Berthold v. Holladay-Klotz Land & Lumber Co.

91 Mo. App. 233
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 17, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 91 Mo. App. 233 (Berthold v. Holladay-Klotz Land & Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Berthold v. Holladay-Klotz Land & Lumber Co., 91 Mo. App. 233 (Mo. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

GOODE, J.

— Plaintiffs instituted an action in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis on the twenty-fourth day of August, 1895, against the H. N. Holladay Lumber and Mercantile Company, on an account, and recovered judgment in said cause thereafter on the sixth day of March, 1899, for two thousand six hundred and eighty-three dollars and sevéntynine cents for their debt and six hundred and twenty-eight dollars and sixty-two cents for costs. Afterwards, two executions were issued on said judgment and returned milla bona. Thereupon the plaintiffs began the present suit in the nature of a creditor’s bill against the Holladay-Klotz Land and Lumber Company to collect said judgment, on the grounds that the defendant company acquired possession of and title to all the assets of the H. N. Holladay Lumber and Mercantile Company, after the institution of plaintiffs’ action against the last named company; that the defendant company was organized for the [236]*236purpose of absorbing said IT. N. Holladay Lumber and Mercantile Company and did absorb its business, assets and goodwill and afterwards carried on the same enterprises, operated the same plants, ran the same stores and in all respects continued the business of the former company and became, in equity, chargeable with the liabilities of said former company, no provision having been made for their payment when it was merged in the defendant company.

The testimony shows that H. N. Holladay, now deceased, was the sole owner of the Holladay Lumber and Mercantile Company, which possessed at the time plaintiffs’ action against it was instituted, assets worth more than three hundred thousand dollars. He ivas the company, it was testified. About that time an arrangement was made between said Holladay, Richard J. Medley, Ely Klotz and C. C. Rainwater, some of whom, at least, were creditors of the Holladay Mercantile and Lumber Company, for the organization of a new corporation with an enlarged capital, to take over the property and business of the old one. Pursuant to this arrangement, substantially all the assets of said mercantile and lumber company, ás well as some individual assets of Holladay, were transferred to Rainwater as trustee, to be held for the benefit of all parties in interest until the new corporation was formed. Said par- • ties immediately organized the Holladay-Klotz Land and Lumber Company, the defendant in this action, with a capital stock of six hundred thousand dollars, which, we believe, was paid solely by said trustee transferring to it the assets of the Holladay Mercantile and Lumber Company and of H. N. Holladay, which had been theretofore transferred to him. This transfer vested in the defendant company all the property and assets of the old company except, perhaps, its accounts, notes and bills receivable, if it had any; whether it had any and if so of what value, does not appear. The new company got its lands, store, sawmills, tools, machinery, shops, eleven miles of railroad, in fact everything which made it a going concern. It [237]*237thereupon ceased business, the business being afterwards conducted by the defendant company. ITolladay, as has been stated, owned all the stock of the former company and 'the majority of that of the new one. All the assets of the new company were made up of the assets of the old except certain lands, the title to which stood in Holladay’s individual name. The evidence in the case satisfies us the facts are as stated. On them the court below found that the defendant company received, absorbed and took over the assets of the H. N. Holladay Lumber and Mercantile Company, its business and good-will, of the value of three hundred thousand dollars or more, and thereafter carried on business with said assets as the successor of the former company; that said property when so received, absorbed, and taken over by the defendant was a trust fund for the payment of plaintiff’s demand and by absorbing the same, together with the business of the old company, the defendant became liable to plaintiffs for the aforesaid judgment, which it was ordered to pay within ten days from the date of the decree, or an execution would issue.

Nothing can be made of the transactions by which the assets of the H. N. Holladay Lumber and Mercantile Company passed, first to the trustee of the syndicate, and after-wards to the new corporation which the members of the syndicate organized, with themselves as the only incorporators, except an absorption of the old corporation by the new one. While the old one may have nominally continued in existence for the purpose of collecting debts owing to it, if in fact any solvent ones were owing, it ceased to have vitality or force as an active concern. The defendant company superseded it in the performance of every function which it had been created to perform, operated its mills, railroads and shops and carried on its mercantile, tie and lumber business, all at the same places, with the same equipment and in the same manner it had theretofore done. We can not accede †° the proposition that the old corporation was still [238]*238suck an independent and vital entity that its creditors were bound to look only to it for the collection of their debts and could not pursue the assets which had passed into the hands of the defendant. It is a settled rule of equity jurisprudence that where one corporation is consolidated with another, or merged in another, which takes its property, such new corporation is bound to discharge the liabilities of the old one. Thompson v. Abbott et al., 61 Mo. 176; Hugher v. School District No. 29, 72 Mo. 643; Eans v. Exchange Bank of Jefferson City, 79 Mo. 182. It is contended, however, there was no merger of the former corporation in che new one, but that it still lived. We think the evidence fully and fairly justifies the conclusion that the Holladay Mercantile and Lumber Company had no substantial assets left after the transfer in question, no reason to exist, and became practically extinct. The new company took those assets cum, onere — impressed with a lien in favor of the creditors of the old; for they were acquired by a transaction outside the ordinary course of business. 5 Thompson on Corporations, sec. 6547. The continuance of the first company as a corporation de jure, after it had ceased to exist as one de facto, constitutes no barrier to this suit by creditors to enforce their judgment against its property in the hands of its successor. To make available the equitable remedies in favor of a creditor of a defunct corporation it is sufficient that it had done or suffered acts which destroyed the end and object for which it was created. Slee v. Bloom, 19 Johns. (N. Y.) 456; Briggs v. Penniman, 8 Cow. (N. Y.) 387; 3 Thompson on Corporations, sec. 3345. That contingency had certainly arisen here.

There is some meagre and unsatisfactory testimony by one witness, that the syndicate, as he styled it, paid about one hundred thousand dollars in cash and the balance in notes to Holladay for the property received by the four men composing the syndicate (of whom Holladay himself was one) for the property received from the mercantile and lumber company [239]*239and from Holladay personally. Nothing was shown about how much the alleged consideration for the transfer was, the number, amount, or maturity of the notes given, liow much cash each individual paid, nor, in fact, how much was paid by all of them. All that was shown on that point is as follows :

“Q. What did those four men that you speak of pay the II. N. Holladay Lumber and Mercantile Company for this transfer of assets? A. Cash and notes.

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Bluebook (online)
91 Mo. App. 233, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berthold-v-holladay-klotz-land-lumber-co-moctapp-1901.