Green v. AR Clark Investment Company

363 S.W.2d 802, 1962 Tex. App. LEXIS 2069
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 28, 1962
Docket16369
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 363 S.W.2d 802 (Green v. AR Clark Investment Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Green v. AR Clark Investment Company, 363 S.W.2d 802, 1962 Tex. App. LEXIS 2069 (Tex. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

MASSEY, Chief Justice.

Matters in the case on appeal are rather involved, with the most important question appearing to be whether or not a constructive trust was properly engrafted on a fund, or what remained thereof, in the *805 hands of the alleged trustee. We have reached the conclusion that the facts and circumstances of the case did not entitle the plaintiffs to such form of a trust, but only to an equitable lien.

Before going into the facts giving rise to the causes of action presented on trial we will state our interpretation of the law in an abstract situation.

Where a Texas corporation is the obligor on an obligation which is not matured, as, for example, upon a promissory note which has not become due or which is not in arrears, and where obligee, or creditor, finds that the corporation has distributed all its assets to one of its stockholders with notice, so that the corporation is insolvent or does not possess assets sufficient to discharge the obligation (to the obligee-creditor) when it shall become due, said obligee may invoke the equity jurisdiction of the district court to have it declared that the stockholder holds the assets distributed to him and still in his possession burdened by an equitable lien. Simkins on Equity, 2nd Ed., p. 350, “Equitable and Contract Liens — Further Illustrations of Equitable Liens”; Panhandle Nat. Bank v. Emery, 1890, 78 Tex. 498, 15 S.W. 23; Restatement of the Law, Restitution, p. 828, et seq., “Following Property”, sec. 203, “Innocent Converter”, and generally see all of Part II under said Restatement on “Constructive Trusts and Analogous Equitable Remedies”.

In such a situation the obligee is not entitled to have such assets seized nor have a constructive trust engrafted thereon for a variety of reasons, the most important being because the time for the performance of the corporation’s obligation has not matured and the obligee would not be entitled to beneficial use of the assets nor to any increase in the hands of the stockholder to whom distributed, particularly when the obligor’s status would be synonymous to that of an innocent converter. See generally 116 A.L.R. p. 270, et seq., Anno. “Jurisdiction of equity to sequester, seize, enjoin transfer of, or otherwise provisionally secure assets for application upon money demand which has not been reduced to judgment”; 13 Am.Jur., p. 818, “Corporations”, see sec. 804, “(Alienation of Property) — Effect of Prejudice to Creditors”; Restatement of the Law, Restitution, p. 828, et seq., “Following Property”, sec. 203, “Innocent Converter”.

We do not perceive there to be any reason, legal or equitable, to qualify the abstract statement in a case where the distribution of the assets of a corporation to its stockholder involved an innocent conversion by the latter, or was one wherein the obligee-creditor either consented to the distribution or contracted that it might be done in advance with actual or implied knowledge that corporate insolvency would result. In particular would this be true where the obligee’s agreement for the distribution made was qualified by a provision that the stockholder should receive the distributed assets “subject to the corporation debts”. Neither would the fact that the obligee might hold security in the form of liens on real or personal property, to secure the performance of the obligation when it matured, qualify the abstract statement. The position of the obligee-creditor would not be as well secured after such distribution as before, and therefore it should not be said that “adequate provision” had been made for the discharge of the corporation’s obligation as applied to that not yet matured, within the meaning of V.A.T.S., Texas Business Corporation Act, Art. 6.11, “Articles of Dissolution.” In this respect see comment of the Bar Committee under the article.

Let us take the stated abstract situation further, and assume that the obligation (as, for example, a promissory note) did become due and was matured. A confessedly owed liquidated claim, or a claim reduced to judgment in favor of the obligee-creditor and against the insolvent corporation, would support a decree engrafting a trust upon the assets received by and remaining in the hands of the stockholder to whom they had *806 been distributed. Assuming a proper showing could be made in a suit for declaratory-judgment brought by an obligee against the stockholder, such' a right might be authorized to be declared even in advance of the time for the obligation to become matured.

Reverting to the abstract situation as stated, and assuming a dispute, it would be the right of the obligee to maintain a suit for declaratory judgment to have it judicially declared whether (in view of the distribution) the corporation remained personally obligated to him, whether the stockholder became personally obligated to him, and whether the stockholder became personally obligated to the corporation. We believe the corporation would remain and continue to be personally liable to the obligee-creditor in the same manner and to the same extent as would have been the case had the corporation been an individual, for in this the corporation had bound itself by contract. The stockholder would be personally liable to the obligee-creditor because he received the corporate assets knowing that to do so would render the corporation insolvent. The stockholder would be personally liable to the corporation for the same reason, it being through the corporation that it would be liable to such creditor.

Upon the maturing of the obligation the stockholder’s personal liability to the ob-ligee-creditor could be reduced to judgment • if and in the event satisfaction of the obligation be not readily discharged by the corporation or someone for it, to the extent of the value of the corporate assets which were distributed to said stockholder, and without regard to whether all or any part of the assets so distributed remained in his hands or had been declared subject to an equitable lien. World Broadcasting System, Inc. v. Bass, 160 Tex. 261, 328 S.W.2d 863. If the stockholder receiving the assets were also a director of the corporation there would be no factual question upon the matter of notice and knowledge of the corporation’s insolvency, and he would be chargeable therewith as a matter of law.

The suit out of which the appeal arose was instituted in the district court of Tar-rant County by plaintiffs H. S. Green, William T. Green, A. B. Canning, and Earl M. Moore, who will be hereinafter termed plaintiffs as a matter of convenience, with occasional reference to one or more of them by name. Additional plaintiffs in the suit, as filed, were E. M. Moore Investment Company (a corporation which had succeeded to most of the rights of co-plaintiff E. M. Moore) and the Florida Management Company, a corporation. Florida Management Company may be disregarded for purposes of the opinion. The rights and interests of E. M. Moore Investment Company, being merely by succession to those of Moore, will be settled by what is hereinafter held as to the rights of plaintiffs when considered collectively. As finally resolved the case became one for construction of contract, for declaratory relief, and for appropriate equitable relief in view of the contractual construction, contractual reformation, and declaratory relief anticipated.

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363 S.W.2d 802, 1962 Tex. App. LEXIS 2069, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-v-ar-clark-investment-company-texapp-1962.