Consolidated American Royalty Corp. v. Taliaferro

78 F.2d 802, 1935 U.S. App. LEXIS 3858
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedJune 26, 1935
DocketNos. 1187, 1197
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 78 F.2d 802 (Consolidated American Royalty Corp. v. Taliaferro) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Consolidated American Royalty Corp. v. Taliaferro, 78 F.2d 802, 1935 U.S. App. LEXIS 3858 (10th Cir. 1935).

Opinion

McDERMOTT, Circuit Judge.

No. 1187

These appeals arise from proceedings subsequent to the decision of this court in Greer Inv. Co. v. Booth, reported in 62 F.(2d) 321, 324. We there held'that a transfer of all the properties of the Petroleum Royalties Company, a common law trust, to a corporation of the same name was void. Our opinion further held that “Upon such restoration, the shareholders who had exchanged their shares would be entitled to have their Trust certificates restored.”

Plaintiffs in that case were in part shareholders in the trust who had been fraudulently induced to exchange their shares in the trust for shares in the corporation. In order that they might have standing to attack the transfer of the trust properties, it-was necessary that their exchange of shares be rescinded and they restored to their position as shareholders in the trust, which was done. But that relief was but a necessary preliminary step to the main relief sought, revesting in the trust the title to the properties transferred to the corporation. As said in our opinion, the '“suit was primarily in behalf of the Trust.” We could not and did not hold that upon restoration the properties would be owned by those who had been defrauded or who had not exchanged their shares- to the exclusion of other shareholders. Such decision would divest shareholders who had exchanged for corporate shares but who had, perchance, not been defrauded, of their interest in the trust estate, and would lead to ludicrous- results. [803]*803For example, if three per cent, of the shareholders were the only ones with a right to complain, they might cause to be set aside a void transfer of corporate properties. When the transfer is avoided, who owns the property reconveyed, the corporation or three per cent, of its shareholders? To state the question is to answer it.

About 97 per cent, of the trust shares had been exchanged for corporate shares; the decree heretofore affirmed properly provided for a re-issue of trust shares to those who had exchanged for corporate shares, or their assignees. As to the few owners of corporate shares who were plaintiffs in the action, the decree itself provided for the re-issue; as for the many owners not parties to the suit, the decree provided:

“That all persons other than the complainants in this case who claim any interest in the trust estate by reason of their past ownership of preferred shares of the trust estate or the past or present owners of the preferred stock of said Petroleum Royalties Company of Oklahoma, the corporation, shall have the right hereafter to present such claims to said Master and such rights shall be hereafter determined by the court.” '

After the main suit was brought, but before the decree became final, appellant acquired 24,199 shares of the preferred stock of the corporation. After the decree became final, appellant presented its certificates to the master, accompanied by proof of ownership, with the request that trust shares be issued therefor. Two parties disputed appellant’s claim as to 3,520 shares, but that controversy is not now in the case. Appellant’s ownership of 20,543 shares is disputed by no one; yet the master recommended, and the trial court decreed, that this substantial share in the properties of the trust should be canceled out, thus increasing the proportionate interest of all other shareholders of the trust.

Before the master, the receiver objected on the ground that appellant was indebted to the trust and asked that this indebtedness be offset against appellant’s right to trust shares. The master properly denied this peculiar application of the doctrine of set-off, one sufficiently valid reason being that a corporation may not adjudicate and collect a debt from a stockholder by the extra-judicial expedient of declining to transfer his shares on the corporate books. Remedies by execution, attachment or garnishment are provided for the purpose of applying assets to the discharge of liabilities. But the master, in some way not clear to us, construed our opinion on the first appeal to mean that when the properties were revested in the trust, their ownership would be in those who had been defrauded, or at most in those who acquired stock in the corporation without knowledge that a fraud had been perpetrated. The conclusion of the master discloses the reason for his recommendation :

“The Master therefore finds, as a matter of fact, that Consolidated American Royalty Corporation was not an innocent purchaser or transferor of certificates, but acted with full knowledge of the illegality and fraud involved in the entire transaction that is the subject of this case.
“The Master further concludes that the Consolidated American Royalty Corporation, by reason of its knowledge of such illegality and fraud, is not of that class of shareholders whose claims to transfer were referred to the Master by the order of reference.”

The trial court denied exceptions to the master’s report upon the ground that appellant and its president knew the facts and' circumstances surrounding the transfer from the trust to the corporation when it acquired the corporate shares in controversy; that it participated in a transaction which, to undo, cost the trust estate thousands of dollars. The conclusion of the trial court was that its ownership in the properties should stand forfeit for its fraud. Passing the point that appellant herein was not a party to the main suit, even so the result does not follow. If appellant has been guilty of fraud, it should be sued, the facts determined and the damage ascertained. To forfeit appellant’s ownership in the properties of the trust, of a value not shown by the record, in satisfaction of an unadjudicated claim for fraud of an unmentioned amount, is a short cut which we cannot sanction. Whether such summary procedure leads roughly to justice or injustice, the record here does not disclose. The same considerations dispose of the trial court’s suggestion that appellant’s legal right to share in the properties in which its money is invested should be cut off because its hands are said to be unclean.

The master’s conclusion that only innocent holders of corporate shares are enti[804]*804tied to trust shares is likewise untenable. What has heretofore been done is simply that the properties transferred to the corporation have been revested in the trust. That does not support the conclusion that the interest of those who acquired stock knowing the facts should be conveyed by decree of court to those who bought in ignorance.

The suggestion that those who acquired corporate shares by assignment have no enforcible right is likewise untenable. It rests upon the same mistaken assumption that appellant’s right is founded on fraud practiced upon it. It does not. It rests upon its ownership of a share of the properties of the trust.

The decree in No. 1187 is reversed with directions to grant appellant’s application except as to the 3,520 shares not involved on this appeal. Costs here and below will be taxed against the estate.

No. 1197

This is an appeal from an order disallowing appellant’s claim for office expenses alleged to have been incurred for the use and benefit of the Petroleum Royalties Company, a trust estate, from May 1, 1931, to November 1, 1931, which was the time elapsing between the filing of the suit to avoid the transfer from the trust to the corporation, and the date the transfer was adjudged to be void.

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Forbush Co. v. Bartley
78 F.2d 805 (Tenth Circuit, 1935)

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Bluebook (online)
78 F.2d 802, 1935 U.S. App. LEXIS 3858, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/consolidated-american-royalty-corp-v-taliaferro-ca10-1935.