Carstens & Earles v. Hofius

87 P. 631, 44 Wash. 456, 1906 Wash. LEXIS 857
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 20, 1906
DocketNo. 6308
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 87 P. 631 (Carstens & Earles v. Hofius) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carstens & Earles v. Hofius, 87 P. 631, 44 Wash. 456, 1906 Wash. LEXIS 857 (Wash. 1906).

Opinion

Hadley, J.

This action was brought to recover by reason of an alleged improper disposition of the assets of a cor[457]*457poration. The plaintiff and the defendants Corbin Machinery and Wittler-Corbin Machinery Company are corporations. In January, 1902, the Corbin Machinery Company became indebted to plaintiff corporation in the sum of $406.78, and in December, 1902, the indebtedness being unpaid, the defendants Corbin Machinery Company and W. J. Corbin executed promissory notes to plaintiff for the amount of said previously existing indebtedness. The notes being unpaid, the plaintiff, in January, 1905, obtained judgment against the said makers, and thereafter execution was issued thereon, which was returned wholly unsatisfied. When the indebtedness was incurred, the defendants Corbin and Hofius were owners of capital stock in said Corbin Machinery Company, and were also trustees thereof. On July 8, 1902, Hofius resigned as trustee and was succeeded by one Wittier.

In June, 1902, the Wittler-Corbin Machinery Company was organized, and the said Corbin and Wittier became stockholders and trustees therein. In the same month the trustees of the Corbin Machinery Company and the trustees of the Wittler-Corbin Machinery Company made an agreement whereby the former corporation agreed to sell to the latter one all the property of the Corbin Machinery Company, except one certain contract with Perkins & Company of Grand Rapids, Michigan, the sale to include the good will of the Corbin Machinery Company. It was also agreed that, as part of the purchase price and consideration to be paid, the purchasing corporation should assume and pay all the outstanding obligations of the selling corporation, excepting a certain promissory note for $10,000 owing to the defendants Hofius and Pigott; that the difference between the appraised or inventory value of the property so purchased and the total of said outstanding obligations should be paid by the issuance of stock in the Wittler-Corbin Machinery Company to defendant Corbin or to such persons as he should direct, it having been previously agreed between Corbin, Hofius and [458]*458Pigott that the two latter should sell to the former all their stock in the Corbin Machinery Company. In pursuance of said agreement, the two defendant corporations carried it into effect through the passage of resolutions by their respective boards of trustees, the stockholders consenting therein.

At the time of the sale it appeared from the statements and inventories of the Corbin Machinery Company, and it was estimated by the parties to the sale, that the reasonable value of the property, including the good will of the selling company, was $27,500, over and above all the outstanding indebtedness of the selling company, except the $10,000 note mentioned. At about the time of the sale, the WhittlerCorbin Machinery Company issued to defendant Corbin certificates for its capital stock to the amount of $20,000, par value, and all the property of the selling corporation was transferred to the purchasing one, except the single contract mentioned. The purchasing corporation continued the business formerly conducted by the selling one, and thereafter exercised complete ownership and control over the property and business formerly owned and conducted by the selling corporation.

The capital stock of the purchasing corporation was $10,-000, divided into four hundred shares of $100 each. Defendant Corbin became a subscriber for two hundred shares of said stock, and said Wittier subscribed for the remaining two hundred shares. Corbin had purchased the stock of Hofius and Pigott in the selling corporation, and as such stockholder his entire equity in the assets sold was accepted as the consideration and payment bjr him for his subscription for the two hundred shares in the purchasing corporation. Wittier, the other subscriber, paid $12,500 cash for his two hundred shares. The purchasing corporation paid all the outstanding obligations of the selling one, except the claim of the plaintiff and the $10,000 note above mentioned. Plain[459]*459tiff’s claim was not presented to the purchasing corporation, but was presented to Corbin, who was at the time the president of the selling company, and thereupon the notes aforesaid, representing the previously existing indebtedness to plaintiff, were executed by the selling corporation and Cor-bin. The plaintiff had no knowledge of the agreement for the sale and transfer of the assets of the selling corporation until after the giving of said notes, and it had no knowledge, at the time of the commencement of this action, of the agreement of the purchasing company to pay the indebtedness of the selling one.

Prior to the agreement for the sale, the selling corporation was indebted to Hofius and Pigott in the sum of $10,000, evidenced by its promissory note. It was agreed between Hofius, Pigott and Corbin that the stock of Hofius and Pigott in the selling corporation should be purchased by Corbin, but that the said stock should be held by Hofius and Pigott as collateral for the payment of the said $10,000 note, the payment of which Corbin guaranteed. Prior to the sale $750 had been paid upon the note, leaving a balance of $9,250. At about the time of the sale, it was agreed that Corbin should pay Plofius and Pigott $2,250 cash upon the note, and should execute to them his note for $7,000, which latter note should be secured by depositing with Hofius and Pigott $17,000 of Corbin’s stock in the purchasing corporation. Thereupon Corbin hypothecated $3,000 of his stock in the purchasing corporation to Wittier, and borrowed thereon $2,250, which sum he paid to Hofius and Pigott, and he executed his note for $7,000 secured by $17,000 of stock in the purchasing corporation, as aforesaid, the old $10,000 note held by Hofius and Pigott being then surrendered. Afterwards the stock of the purchasing corporation so pledged by Corbin was sold to satisfy said loans, and after applying the proceeds of the sale to the payment of the loans, there, was left a balance of $1,200.

[460]*460Neither Hofius nor Pigott became a purchaser of the stock at the said sale thereof, and neither one has ever been the owner of any part of the stock of the Wittler-Corbin Machinery Company. No money was paid by the Wittler-Corbin Machinery Company to the Corbin Machinery Company for the transfer of the latter’s assets. No consideration passed to it for the transfer other than the assumption by the Wittler-Corbin Machinery Company of the outstanding indebtedness of the other company, not including the said $10,000 debt owing to Hofius and Pigott. The remaining consideration was paid by means of the issue of fully paid up stock of the Wittler-Corbin Machinery Company to Corbin, of the par value of $20,000. At the time of the transfer of the assets of the Corbin Machinery Company, defendant Pigott was not a trustee of said company, but at the time the sale was authorized the defendant Hofius was a trustee, was present at the trustee’s meeting, consented to the plan for the transfer and to the resolution authorizing it, and did not cause his dissent therefrom to be entered at large upon the minutes of the board of trustees.

The above facts we have gleaned from the court’s findings in the case. The findings are very extensive, and the above is but an abbreviated statement thereof. There is no evidence here, and the findings are therefore conclusive as to the facts.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 P. 631, 44 Wash. 456, 1906 Wash. LEXIS 857, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carstens-earles-v-hofius-wash-1906.