Clark v. Lanahan

31 F.2d 419, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 3466
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMarch 5, 1929
DocketNos. 3884, 3885
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 31 F.2d 419 (Clark v. Lanahan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark v. Lanahan, 31 F.2d 419, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 3466 (3d Cir. 1929).

Opinion

WOOLLEY, Circuit Judge.

This court affirmed, with certain modifications, a decree which the District Court [11 F.(2d) 814] had entered against Clark Car Company, a Pennsylvania corporation, and Frank J. Lanahan for an aeounting to the Clark Car Company, a New Jersey Corporation, and to Charles H. Clark, also for restitution of certain properties and cancellation of certain instruments purporting to authorize their conveyance. (C. C. A.) 11 F.(2d) 820. After reference to a master,- an accounting followed, which is here on cross-appeals from the court’s decree overruling exceptions filed by the parties and affirming the master’s report in all particulars.

Shortly after the opening of the argument on these appeals this court stated that, [421]*421as it had heard and decided the case on the , merits in the appeal from the original decree, it -would review the questions raised on the accounting as they bore not on the merits originally presented but on the matters definitely decided. Nevertheless, the argument was very much in the nature of a reargument on the merits of the whole case. It will be enough to say that we stand by our original position and shall dispose of the exceptions by giving directions to the learned trial court (based on the decree already entered) as to a proper decree on the accounting without discussing the facts or the law;

Before giving these directions it may be well to state the theory on which they will be framed.

At one time all property, money and rights here in dispute were gathered together in the Pennsylvania corporation whose stock was owned in different proportions by Clark and Lanahan. They consisted of three groups; one, lease agreement, patents, drawings, office furniture and the like which originally belonged to Clark and had been assigned to the company in exchange for its stock; another, the sum of $50,000 which Lanahan originally contributed to the company in exchange for stock; and a third, the increment from these two, which was considerable. In respect to these three groups of properties we recognized three distinct rights, or groups of rights, and directed distribution of the properties accordingly; first, that what originally belonged to Clark should be returned to him; third, that the money which Lanahan contributed should be returned to him with interest; and that, intermediate these (second in position but in certain respects primary in character) the claims of strangers to Clark’s and Lanahan’s transaction, who had dene business with and had extended credit to their Pennsylvania corporation should be paid out of the general assets of the corporation before'Clark should absolutely retain his property and before certain payments should be made to Lanahan. Here, then, were three groups of properties and as many groups of claimants. As the corporation was in receivership we thought that these properties could, in a relatively simple and orderly way, be distributed and the various claimants satisfied through that instrumentality. But the learned trial court, flunking otherwise, did not avail itself of the receivership but turned the corporation and all its property over to Clark and, on accepting security from Clark and the Pennsylvania company to pay Lanahan what might be found due him., referred the ease to a master to take and state an account by Lanahan and the Pennsylvania company. Thus it gave Clark all the property without earing for the claims of the company’s creditors and made it difficult, if not impossible, finally to determine what should be paid Lanahan as “compensation” and what should be retained by Clark without first determining, as required by the decree, the indebtedness of the company to its creditors who were strangers to the transaction. We think the decree of this court makes it plain that these creditors should be paid before any payment should be made to Lanahan for compensation or any award be made to Clark, the New Jersey company, or their privies. With these observations we shall formulate our instructions to the master as though addressed to a receiver enjoined to make distribution according to the decree of this court, confident that the master and court can work them out in conformity therewith.

To that end we direct that the case be remanded to the master for an amended accounting on the same reference, to be conducted as though he were acting as a receiver in allowing and disallowing claims and making distribution of the property of the Pennsylvania company pursuant, of course, to the previous decree of this court in respect to new matters and consistent with the following instructions in respect to matters already decided by him and now excepted to.

1. The master shall hear, consider and deeide claims of all creditors of the Pennsylvania company who, as defined by the decree, were strangers to the transaction in suit on the effective date of Clark’s bond and order payment from the general or common properties of the company as a step necessarily antecedent to the allowance and payment of compensation to Lanahan, as provided by the decree, without prejudice to the right of such creditors, if not satisfied, to establish their claims and recover from the Pennsylvania company in any way provided by law; but, should they not enter, or, after entering, withdraw from this reference, such creditors shall not retain the preference given them nor shall their conduct in this respect delay or otherwise prejudice the ascertainment and payment to Lanahan and others of the amounts found due them in the allowances to be made and reported by the master.

2. After the master shall have allowed and the Pennsylvania company shall have paid or have offered to pay the debts which it owed its creditors on the date named, he shall allow Clark to retain the .property which [422]*422originally belonged to him and which he now holds through stock ownership of the Pennsylvania company, liable of course for the claims of non-assenting creditors but free from all elaims of Lanahan, and also the profits earned by the company during Lanahan’s management after deducting and paying allowances to Lanahan and others and all proper charges.

3. The master shall, as in his former report, allow Lanahan $50,000 as a general non-preferred debt of the Pennsylvania company with interest, payable from any fund or property except that which originally belonged to Clark.

4. The master shall, as before, allow Lanahan $88,000 as “compensation,” payable after ascertaining claims filed by creditors as aforesaid and after they have either accepted or rejected payment of the same.

5. The master shall, as before, allow the item of $446 which Lanahan paid Clark and Doolittle, patent attorneys, as reimbursement to Lanahan for expenditures properly chargeable to and payable by the Pennsylvania company.

6. The master, for the reasons he gave, was right in dividing and reckoning the costs and charges of this litigation as of August 3, 1925, the date of the decree of the District Court and the date upon which the controversy between the corporate parties as originally named practically ceased and became a personal controversy between Clark and Lanahan, and he shall, except as hereafter indicated, make in his next report like allowances, disallowances, charges and surcharges.

7.

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Related

Fording v. Clark Car Co.
46 F.2d 869 (Third Circuit, 1931)

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Bluebook (online)
31 F.2d 419, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 3466, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-lanahan-ca3-1929.