Clark v. Tillinghast
201 F. 77 (Seventh Circuit, 1912)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
172 F. 730, 1909 U.S. App. LEXIS 5843, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/asheville-lumber-co-v-hyde-circtmdpa-1909.