Caldwell v. . Robinson

103 S.E. 75, 179 N.C. 518, 1920 N.C. LEXIS 281
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMay 5, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 103 S.E. 75 (Caldwell v. . Robinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Caldwell v. . Robinson, 103 S.E. 75, 179 N.C. 518, 1920 N.C. LEXIS 281 (N.C. 1920).

Opinion

Walker, J.,

after stating the case: The testimony, upon which Judge Harding based his findings of fact, is not in the transcript, and we must therefore assume that there was sufficient evidence to support them, and this being so, they must be sustained, as we do not review findings of facts in such a case. Dorsey v. Mining Co., 177 N. C., 60, and cases cited; Thompson v. Smith, 156 N. C., 345. It was said in Thompson v. Smith, supra: “If there is any evidence to support the findings, and no error has been committed in receiving or rejecting testimony, and no other question of law is raised with respect to the findings, we accept what the judge has found as final, as we do in the case of a jury,” citing Malloy v. Cotton Mills, 132 N. C., 432; Lambertson v. Vann, 134 N. C., 108; Clark’s Code (3 ed.), p. 564, and cases there collected; Ramsey v. Browder, 136 N. C., 251, Comrs. v. Packing Co., 135 N. C., 62. The judge acted within his power when he reversed the referee as to the essential facts, although he may have affirmed him in some unimportant re *522 spect. Dumas v. Morrison, 175 N. C., 431; Cummings v. Swepson, 124 N. C., 579; Miller v. Groome, 109 N. C., 148; Highland v. Ice Co., 84 S. E. 252. The second exception is untenable because, though tKe judge set aside the referee’s findings as to there being no consideration for the $24,000 of bonds issued by the company to the defendants, he did not fail, as alleged in the exception, to substitute a finding in its place, as he had already found that the property conveyed to the company by the defendants was not sold to it knowingly and fraudulently at an overvaluation, but bona fide, and honestly, the defendants believing at the time, after carefully inspecting the property, and after having made due inquiries as to its true value, that “it was reasonably worth, on the market, the sum of $77,000, this having been the testimony of disinterested witnesses, admitted to be of good character, that it was worth, at that time, all of that amount, and that no witness testified to the contrary.”

The emphatic language of the judge leads us to interpret the findings to mean that the property was fully worth what the defendants charged the company for it, and that they honestly and in good faith believed that it was of that value. But if that was not its real value, it has certainly been found as a fact by the judge, taking any reasonable view of his language, that they honestly, and in good faith, believed it to be its real value, and there is no evidence before us to the contrary, nor is there any to show that $77,000 was not its true value. If it was the full value, we do not perceive how there could have been any fraud or misconduct in the transaction to the prejudice of creditors. It is a fact that, when the sale to the company was made, it had no creditors, except the defendants themselves. But the prominent and controlling fact is that they sold the property to the company at a fair and reasonable value, or to put it another way, the company bought it at its true value, and, therefore, got full value for its bonds and stock, the par value of which was $59,500. Judgments were recovered upon the bonds, which were duly docketed in the Superior Court of Transylvania County, thereby becoming liens upon the real property of the company. The judge refused to set aside the judgments as collusive or fraudulent, and we must again assume that there was evidence to support his ruling, as the testimony is not all before us, and the appellant must show error. Besides, it appears, as we have before stated, that the company owed the debts upon which the judgments were taken, and had no valid defense to the action in which they were rendered, and it does not appear that they were unfairly obtained for the purpose of cheating or defrauding the company, or taking any undue advantage of it. If these judgments were erroneous, the remedy was by an appeal; if irregular, by motion to set them aside; if void, as fraudulent, or for any other reason, they could be avoided by proper proceedings. But we do not think the assignments *523 of error sufficiently raise tbe question as to tbeir fraudulency, or invalidity, though they do as to the right to docket them in Transylvania County. If they were valid, we do not see why they could not be docketed, under the statute, in that county. The whole case, upon its real merits, rests upon the finding of the judge that the sale of the land and other property by the defendants to the company was not fraudulent, but that the land and other property brought their value, and that the stock and bonds of the company given in payment of the purchase money were, therefore, fully paid for. If this be so, the judgments having been docketed in the county where the land is situated, constituted a lien upon it some time before Moore & Gilmer became creditors of the company. It is contended by the plaintiff that the dealings between the officers and the company were intended as a method for cheating and defrauding creditors, but the court has found against this charge, and there really is no evidence before us to sustain it. At the time of the transactions, there were no creditors to be defrauded except those who were parties thereto, and it could not be said that they intended to cheat themselves, and it is not shown that there was any actual intent to defraud subsequent creditors, or any proof from which such an intent can be inferred. The judge’s findings conclusively refute the allegation of fraud.

The doctrine of this Court, and of all others, we believe, is restated in Wall v. Rothrock, 171 N. C., 388, 391, as follows: “There is no doubt that a board of directors, unless restricted by charter, may borrow money for the present needs of the corporation, and authorize certain directors to indorse the notes and secure them by mortgage on the corporate property, if done in good faith. . . . There is nothing to hinder a director from loaning money and taking liens on the corporate property to secure him. If he can do that he can lend his credit by indorsing its paper in order to obtain needed cash, and secure himself upon the corporation’s property. Such transactions are looked upon with suspicion, and strict proof of their bona fides is required. But the directors, occupying a fiduciary relation, are not permitted to secure themselves against preexisting liabilities of the corporation upon which they are already bound, or for money they have already loaned, when the corporation is in declining circumstances and verging on insolvency. They cannot be permitted to take advantage of their intimate knowledge of the corporation’s affairs for their own benefit at the expense of the general creditors,” citing Edwards v. Supply Co., 150 N. C., 171; Powell v. Lumber Co., 153 N. C., 56; Whitlock v. Alexander, 160 N. C., 479. These cases are in line with others cited to us by the plaintiff, Pender v. Speight, 159 N. C., 612; McIver v. Hardware Co., 144 N. C., 478; Steel Co. v. Hardware Co., 175 N. C., 450; Graham v. Carr, 130 N. C., 271. The case of Graham v. Carr, supra, appears to be decisive of the mate *524

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Bluebook (online)
103 S.E. 75, 179 N.C. 518, 1920 N.C. LEXIS 281, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/caldwell-v-robinson-nc-1920.