Boyum v. Johnson

127 F.2d 491, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 3905
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedApril 13, 1942
Docket12062
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 127 F.2d 491 (Boyum v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boyum v. Johnson, 127 F.2d 491, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 3905 (8th Cir. 1942).

Opinion

JOHNSEN, Circuit Judge.

Iver J. Boyum, the managing officer and controlling stockholder of the bankrupt corporation, has appealed from the order of the District Court made upon a review of his claims against the bankrupt estate.

The Referee had allowed Boyum’s claims in the sum of $49,210.58, without any set-off on the part of the bankrupt corporation. Of this amount, $424.11 was for services as secretary of the corporation $1,213.80 was for salary as general manager, and $47,572.67 was for cash advances made to the corporation, evidenced by promissory notes. A minority stockholder owning three shares of capital stock and a general creditor having a claim of $252.-50 petitioned for review.

On a review, the District Court affirmed the allowance of the claim for services as secretary, the claim for salary as general manager, and part of the claims upon the notes, fixing the total amount of the corporation’s indebtedness to Boyum at $33,678.33. It disallowed Boyum’s claim upon a $2,500 note, as being barred by the statute of limitations, and upon a $10,000 note, as being without consideration. It held further that the corporation was entitled to set-offs against the indebtedness due Boyum, for unlawful bonuses received by him during the years 1919 to 1925, together with interest thereon, in a total sum of $40,636; for the agreed purchase price of the “Leader Store”, bought from the *494 corporation in 1930, together with interest thereon, in a total sum of $24,602.27; and for payments applied by him upon the $10,000 note which was without consideration, together with interest thereon, in a total sum of $3,652.95. These set-offs aggregated $68,891.22, and, since this amount was in excess of the corporation’s indebtedness to Boyum, the court held that he was not entitled to receive any dividends out of the estate. It accordingly directed him to refund to the Trustee a dividend payment of $2,545.17, which had been made to him under an order of claim allowance, entered more than a year, prior to the institution of the present proceedings before the Referee for reconsideration of his claims. The court further required him to surrender to the Trustee, as unlawful preferences, the sum of $2,583.70, received and applied by him as payments upon his notes within four months preceding the filing of the petition in bankruptcy.

The exhaustive opinion of the District Court is reported in Re Fergus Falls Woolen Mills Co., 41 F.Supp. 355, and it will be unnecessary to repeat here many of the facts set out therein

We think the District Court properly disallowed the $2,500 and $10,000 notes as claims, and correctly fixed the total amount of the indebtedness owing to Boyum from the corporation at $33,678.33. On the record before us, however, we believe that the court erred in holding that the bonuses received by Boyum, for the years 1919 to 1925, and the purchase price of the Leader Store bought from the corporation in 1930 constituted a proper set-off against the amount for which Boyum’s claims were allowed.

We should say at the outset that anything that may be owing to Boyum on his note claims will be ordered subordinated to the payment of the claims of the other general creditors. The record shows that the bankrupt was essentially a one-man corporation. Boyum was the controlling stockholder and virtually ran the affairs of the corporation as his own. His general dealings with the corporation were not on the arm’s length plane of the other creditors. The cash advances which he made were apparently necessary to supply a deficiency in working capital. From their amounts, duration, and continued need, they were hardly mere ordinary commercial incidents, but rather part of a plan of permanent, personal financing, to avoid the necessity of increasing the capital of the corporation. Boyum’s note claims, therefore, cannot be said to occupy an equal equitable position with the other general claims and should accordingly be subordinated to them. See Pepper v. Litton, 308 U.S. 295, 307-311, 60 S.Ct. 238, 84 L.Ed. 281.

With this subordination made, the controversy here appears to become one wholly between Boyum and a group of minority stockholders. The claims of other general creditors, outside of Boyum, total only $1,759.70, and from the amount of the initial dividend payment made and the portion thereof which Boyum can be required to refund to the Trustee, as well as the indication of further unliquidated assets in the record, it seems clear that these general creditors will be paid in full. That is as far, of course, as their right or interest in this proceeding can go. We advert to this fact here, because, in considering the relationship of Boyum’s claims solely to other stockholders, there appears to be an element of acquiescence involved as to the portion of the set-off allowed by the District Court for bonus payments made to Boyum, which we think is controlling on that phase of the controversy. We shall discuss the matter more specifically later.

As to the $2,500 note, Boyum failed to show the date when either of two payment's of interest, upon which it was necessary for him to rely, was actually indorsed upon the instrument, and so, as the District Court held, failed to establish a tolling of the statute of limitations. The Minnesota rule is that an indorsement upon^a note is not such prima facie evidence of payment as will toll the statute of limitations, unless the holder shows by proof dehors the indorsement that it was actually made at a time when it was against his interest to make it. Riley v. Mankato Loan & Trust Co., 133 Minn. 289, 158 N.W. 391; Young v. Perkins, 29 Minn. 173, 12 N.W. 515.

As to the $10,000 note, the District Court found from the bills payable register and the corporation’s financial statement for the year 1928, when the note purported to have been given, that there was an unexplained discrepancy of $9,-991.25 between the amount of cash which the corporation appeared to have received from Boyum during that year and the amount of notes which the corporation *495 had issued to him. However honest Boy-um’s expressed recollection and belief may have been, the court was not bound to accept his general testimony that the note represented an actual advance of cash made to the corporation at the time, as against the failure of the corporation’s records to show receipt of $9,991.25, whose only traceable source, if received, would appear to have been the notes which the corporation had issued to Boyum. The court was therefore justified in holding that he had failed to establish the necessary consideration for the $10,000 note. An officer of a bankrupt corporation, because of his fiduciary relationship, has the burden of satisfying the court fully of the existence and sufficiency of the consideration for any claim which he may have against the corporation, including one upon a negotiable instrument. Pepper v. Litton, supra, at page 306 of 308 U.S., 60 S. Ct. 238, 84 L.Ed. 281; Ebert Hicken Co. v. Scott-Bevier Iron Mining Co., 177 Minn. 72, 224 N.W. 454, 455; 3 Fletcher Cyclopedia Corporations, Permanent Edition, § 952.

As to the bonus payments made to Boyum during the years 1919 to 1925, which the trial court allowed as a set-off against the amount of his established claims, such payments or most of them doubtless would have been recoverable in an action seasonably brought by the minority stockholders.

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Bluebook (online)
127 F.2d 491, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 3905, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boyum-v-johnson-ca8-1942.