First National Bank v. E. T. Barnum Wire & Iron Works

27 N.W. 657, 60 Mich. 487, 1886 Mich. LEXIS 610
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 27 N.W. 657 (First National Bank v. E. T. Barnum Wire & Iron Works) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First National Bank v. E. T. Barnum Wire & Iron Works, 27 N.W. 657, 60 Mich. 487, 1886 Mich. LEXIS 610 (Mich. 1886).

Opinion

Sherwood, J.

The defendant E. T. Barnum Wire & Iron Works was a corporation, having a capital stock paid in, prior to February, 1884, of $279,750.

At that date the company consisted of fifteen stockholders, among whom were the defendants Lucetta R. Medbury, William Gr. Thompson, Charles H. Thompson, and Henry M. Duifield, the last named having purchased his stock, consisting of $5,000 worth, on the twenty-sixth day of January previous.

Some time subsequent to February, 1884, the capital stock seems to have been increased $100,000, and the new stock was taken in April or May, 1884, by defendants Brace, Hall, Croul, Yernor, and others. Shortly after this, Charles Bewick was given some charge over the affairs of the company, and, during his investigations of the concern, discov[492]*492ered that the company was insolvent, and made report of the fact. This soon became known, and defendants above named, Thompsons, and Medbury, and two creditors, John B. Lee and George G. Morris, besides the appellant in this case, commenced attachment suits against the defendant E. T. Barnurn Wire & Iron Works.

Most of these suits were commenced to recover back money the plaintiffs had been induced to pay the company for its unissued or treasury stock, purchased, as they claimed, upon the fraudulent representation of the president of the company, under which several attachments all the personal property of the corporation within the city of Detroit was levied upon. The claims for which the several suits were brought amounted in the aggregate to the sum of about $80,000.

Lee’s claim was for money loaned to the company, he taking treasury stock as security. His claim was not yet due according to its terms, but he claimed to repudiate the contract on the ground of fraudulent representations concerning the stock, and treat his debt as due from the date the company received his money. The Morris debt was for goods sold to the corporation. His attachment was the last one levied, and the appellant’s was the next preceding it.

The effect of these levies was to suspend work and sales by the corporation at its manufactory, and on the twenty-eighth day of July, 1884, thereafter, the E. T. Barnurn Wire & Iron Works made an assignment for the benefit of its creditors to Abram L. Stebbins, of the city of Detroit, and filed the instrument, with schedules attached, in the office of the clerk of Wayne county.

Stebbins accepted the trust in writing, but neglected to file the required bond. Thereupon the complainants above named, who were creditors to the amount of about $30,000 each, filed the bill of complaint in this cause for the appointment of a receiver pending the final determination of the attachment suits. All parties consented to the appointment of Stebbins as receiver, and he was accordingly appointed [493]*493and gave the requisite bond, with D. Whitney, Jr.', S. J. Murphy, and Nancy L. Avery as sureties.

The attached property was turned over to the receiver by the sheriff, but under the terms of the order that the lien of the attachment was not to be impaired thereby; and it was tacitly understood that the suit of William H. Brace should be the first one tried as a test case. The appellant claims, for the purpose of preparing for trial it was necessary for the plaintiffs to have access to the books of the corporation to show the financial condition of the company at the time the claimed false representations were made, and at the time the attaching creditors purchased their stock, but they were denied this privilege until it was ordered by the court.

That subsequently all the attaching stockholders, except the appellant, and all the other stockholders who claimed to have been defrauded into subscribing for the stock, except two, formed a syndicate to obtain the possession of the assets of the corporation by a purchase of the debts at fifty cents on the dollar, and the claims of those two were purchased under the direction of the syndicate, and in its interest.

That the receiver was fully aware of the organization of the syndicate, and of the meetings of its members prior to its organization, and furnished to them through his counsel, Mr. Holbrook, a full statement of its assets and liabilities, according to which the assets Avere $37,000 over the liabilities, and the cash assets were $6,000 in excess of fifty per cent, of the unsecured debts; and' that during the same period the receiver intentionally omitted to file quarterly reports as required by statute, and never filed any inventory whatever; and, further, that the syndicate were to retain him as general manager for at least a year after the reorganization.

The appellant further claims that no creditor or stockholder of a date of the alleged fraudulently obtained subscriptions was given an opportunity or allowed to join this syndicate, except D. Whitney, Jr.; that be was a director and stockholder to the amount of $10,000 before and at the [494]*494time the attaching stockholders subscribed for their stock, and had as a director declared, and as a stockholder received, dividends on his stock within less than a month of the failure ; that he also claimed to be a secured creditor for more than $60,000, and an unsecured creditor for about $30,000, proofs of debt of both of which claims he had filed in the matter of the assignment; that Whitney was also the principal surety on Stebbins’ bond, which was for $150,000, and before signing this bond as surety, and as an express condition to such signing, Whitney required that Stebbins should select for his counsel as receiver D. C. Holbrook, who was, and for many years had been, Whitney’s confidential legal adviser and counsel, as Stebbins well knew; that Holbrook was also Stebbins1 personal counsel, and was so chosen, being substituted for F. H. Canfield, who’had been attorney for the company ; that under Holbrook’s advice the above-mentioned application for an examination of the books was resisted ; that up to the time of the formation of this syndicate, which was in February, 1885, the receiver and the corporation contested all of the attachment suits.

That the appellant, Dufiield, declined to join the syndicate or sell his claim for less than the amount thereof, and thereupon a meeting of the directors of the company was called, at which a majority of the directors present were members of the syndicate, and a resolution was adopted requesting the receiver to withdraw the defense in all the cases except that of Dufiield, and no further defense was made to them; that this course was taken under the advice of Holbrook.

That Morris’ attachment at this time had been put into judgment, after a contest, and the receiver was resisting payment thereof, and that judgments were allowed to be taken in the other cases,except the appellant’s, for the full amount of each claim; and when appellant applied to have his case take the same course, the receiver replied through his attorney, Mr. Holbrook: Mr. Stebbins deemed it his duty to defend your suit until otherwise instructed by the parties most interested.”

Thereupon the appellant filed his petition in this case, set[495]

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

Related

In Re Paris Academy
Michigan Court of Appeals, 2024
Ypsilanti Fire Marshal v. Kircher
730 N.W.2d 481 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 2007)
Cavanagh v. Cavanagh
375 A.2d 911 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1977)
Singer v. Goff
54 N.W.2d 290 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1952)
Quigley v. Wolf
143 N.W. 882 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1913)
Clapp v. Clapp
1 N.Y.S. 919 (New York Supreme Court, 1888)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
27 N.W. 657, 60 Mich. 487, 1886 Mich. LEXIS 610, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-v-e-t-barnum-wire-iron-works-mich-1886.