Eisenrod v. Utley

211 F.2d 678, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 3878
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedMarch 1, 1954
Docket13547
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 211 F.2d 678 (Eisenrod v. Utley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eisenrod v. Utley, 211 F.2d 678, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 3878 (9th Cir. 1954).

Opinion

POPE, Circuit Judge.

The above named Trustee in Bankruptcy brought an action, designated one “to set aside and avoid fraudulent conveyances made by the bankrupt”, against the appellants, and recovered a money judgment from which this appeal is taken. Appellants present but one contention: that this is not truly an action to set aside fraudulent transfers; *679 rather that it was an action to recover damages for certain tortious acts of the defendants in despoiling the bankrupt corporation. Hence it is said, the action is not one authorized by § 70, sub. e of the Bankruptcy Act to be brought in the above named court ; 1 and as diversity of citizenship is lacking, the court could not entertain it. This claim of want of jurisdiction is the sole specification of error presented.

Appellants base their contention upon (1) the complaint; (2), the instructions to the jury; and (3), the verdict, which was a special one. The evidence is not here but from the sources listed appellants undertake to demonstrate that the action was not one to set aside fraudulent transfers within the meaning of § 70, sub. e. Pointing to the language of subdivision (2) of § 70, sub. e, they note that the action there referred to is one to “reclaim and recover” the transferred property, or collect its value from and avoid such transfer or obligation “against whoever may hold or have received it”.I. * 2 They say this means that the plenary jurisdiction granted by this section to a bankruptcy court is a jurisdiction “to reclaim or replevy”. The action it is said must be one to recover or reclaim “transferred property”, and it must be brought “against whoever may hold or have received it”; that is, it is the ancient right which a creditor had in equity to remove some obstruction fraudulently placed by the debtor in the creditors’ path, but that this does not include the right to “cast the debtor or his accomplices in damages”. 3

The complaint states that in March, 1945, when the alleged fraudulent transfers took place, the Eisenrods owned all of the stock in Lincoln Machine Co., here called Lincoln, a Rhode Island corporation. Lincoln, it is alleged, was “owned, controlled, dominated and operated” by the Eisenrods. At that time the Eisen-rods contrived to procure their own election as directors of Poulsen & Nardon, Inc., hereafter called Poulsen, the California corporation which subsequently was adjudicated bankrupt. The Eisen-rods then arranged for Lincoln to acquire all of the stock of Poulsen. To furnish the funds for this acquisition the Eisenrods caused Poulsen, contrary to its by-laws, to transfer to Lincoln large sums of money aggregating amounts in excess of $615,000, under the guise of loans to Lincoln, although Lincoln was insolvent and its only purported asset was the stock of Poulsen thus acquired. Additional sums, it is alleged, were *680 transferred' to the Eisenrods as purported commissions to them and for use by them in purchasing stock of Poulsen. These transactions were pursuant to a fraudulent conspiracy, scheme and plot concocted by Poulsen, acting through the Eisenrods, who became the officers of that corporation and who contrived to elect one Jack D. Eisenrod in the place of the third director who resigned. The scheme and plot was one designed to transfer from Poulsen assets belonging to it, and available for payment to its creditors, to the defendants and to their owned, controlled and dominated Lincoln Machine Co., with intent and purpose to hinder, delay or defraud Poul-sen’s creditors, and with the design and contemplation that funds so transferred to Lincoln should come to the defendants in the form of salaries.

The complaint also states that part of the scheme was to pay the Eisenrods exorbitant, unreasonable and inflated salaries as officers of Poulsen. That as a result of the acts thus performed there was transferred to the defendants or to their wholly owned, dominated and controlled corporation, a sum in excess of $722,000. It also alleged the existence of an extensive indebtedness on the part of Poulsen to various creditors; that corporation’s inability to meet those debts largely on account of the fraudulent transfers here mentioned; and the bankruptcy adjudication in May, 1948. The prayer was for judgment that these transfers be set aside and be decreed to be fraudulent and void as to the creditors of Poulsen; that the defendants be required to account for funds found to have been diverted by the bankrupt corporation to them, and that plaintiff have a money judgment against the defendants.

. Appellants say that at most this complaint alleges acts on the part of defendants which despoiled or damaged the bankrupt corporation but that it does not state a cause of action within the meaning of § 70, sub. e or within the jurisdiction of the court below because it shows first, that the bankrupt itself did not make any transfer, and second, the defendants are' not alleged to have received any such transfer.

Attention is called to the allegation that the by-laws of the bankrupt corporation did not permit its officers or directors to make loans or transfers of its funds under the circumstances here set out and hence that the corporation cannot be said to have acted in making the transfers. Appellants rely principally upon Park v. Cameron, 237 U.S. 616, 35 S.Ct. 719, 720, 59 L.Ed. 1147, in which the court had occasion to examine the allegations of a bill in equity which the court below had dismissed for want of jurisdiction. In that case the court said: “The other allegations are not material to the question before us. Those that we have recited seem to us in their conclusion to import not that the corporation has done anything, but that certain of its officers, by false pretenses, have withdrawn its funds. If so, the suit is not to avoid a transfer by the bankrupt of its property, but a suit against wrongdoers, who have appropriated it without the bankrupt's assent, and therefore not within §§ 23b and 70e of the act [11 U.S.C.A. §§ 46, sub. b, 110, sub. e].” It is said that the complaint here amounts to no more and that we must therefore hold that it disclosed want of jurisdiction in the trial court.

When Park v. Cameron was decided the language of § 70, sub. e was: “The trustee may avoid any transfer by the bankrupt of his property which any creditor of such bankrupt might have avoided * * (Italics supplied.) After the amendment made by the Chandler Act the section read: “A transfer made or suffered or obligation incurred by a debtor adjudged a bankrupt under this title which * * * is fraudulent as against or voidable for any other reason by any creditor of the debtor * * * shall be null and void as against the trustee of such debtor. * * * ” (Italics supplied.) Title 11 U.S.C.A. § 110, sub. e(l). Also in the 1938 Act the definition of “transfer” in § 1(30) was amended to make it clear *681 that “transfer” included every “parting with property” or with an interest therein or possession thereof, “voluntarily or involuntarily”. 4 It appears to us that these 1938 amendments operated to bring within the orbit of § 70, sub. e the very thing which transpired here.

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Bluebook (online)
211 F.2d 678, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 3878, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eisenrod-v-utley-ca9-1954.