Drennen v. Southern States Fire Ins.

252 F. 776, 164 C.C.A. 616, 1918 U.S. App. LEXIS 2134
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 18, 1918
DocketNo. 3031
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 252 F. 776 (Drennen v. Southern States Fire Ins.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Drennen v. Southern States Fire Ins., 252 F. 776, 164 C.C.A. 616, 1918 U.S. App. LEXIS 2134 (5th Cir. 1918).

Opinions

BATTS, Circuit Judge.

The plaintiff, Drenncn, as receiver of the American Mortgage & Loan Company, brings suit against the Southern States First Insurance Company, Sibley P. King, Sumter Cogswell, McLane Tilton, Eugene F. Enslen, J. G. Cooke, D. E. Manasco, and R. B. Watts. The allegations of the complaint are substantially to the effect following:

The Southern States Fire Insurance Company ceased active business in December, IMS. Defendants King and Watts were directors of both the American Mortgage & Loan Company (hereafter called the American Company) and ihe Southern States Fire Insurance Company (hereafter called the Insurance Company); defendant Enslen was a director and treasurer of both companies; defendant Manasco was the president and a director of the Insurance Company and one of the organizers and promoters of the American Company; defendant Tilton was director of the Insurance Company; defendant Cogswell a director, vice president, and general manager of the Insurance Company; defendant Cooke had been one of its directors. The defendants, other than the Insurance Company, being directors and officers of the companies as named, entered into a conspiracy to sell to the American Company 4,647 shares of the capital stock of the Insurance Company, and, in pursuance of the scheme, on February 2, 3014, with the fraudulent intent to enrich themselves at the expense of the American Company and its stockholders and creditors, and with the unlawful assistance of the Insurance Company, pretended to sell to the American Company the stock at §10 per share; said defendants knowing that the Insurance Company had ceased to do business, and that the price greatly exceeded the value of the stock. Defendants, pursuing the scheme to defraud, by and with the connivance of defendant E. F. Enslen, who was at that time president of the Jefferson County Savings Bank, obtained from the bank a temporary loan wherewith to partly finance the pretended purchase, until such time as they could obtain from the treasury of the Insurance Company the additional money required therefor, talcing the money from the Insurance Company and pretending to loan it to the American Company, to be paid over by the latter in lum to ihe defendants. Defendants obtained the loan from the bank, and, with the connivance of Enslen, borrowed from the Insurance Company the additional money needed to effect their plans, and executed and delivered the promissory notes of the American Company. for the sums borrowed, to the Insurance Company, and deposited, with some of said notes as security, the identical 4,647 shares of stock that they pretended to sell, and paid over to themselves the sums of money borrowed.
By protending to sell the 4,647 shares to the American Company, defendants passed the shares from their hands into the custody and control of tne Insurance Company, thereby ultimately taking out of the treasury of the American Company §46,470, for which it received and holds nothing in return. Defendant Insurance Company, by loaning or pretending to loan the American Company the sum of §3 a share on the 4,647 shares, made the fraud successful, and tlie effect was to gather into the treasury of the Insurance Company 4,647 shares, leaving the American Company with nothing whatever to show for the transaction, except its obligations to ihe Insurance Company for the pretended loans. After making the protended sale of the 4,647 shares, the defendants, further pursuing the conspiracy, began systematically to loan, or pretend to loan, to the American Company large sums of money from the In[778]*778surance Company, and then converted the money to themselves, or some of themselves, and their confederates. The ultimate effect of the -wrongful acts was to leave the American Company indebted to the Insurance Company $50,053, with accumulated interest, and with nothing to discharge the indebtedness, except 16,684 shares of the capital stock of the Insurance Company, delivered as security for the pretended indebtedness, and all of which stock the Insurance Company is now threatening to dispose of for the purpose of paying the pretended indebtedness.
At the time of the transfer bj the natural defendants of said 4;647 shares of the capital stock of the Insurance Company, the American Company had no money with which to pay the purchase price of the stock, and a part of the purchase price was obtained from the Jefferson County Savings Bank upon the notes of the American Company, secured by the stock and other securities, and the balance of the purchase price was evidenced by notes of the American Company, made payable to the natural defendants or some of them. Before the maturity of any of the notes given to the bank or the natural defendants, one J. A. Gorham, who was at the time president of the American Company, became also president of the Insurance Company, and was president at the time the notes matured. As the notes matured, sufficient money was obtained from the Insurance! Company and applied in payment of the notes, and in this way all of the purchase price of the 4,647 shares was ultimately paid out of the loans of the Insurance Company, the notes of the American Company being given to the Insurance Company in evidence of the loans and in substitution of its notes to the bank and the natural defendants; the notes to the Insurance Company being secured by 16,684 shares of its own stock, and all of which it still has. Included in the 16,684 shares are the 4,647 shares obtained from the natural defendants. At the time of the loan Gorham was president of both corporations, and as such executed the notes and permitted them to be secured by the stock. The Insurance Company had knowledge, at the time the money was obtained, that it was being obtained for the purpose of being used to pay the purchase price of said shares of stock, and that the American Company would be unable to pay tbe money, and that said shares of stock would be sacrificed in order to repay the same; and it had knowledge of the fraud being perpetrated upon the American Company by the transfer of said 4,647 shares, and had knowledge that the fraud could not be consummated, except through the Insurance Company’s furnishing the money with which to pay the purchase-price notes, and with such knowledge the Insurance Company actively participated and joined with the natural defendants in carrying out the fraud perpetrated upon the American Company, and with such knowledge assisted the natural defendants in thus placing beyond its reach and control the shares of stock belonging' to the American Company, knowing that by loaning the money it would bring about the deprivation to the American Company of said shares of stock and perfect the injury resulting to the American Company by the transfer of sjaid 4,647 shares of stock. By so doing the Insurance Company actively assisted the natural defendants in getting full payment of the purchase price of their shares of stock out of and through the assets belonging to the American Company, knowing of the injury being done and that it was not possible, except by its assistance.
The plaintiff prayed for a decree against the defendants for $46,470 and interest, and for a temporary order restraining the Insurance .Company from selling or otherwise disposing of any of the American Company’s collateral deposited with it as security.

On February 2, 1914, the natural defendants sold to the American Company 4,647 shares of the capital stock of the Insurance Company at $10 per share. The face value was $5, tire nominal book value $5.61, and the evidence established a market value of not exceeding $3.

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Bluebook (online)
252 F. 776, 164 C.C.A. 616, 1918 U.S. App. LEXIS 2134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/drennen-v-southern-states-fire-ins-ca5-1918.