Dollar Cleansers & Dyers, Inc. v. McGregor

161 A. 159, 163 Md. 105, 1932 Md. LEXIS 12
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 20, 1932
Docket[No. 20, April Term, 1932.]
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 161 A. 159 (Dollar Cleansers & Dyers, Inc. v. McGregor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dollar Cleansers & Dyers, Inc. v. McGregor, 161 A. 159, 163 Md. 105, 1932 Md. LEXIS 12 (Md. 1932).

Opinion

Adkins, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Edward E. Kaplan owned and operated a dry cleaning establishment, and did business under the name of the Dollar Dry Cleaning Company. The office and plant were located at No. 1400- Rice Street and Nos. 708-710-712 North Calhoun Street adjoining. In the summer of 1929 he formed a corporation under the name of the Dollar Dry Cleaning Company, Incorporated, with a view of transferring to it the plant and business. The three original directors resigned at the first meeting of the board, and Edward E. Kaplan, Rose Kaplan (wife of Edward E!), and Isidore Miller (brother-in-law of Kaplan) were elected directors to succeed them. Edward E. Kaplan was elected president, Isidore Miller vice-president, and Rose Kaplan secretary. The only *107 stock ever issued was twenty-five shares of preferred and twenty-five of common, par value $100 each, to Edward E. Kaplan. A resolution was passed by the corporation to purchase from Edward E. Kaplan the business, including property No. 1400 Rice Street, “subject to the mortgage now existing thereon,” together with all the goods, wares, merchandise, trucks, equipment, fixtures, chattels, and good will of the Dollar Dry Cleaning Company, said assets to be transferred on the payment to Kaplan of $5,000 in cash and on the execution of a chattel mortgage for the sum of $45,000 payable on or before September 8th, 1930. “The said assets to be more accurately determined by an inventory check to be made by-Phillip W. Cheslock, O. P. A.”

Eor the cash payment of $5,000, twenty-five shares of preferred stock and twenty-five shares of common stock were issued to Kaplan on August 6th, 1929, and on September 9th, 1929, the mortgage to Kaplan for $45,000 was executed by the corporation to Edward E. Kaplan, president, acknowledged by him as president, and duly recorded.

On December 12th, 1930, a resolution was passed by the board to purchase leasehold properties Nos. 708-710-712 North Calhoun Street, Baltimore, and to execute a mortgage on No. 1400 Rice Street and the Calhoun Street properties and all the personal property and chattels of the corporation to Eleazer Winakur to secure a loan from him to the corporation of $7,500. It does not appear from the record, but is explained in the brief of appellee, that this mortgage to Winakur, although subsequent in date to the mortgage to Kaplan, became a prior lien by a waiver executed by Kaplan to Winakur. It is conceded that Winakur held the prior lien. Tinder a consent to decree for sale contained in the mortgage to Winakur it was foreclosed, and on August 10th, 1931, Robert J. MacGregor, receiver in bankruptcy for the Dollar Dry Cleaning Company, Incorporated, filed a petition asking that the surplus proceeds of sale be credited to him as receiver, on which an order was passed directing the auditor to make the allowance prayed. On September 1st, 1931, Isidore Miller filed a petition, in which he alleged that he was the *108 holder by assignment of a second mortgage dated. September 9th, 1929, in the amount of $45,000 from 'said corporation to Kaplan, and was entitled to the surplus proceeds of sale; and prayed that an order be passed directing the auditor to distribute them to him. An order was accordingly passed, subject to the usual exceptions. Exceptions were filed to this order in which it was alleged that the mortgage from the corporation to Kaplan was made in fraud of the creditors of the corporation and that the assignment to Miller was fraudulent. During the progress of the hearing on these exceptions, on the petition of the appellant, Dollar Cleansers and Dyers, Incorporated, alleging that by virtue of assignment it had acquired all rights and interest of Isidore Miller, it was by order of the chancellor substituted in the place and stead of said Miller.

The chancellor found that the said second mortgage was fraudulent in law; that the appellant was not a bona fide purchaser for value of said mortgage without notice, and accordingly decreed that the order signed on September 1st, 1931, on the petition of Miller, be rescinded, and the order of August 10th, 1931, on the petition of the receiver, be made absolute; and that the,surplus proceeds of sale over and above the balance due under the mortgage of Eleazer Winakur, plus interest and expenses, be allowed the receiver. This appeal is from that decree. We concur in the conclusion of the chancellor.

We are not prepared to hold under the present state of the law in relation to corporations that under no circumstances could a corporation, in which all of the stock was held by one person, make a valid mortgage to that person. The expressions in Swift v. Smith Dixon & Co., 65 Md. 428, 5 A. 534, which would lead to that conclusion, however correctly they may have stated the law as it then was in this state; cannot now be accepted without qualification, in view of changes that have taken place in our statutes. We said in Carozza v. Federal Finance Co., 149 Md. at page 238, 131 A. 332, 338: “The equitable rule that the form of a corporate entity may be disregarded where the ownership of all of its corporate stock is in one person is not of general appli *109 cation, but is commonly limited to- those instances in which it becomes necessary to disregard a formal corporate existence to prevent fraud or imposition or to enforce a paramount and superior equity.” See, also, Bethlehem Steel Co. v. Raymond Concrete Pile Co., 141 Md. 67, 81, 118 A. 279.

One of the purposes of the liberalization of the corporation laws of this state was to make it more practicable for an ordinary business to be conducted in the form of a corp-orar tio-n without the hazard of personal responsibility beyond the risk of the assets of the business. It is quite understandable that one would be willing to risk the loss of a definite -amount invested in a business enterprise, while unwilling to stake his entire fortune- on the success of such venture. So- long as the corporate plan is adopted and pursued in good faith and in accordance with the registration -and other laws of the state, those dealing with the corporation have only themselves to blame if they suffer from neglect to seek information obtainable from public records and -other available- sources. And it is not apparent why the substantial or even the sole owner of the stock may not lend to the corporate entity on the security of a mortgage of the corporate assets, provided the money lent is a bona fide loan for corporate purposes. Such a transaction, we think, is not invalid as a. matter of law. But its bona fides is always open to- inquiry. This court does not think the law contemplates- that one- may incorporate an established business of his own, continue to own and control it as before, and at the same time, for his personal benefit, p-ut beyond the reach of prospective creditors all the assets of the corporation. Folson v. Detrick Fertilizer Co., 85 Md. 52, 36 A. 446.

And that was what was attempted in this case. There can be no reasonable d-o-ubt that Kaplan knew the business could not be run without either money or credit. .The record shows that there was no money paid in. The entire capital stock was issued to Kaplan ostensibly in p-art payment for the plant.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Ex Parte Garey
95 A.2d 298 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1995)
Obre v. Alban Tractor Co.
179 A.2d 861 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1962)
Jersey Boulevard Corp. v. Lerner Stores Corp.
178 A. 707 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1935)
Coffman v. Maryland Publishing Co.
173 A. 248 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1934)
J. Francis Hock & Co. v. Strohm
170 A. 738 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1934)
Hammond v. Lyon Realty Co.
163 A. 480 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1932)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
161 A. 159, 163 Md. 105, 1932 Md. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dollar-cleansers-dyers-inc-v-mcgregor-md-1932.