Bates v. Brooks

270 N.W. 867, 222 Iowa 1128
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 12, 1937
DocketNo. 43661.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 270 N.W. 867 (Bates v. Brooks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bates v. Brooks, 270 N.W. 867, 222 Iowa 1128 (iowa 1937).

Opinion

Kintzinger, J.

This is an action at law commenced by the receiver of the First Iowa State Trust & Savings Bank against the defendant stockholders and representatives of stockholders in the S. R. & I. C. McConnell Company, hereinafter referred to as the McConnell Company, a corporation which had been placed in the hands of a receiver upon a prior application of the plaintiff herein.

The principal creditor of the McConnell Company was the First Iowa State Trust & Savings Bank, whose claim had been reduced to judgment against the McConnell Company for $61,076, and comprised about ninety per cent of the indebtedness of the company. This bank was also in the hands of a receiver, who commenced this action to recover a judgment against the defendants, for the bank and all other creditors similarly situated, because of the wrongful payment of dividends to the said defendants out of the corporation funds, to the detriment of its creditors.

The fact that the receivership was not a liquidating receivership might naturally imply that it was not then insolvent. If the receivership had not been applied for, plaintiff might have had an execution issue under its judgment and levied upon the corporation property.

The record shows that after payment of the dividends com-"'' plained of, the assets of the corporation, as estimated by competent accountants, greatly exceeded its indebtedness. Appellees, therefore, contend that sufficient funds to satisfy appellant’s claim could have been realized from the sale of such assets, and plaintiff would not have been injured by the payment of the dividends complained of. Such dividends were paid each year *1130 during tbe five years preceding and including September, 1931. During’ all of that time there was no surplus or profits from which dividends could lawfully be paid. However, the evidence introduced shows the following assets, liabilities and net worth of the company during that period:

Date Assets Liabilities Net Worth

June 30, ’27 $281,124.28 $ 53,461.27 $227,663.01

June 30, ’28 310,129.77 103,674.46 226,455.31

June 30, ’29 244,036.97 51,546.01 192,490.96

June 30, ’30 240,840.43 62,786.05 178,054.38

June 30, ’31 215,874.56 75,942.49 139,932.07

June 30, ’32 185,004.31 72,471.15 112,533.16

The inventoried values of the properties were determined at cost or market value, depending upon which was the lower. No dividends were paid after September, 1931. The evidence, therefore, fails to show that the McConnell Company was insolvent when any of the dividends were paid, although its capital stock was greatly impaired.

The dividends paid to the various defendant stockholders during the five years preceding September, 1931, amounted in the aggregate to $34,215, for which appellant asks for a judgment against the various defendant stockholders for the amounts paid to each. The evidence, however, fails to show that the defendants acted in bad faith or knew the dividends received by them were wrongfully paid.

The foregoing constitutes substantially all the evidence introduced. At the conclusion thereof, the lower court sustained defendants’ motion for a directed verdict upon substantially the following grounds:

That the evidence fails to show that any dividends received by the stockholders were fraudulently received by them or were received with any knowledge on their part of the wrongful diversion of funds; that the corporation was solvent at all times when such dividends were paid, and that plaintiff suffered no loss or injurjr thereby. Defendants’ motion was sustained and plaintiff appeals.

The case was tried as a law action, and after all of the evidence was introduced before the jury, and after arguments had been made upon appellees’ motion for a directed verdict, and after the court had announced its contemplated ruling thereon, *1131 appellant moved the court to transfer the case to equity. The court overruled this motion. No appeal, however, was taken from this ruling of the court, and no assignment of error is alleged as a ground for a reversal thereon. This case must, therefore, be considered an action at law.

The only errors assigned for a reversal are the following:

I. That the eoui’t erred in sustaining defendants’ motion for a directed verdict, and

II. That the court erred in refusing to admit certain evidence to show the amount of claims existing against the receivership of the McConnell Company.

I. Appellant contends that the lower court erred in directing a verdict for the defendants because the evidence shows that the capital stock of the company had been greatly reduced; that dividends had been wrongfully paid to stockholders out of the assets of the corporation, and not out of its profits; appellant’s principal contention being that where dividends are wrongfully paid out of the capital stock or assets of the corporation and not out of its surplus or earnings, the stockholders receiving such dividends are personally liable to the creditors of the corporation, and that such stockholders are personally liable therefor. Appellant contends that such liability arises (1) under the statute, and (2) under the “trust fund” doctrine of the common law.

(1) Are defendant stockholders liable under the statute for having received dividends wrongfully paid them by officers of the corporation, because of a wrongful diversion of its funds ? Sections 8377 and 8378 of the Code of 1931 relating to the diversion of the funds of corporations provide as follows:

Section 8377. “Intentional fraud in failing to comply substantially with the articles of incorporation, or in deceiving the public or individuals in relation to their means or their liabilities, * * * shall subject those guilty thereof to fine and imprisonment, * * *. Any person who has sustained injury from such fraud may also recover damages therefor against those guilty of participating in such fraud.”

Section 8378. “The diversion of the funds of the corporation * * *, if any person be injured thereby, and the payment of dividends which leaves insufficient funds to meet the liabilities thereof, shall be such fraud as will subject those guilty thereof *1132 to the penalties of the preceding section; and such dividends, or their equivalent, in the hands of stockholders, shall be subject to such liabilities. If the directors * * * shall declare and pay any dividend when such corporation is known by them to be insolvent, or any dividend the payment of which would render it insolvent, or which would diminish the amount of its capital stock, all directors, officers, or agents knowingly consenting thereto shall be jointly and severally liable for all the debts of such corporation then existing, but dividends made in good faith before knowledge of the occurring of losses shall not come within the provisions of this section.” (Italics ours.)

These statutes create a liability to defrauded creditors who ha/ue been injured by the acts of the corporation.

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270 N.W. 867, 222 Iowa 1128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bates-v-brooks-iowa-1937.