Benson v. Borden

198 A. 419, 174 Md. 202
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 8, 1938
Docket[No. 36, January Term, 1938.]
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 198 A. 419 (Benson v. Borden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Benson v. Borden, 198 A. 419, 174 Md. 202 (Md. 1938).

Opinion

Mitchell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.'

The appeal in this case is from a-decree of the Circuit Court for Allegany county, passed on October 4th, 1937, in the matter of the receivership of the Big Savage Fire Brick Company. The decree rejected certain claims filed in said cause by the appellant and allowed certain claims of the receiver as against the appellant. It further allowed other claims filed in the cause by the appellant, and decreed that the latter allowances be set off against indebtedness found to be due by the appellant to the receiver; and, finally, decreed that the difference between the conflicting claims, as allowed, be held as a personal obligation of the appellant to the receiver.-

The Big Savage Fire Brick Company, -hereinafter designated as Company, was incorporated in 1902 for the "purpose, as its corporate - name implies, of engaging in the manufacture of bricks and burnt clay products; its plant and principle office being located in Allegany County. At the time of the -incorporation, Davisson Armstrong was elected president and continued as such *205 until a short period before his death, which occurred on June 1st, 1935. The record reveals that Mr. Armstrong was at that time an active business man, and that he was connected with the Borden Mining Company and the Citizens’ National Bank of Frostburg, in addition to his position as president of the Brick Company. He was eighty-six years of age at the time of his death, and, according to the testimony of his physician, he suffered from arteriosclerosis and advanced senility as far back as 1932, and his condition became serious upon the closing of the bank in 1933. At the time the Company was organized, John N. Benson, the father of the appellant, was elected vice-president and general manager of the Company, and held that position until his death, which occurred in 1919. The first official connection the appellant, Davisson A. Benson, Sr., had with the Company was that of secretary, and, upon the death of his father, he was elected vice-president and treasurer, in which position he also performed the duties of general manager.

It does not appear from the record what compensation the appellant originally received as vicer-president and treasurer, but it does appear by resolution of the board of directors, passed on January 31st, 1934, that the salary of such officer was fixed at $5,000 per annum, accounting from January 1st, 1924; and there is no evidence in the record that that resolution was ever formally rescinded by the directors. It is conceded that the appellant received the full payment of his salary, on the above basis, until January 1st, 1928, and that after that date he drew, or was paid, irregular sums, as follows: 1928, $3,200; 1929, $1,800; 1930, $3,200; 1931, $1,800; 1932, $3,200; 1933, $1,800; 1934, $3,200; 1935, $1,800. His official position with the Company terminated on January 31st, 1936, and he received no salary payment for the latter month.

The Company met with reasonable success and paid dividends on its stock until 1927; after that year, however, it began to lose money and rapidly became involved.

*206 In January, 1936, the appellant and his son, D. A. Benson, Jr., were ousted as directors of the Company, and this action was followed by the appointment of Frederick Y. Borden, the appellee, as receiver for the Company, by the Circuit Court for Allegany County, which assumed jurisdiction in the premises on January 31st, 19,36.

In response to a general notice of the receiver to the creditors of the Company to file their respective claims in the above proceedings, the appellant filed claims as follows:

Open account for unpaid salary..................... $20,416.66
Open account for bills paid on behalf of the Company, by the appellant.................. 117.62
Principal note indebtedness due appellant ................................................................................... 10,000.00
Interest on above notes to July 1,1936...... 692.27
Royalty on coal furnished the Company by the appellant, accounting from January i, 1928, to January 31, 1936... 19,327.35
Total................................................................................ $50,553.90

In addition to the above, the appellant, on his own behalf and on behalf of F. A. Buchholz, a former director of the Company, filed a promissory note held by them jointly, as follows:

Principal of note.............................................................. $5,000.00
Interest to July 1,1936............................................... 259.02
Total................................................................................... $5,259.02

It may be here noted that, at the hearing in the lower court, it was shown by the records of the Company that additional sums collected by the appellant as payments to him on account of coal royalties alleged to be due him were not credited on the coal account as filed, whereupon the appellant corrected the claim by allowing said credits in the aggregate sum of $3,445.26.

To summarize, therefore, the total indebtedness, as *207 corrected, claimed by the appellant against the receiver, is as follows:

(a) Open account for unpaid salary......... $20,416.66
(b) Open account for bills paid.................... 117.62
(c) Adjusted coal royalty account............ 15,882.09
(d) Company notes held individually, plus interest thereon................................. 10,692.27
(e) One-half of Company’s note, held jointly, plus interest thereon............ 2,629.51
Total................................................................................ $49,738.15

Exceptions to the allowance of claims (a) and (c) were filed by the receiver as follows:

(a) Because the appellant at the time he ceased to draw the full salary of $5,000 per annum, as originally authorized by resolution of the board of directors in 1924, was in sole control of the operation and management of the Company, due to the illness of its president; that the salary was not paid in full because it was not earned and could not therefore be collected; that no claim for balance due on salary was ever set up on the books of the Company, which were kept under the direction of the appellant, until they were audited in 1935, shortly before the receivership; that meanwhile, acting as president of the Company, the appellant caused financial statements to be annually presented to its stockholders, which did not reflect the liability indicated, and that, as acting president and general manager, he furnished creditors with financial statements relating to its affairs, which did not include such liability.

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Bluebook (online)
198 A. 419, 174 Md. 202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benson-v-borden-md-1938.