Belmont Nail Co. v. Columbia Iron & Steel Co.

46 F. 8, 1891 U.S. App. LEXIS 1199
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 6, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 46 F. 8 (Belmont Nail Co. v. Columbia Iron & Steel Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Belmont Nail Co. v. Columbia Iron & Steel Co., 46 F. 8, 1891 U.S. App. LEXIS 1199 (circtwdpa 1891).

Opinion

Reed, J.

The complainant has filed the bill in this case as a corporation of the state of West Virginia against the Columbia Iron & Steel Company, a corporation of the state of Pennsylvania, joining as a co-defendant the trustee named in the general mortgage of the defendant company, the trustee also being a corporation of the state of Pennsylvania. The bill alleges the insolvency of the defendant company; the improper disposition of its assets by its officers, since its insolvency, by the payments and preference of certain of its creditors; the pendency of suits and attachments against the company; and that it is disposing of certain of its assets by shipping them to foreign states, and converting them by sale into book-accounts, which are liable to attachment by the creditors of the defendant; that the complainant is a creditor of the defendant company to a large amount, a portion of the indebtedness held by it having matured, and payment refused by the company; that the company has a large amount of assets, consisting of lands, factories, buildings, machinery, rolls, stock on hand, material unfinished and partly finished, book-accounts, and bills receivable; thatthe interest on its mortgage bonds will mature April 1, 1891, and that defendant company has no funds on hand to pay the same, and by the terms of the mortgage the mortgage debt may become due if the interest is not paid; that there is danger of the assets of the company being dissipated by sales on executions and otherwise; that said assets should be preserved and ratably distributed among all the creditors of the defendant company, in proportion to the amounts of their several debts, either due or to become due. The bill prays that the assets be decreed to be a trust fund for the benefit of all the creditors of the company, that an account be taken of all its debts; that its assets may be applied in payment of the indebtedness of the corporation in proportion to the whole thereof; that the defendant company be restrained by injunction from disposing of its assets; that a receiver be appointed to take and hold the said assets of the company. This bill was filed March 26, 1891, and the return of the marshal shows the subpoena to have been served the same day on C. Yeager, president of the defendant company. On April 2, 1891, a notice was served by the solicitor for the complainant upon C. Yeager, president, notifying him that an application would be made on Saturday, April 4, 1891, for the appointment of a receiver, and for an injunction as prayed for in the bill.

[9]*9At the hearing, on April 4th, affidavits were read by the solicitor for the complainant in support of the averments of the bill. These affidavits show the insolvency of the company; that a number of suits are pending against it for large amounts, some of which have been overdue for several weeks; and that a portion of the claim of the complainant is due and unpaid, although its book-keeper made personal application at the office of the defendant for its payment; but was there informed that the company had no funds or other assets with which to pay the claim. Affidavits were also presented of other creditors whose claims are unpaid. The affidavit of Mr. Boggs, to which I will refer again, establishes the fact of insolvency beyond question. The defendant company presented no affidavits, at the hearing on the motion, to controvert either the allegations of the bill or of the affidavits read in its support, and the statements of fact presented by complainants are uncontradicted. The case, as made out by the bill and affidavits, (other than that of Mr. Boggs,) would, in my judgment, be a proper one for the appointment of a receiver.

The affidavit of R. H. Boggs, however, raises an unusual question, which must be considered. It sets forth that he is a member of the board of directors of the defendant company; that a meeting of the board was held on Friday, April 3, 1891, (the day following the service of the notice of the hearing, and the day previous to the hearing;) that at said meeting it was resolved that the defendant company was insolvent, and the question of the application for a receiver in the present case was taken up and discussed, and it was finally decided by the maj'ority of the board of directors, (the affiant and Mr. Buhl, another director, voting against the same,) that, for the purpose of preventing a receiver being appointed in this case by the court, an assignment be made to Charles A. O’Brien, which was accordingly done, against the protest of Messrs. Boggs and Buhl, who notified the directors that they had been advised by counsel that the United States court had obtained jurisdiction of the subject-matter and the parties, and such action on the part of the company was improper. At the hearing of the motion counsel for the defendant company appeared, stating that such an assignment to Mr. O’Brien had been made in pursuance of the action of the board of directors, which assignment was made in the afternoon of April 3, 1891, and that the assignment was to Mr. O’Brien in trust for the benefit of creditors, and conveyed to him all the property of the company for that purpose. Mr. O’Brien, it was stated by counsel, was, up to the time of his appointment as assignee, the attorney of the company, and was present during the deliberations of the board detailed in Mr. Boggs’ affidavit. It was claimed by defendants’ counsel that, under this state of facts, the complainant’s application for a receiver must be refused.

It is well settled that the assets of a private corporation constitute a trust fund for the payment of its debts, and that, in the event of insolvency, creditors may proceed in a court of equity to have such trust fund administered and applied in equality to the payment of the claims of the creditors of the corporation. “ The assets of such a corporation are [10]*10a fund for the payment of its debts. If theyVre held by the corporation itself, and so invested as to be subject to legal process, they may be levied on by such process. If they have been distributed among stockholders, or gone into the hands of others than bona fide creditors or purchasers, leaving debts of the corporation unpaid, such holders take the property charged with the trust in favor of creditors, which a court of equity will enforce, and compel the application of the property to the satisfaction of their debts.” Curran v. Arkansas, 15 How. 307. “Equity regards the property of a corporation as held in trust for the payment of the debts of the corporation, and recognizes the right of creditors to pursue it into whosesoever possession it may be transferred, unless it has passed into the hands of a bona fide purchaser.” Railroad Co. v. Howard, 7 Wall. 409. The right of the complainant, upon the insolvency of the defendant company, to file its bill for the benefit of itself and such other creditors as might join, for the purpose of obtaining the aid of the court sitting in equity to apply the assets of the corporation to the payment of its debts, being unquestioned, it necessarily follows that, upon the service of the subpoena upon the defendant company, the jurisdiction of this court was complete, both as to the parties and the subject-matter. .This, as the record shows, was on the 26th day of March, 1891. Hence the relation of the parties and the status of the property in question must be considered as of that date. No subsequent action of one of the parties could affect the rights of the other party. Any disposition by the defendant company of its assets (except the sale of personal property or transfer of negotiable securities to bona fide

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
46 F. 8, 1891 U.S. App. LEXIS 1199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/belmont-nail-co-v-columbia-iron-steel-co-circtwdpa-1891.