Hall v. Swan

188 P.2d 437, 117 Colo. 349, 1947 Colo. LEXIS 260
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedDecember 8, 1947
DocketNo. 15,566.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 188 P.2d 437 (Hall v. Swan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hall v. Swan, 188 P.2d 437, 117 Colo. 349, 1947 Colo. LEXIS 260 (Colo. 1947).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Jackson

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is • an action whereby plaintiff seeks personal judgments against the directors of the Bankers Trust Company under our Colorado statutes pertaining to liability of corporate directors. In a trial to the court judgment was in favor of the defendant directors, and plaintiff, coming here as plaintiff in error, seeks reversal.

The transactions from which this case arose are the same as those upon which the case of Bankers Trust Co. v. Hall, 116 Colo. 566, 183 P. (2d) 986, is grounded. For that reason the two cases were orally argued at the same time. The Bankers Trust Company case was an action at law for rescission. Both parties agree that the instant case is in the nature of a proceeding in equity. Both cases arose out of the sale, in January 1921, by Bankers Trust Company of farm loan notes of the Park Range Live Stock Company to certain individual investors, who later assigned their interests to the same plaintiff in both actions. The necessary facts pertaining to Bankers Trust Co. v. Hall, supra, appear in the opinion in that case and we here refer to it as giving additional background to the proceedings in the instant case. A chronological statement of the pertinent facts in the present action is now in order.

In 1923, and at a time long before any of the matters *351 involved in this case had become known to any of the parties herein, the Bankers Trust Company notified all of its customers, including the plaintiff, that it was winding up its affairs and going out of business. Its board of directors, acting pursuant to action previously taken by the stockholders, directed that the corporation be placed in voluntary liquidation in accordance with Colorado law under which it was incorporated. The directors appointed a liquidating committee from their board, naming Swan as the liquidating agent, and authorized the committee to take all steps necessary for the expeditious liquidation of the affairs of the company; accordingly, the company ceased thenceforward to act as a commercial bank of deposit or to deal with the public in handling new business of any sort. As a further step, the remaining assets were converted into cash from which five liquidating dividends were paid to the stockholders, the first on September 1, 1923, and the last in July 1925. These liquidating dividends, or distributions, totaled $1,000,000, which amount .was. the capital of the bank. These payments therefore returned to the stockholders their original capital investment. There remained a surplus of $250,000 in the hands of the directors. The assets back of this surplus were liquidated more slowly over a period of years. At the time of the completion of the return of the $1,000,000 capital to the stockholders, there was approximately $7,000 of known claims against the company for which provision was to be made out of the surplus. This $7,000 of claims was subsequently paid and the annual balance sheets of the corporation filed with the secretary of state for the years 1926 to 1932, inclusive, copies of which were introduced in evidence by plaintiff, disclose a gradual decline of this surplus fund until on December 31, 1932, the company had on hand but $95.73. There was evidence to the effect that this shrinkage in value was caused by expenses of the company’s operations and the financial panic which commenced in the fall of 1929. No charge of mismanagement *352 was made either in the complaint or by the testimony. The corporation had been reduced to a mere shell or paper corporation, and the evidence shows that it continued thus until the expiration of its charter in 1940. In the meantime an agent and officer of the company wrote a letter dated October 16,1933, addressed to plaintiff and to the other noteholders who were his assignors, stating that the original circular describing the ranch loan was erroneous in certain respects. This letter was used in fixing the date when plaintiff had notice in the Bankers Trust Company case, where the court instructed the jury as follows: “Gentlemen of the Jury, with the consent of counsel, the court is making the following statement: Counsel for the plaintiffs has stated that the letter of October 16, 1933, was such notice to the note-holders of fraud in the original circular that it put them on notice thereof, and that the noteholders in this case were all put on such notice on October 16, 1933.”

February 11, 1935, plaintiff filed suit against the Bankers Trust Company. In Bankers Trust Co. v. Hall, supra, the course of that litigation is described, from which it will be noted that plaintiff did not succeed in obtaining its first judgment against the Bankers Trust Company until July 25, 1938. Execution was returned unsatisfied October 5, 1938. February 16, 1939, plaintiff filed his original complaint in the instant case, in which he alleged that:

“On or about November 1, 1934, said Bankers Trust Company contracted an indebtedness with plaintiff and eighteen other persons * * *. Said indebtedness so contracted by Bankers Trust Company with plaintiff and his said eighteen assignors was for money had and received, by virtue of a contract implied by law in manner and form as follows:
“On or about January 2, A.D. 1921, said Bankers Trust Company by numerous false and fraudulent statements and representations then and there made by it to plaintiff and his said eighteen assignors, caused plaintiff and *353 his said eighteen assignors to pay to it certain large sums of money for certain first mortgage notes made and issued by Park Range Live Stock Company, a corporation, which said fraud so committed against plaintiff and his said eighteen assignors, was not discovered by him and them, or any of them, until on or about said first day of November, A.D. 1934. Shortly thereafter plaintiff and his said eighteen assignors elected to and did rescind their several purchases of said mortgage notes, and did then and there demand of and from said Bankers Trust Company restitution of the several sums of money which they had paid to it as and for the purchase price of said notes; but their several demands for restitution and the return of their money were refused by said Bankers Trust Company.”

Plaintiff’s two specifications of error are the following:

“I. The judgment of the trial court is against the law as set forth in Sections 34, 62 and 68 of Chapter 41 of the 1935 Colorado Statutes Annotated, which said statutory provisions are mandatory in requiring that the property of a corporation must first be appropriated to the payment and satisfaction of the claims of holders of ‘liabilities’ against the company before any portion of it can be distributed to the stockholders.
“II. In Dick v. Petersen, 90 Colo. 83, 87, this Court said: ‘The effect of these two sections (Secs. 62 and 68, Ch. 41, 1935 C.S.A.) is to save to persons to whom the corporation owes “debts” contracted, the right to enforce payment thereof, and to persons in whose favor the corporation has incurred “liabilities” the right to receive satisfaction therefor. On the other hand, if dissolution of this corporation was not effected, the claim of the plaintiff, which was reduced to judgment, the validity of which is not challenged,

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Bluebook (online)
188 P.2d 437, 117 Colo. 349, 1947 Colo. LEXIS 260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-swan-colo-1947.