Hayhurst v. Boyd

300 P. 895, 50 Idaho 752, 1931 Ida. LEXIS 78
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJune 8, 1931
DocketNo. 5594.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 300 P. 895 (Hayhurst v. Boyd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hayhurst v. Boyd, 300 P. 895, 50 Idaho 752, 1931 Ida. LEXIS 78 (Idaho 1931).

Opinion

*755 BUDGE, J.

In an action against the Boyd Hospital, a corporation, for damages on account of injuries alleged to have been sustained while a patient in the hospital, appellant recovered a money judgment December 22, 1922, which was by this court affirmed on appeal. (Hayhurst v. Boyd Hospital, 43 Ida. 661, 254 Pac. 528.) On the appeal from the judgment against it, the hospital corporation did not execute an undertaking in the way of a supersedeas to stay execution, and execution on the judgment was issued and levy made October 23, 1923, on certain personal property, consisting of equipment and furnishings of the hospital, and on certain real property. Thereupon a demand was made, supported by affidavit, for the release of the property levied upon, for the assigned reason that none of such property was owned by the judgment debtor, the Boyd Hospital. Nothing further was done in consequence of the levy. Shortly thereafter the instant action was commenced by appellant against T. 0. Boyd and members of his family (individually and as trustees of the Boyd Hospital, a corporation), the Boyd Corporation and the Boyd Hospital, a corporation.

The allegations of the complaint as amended are directed mainly against T. O. Boyd personally and individually and assert in substance and effect that he was the chief actor in the incorporation of the Boyd Hospital (organized for the purpose of conducting a general hospital in the city of Twin Falls) and of the Boyd Corporation (to be used in name as a holding and disbursing company for the properties of T. O. Boyd and the Boyd Hospital), this being done in order to make it appear that said hospital was a sepa *756 rate entity from T. 0. Boyd, holding no property and not being financially responsible for any debts, obligations or damages which should be incurred in conducting the hospital business, and that, pursuant to such plan T. 0. Boyd appropriated to his own use all of the.assets of the Boyd Hospital so as to cheat and defraud creditors; that the said T. 0. Boyd was and is the true and lawful owner of the property levied on under appellant’s judgment and that such property was and now is subject to sale in satisfaction of said judgment and under the levy made thereon; that the claims of the other defendants, including members of the family of T. 0. Boyd and the Boyd Corporation, to an interest in the property levied on, are fictitious and untrue and were made at the solicitation of T. 0. Boyd in furtherance of his plan in conducting a general hospital business and for the purpose of cheating and defrauding appellant out of his judgment. The complaint prayed for an accounting of the assets of T. 0. Boyd, the Boyd Corporation and the Boyd Hospital; that it be decreed that T. 0. Boyd and the Boyd Hospital are one and the same entity and that the property levied on in execution of appellant’s judgment be declared to be owned by T. 0. Boyd as the Boyd Hospital and subject to the lien of appellant’s judgment; that the defendants be restrained from disposing of such property without first applying the proceeds thereof to the payment of appellant’s judgment; and for judgment against all of the individual defendants in the amount of appellant’s judgment obtained against the Boyd Hospital, together with interest and costs.

The cause was tried to the court without a jury. The court found that T. 0. Boyd had been a duly licensed physician engaged in the practice of his profession at Twin Falls and that other individual defendants were his wife and children; that, originally incorporated in 1914, under the laws of this state, as the Twin Falls Hospital, with a capital stock of 500 shares of the par value of #10 each, of which 36 shares were all that had been subscribed, the corporate name of the hospital was in 1917 changed to *757 Boyd Hospital, and that the charter of the Boyd Hospital and its right to do business as a corporation had been forfeited November 1, 1921; that the business of the hospital had been conducted as a corporation on property the record title to which had stood in the name of the Boyd Corporation for more than a year prior to the incorporation of the Twin Falls Hospital (1914); that T. 0. Boyd was not the sole or only real or actual owner of the capital stock of the Boyd Hospital or of the Boyd Corporation, but that as president of the Boyd Hospital and with the consent of other stockholders he had controlled and managed its business and affairs; that the defense to the action brought by Hayhurst against the Boyd Hospital was conducted in the name of the Boyd Hospital, a corporation, but the expenses thereof were paid by T. 0. Boyd personally; that said action was brought against the Boyd Hospital, a corporation, and against no other party, and throughout said action the Boyd Hospital was treated and considered by plaintiff as a corporation; that plaintiff did not enter the hospital in the faith induced by any act or word of any of its stockholders, directors or officers, or of any defendant, that it was the owner of any property or that T. 0. Boyd was or would be personally responsible and liable for the debts or torts of the Boyd Hospital; that at no time while plaintiff was in such hospital was he under the personal or professional care or attention of defendant T. 0. Boyd, and in entering the hospital he did not contract for such care and attention, and the judgment obtained by him against the hospital was not for damages for any personal act or negligence of defendant T. 0. Boyd; that the Boyd Hospital at no time made any profits over and above its operating expenses and charges, and its capital was consumed in the payment of its debts, and that said hospital did not at any time own the property levied upon or any other property, real or personal; that such matters as above recited were not in fraud of any creditor of the Boyd Hospital, a corporation. This appeal is from the judgment entered January 17, 1930, in consonance with the findings.

*758 The principal question here is whether there was sufficient evidence before the trial court to require a holding that the fiction of the corporate entity of the Boyd Hospital should be disregarded and its alleged alter ego, T. 0. Boyd, held personally accountahle for the satisfaction of appellant’s judgment against the hospital.

The findings of the • trial court as hereinabove set out are largely predicated upon the lack of sufficient competent evidence to the contrary of the facts therein stated. In contending that this was not the proper attitude in the light of what is disclosed by the record, appellant calls attention to some “peculiarities” brought to the surface in this proceeding, i. e., that the Boyd Hospital owned no property and made no profits and acquired nothing by its operations as a hospital; and that, on the other hand, the Boyd Corporation, made up of T. 0. Boyd and members of his family, though not engaged in any actual business enterprise, owned considerable real and personal property. But, appellant says, it is not necessary to rely on such “peculiarities” to support findings in his favor, and as one phase of what he contends is actual, concrete and uncontroverted evidence to fully support findings and judgment in his favor he directs attention to the following:

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Bluebook (online)
300 P. 895, 50 Idaho 752, 1931 Ida. LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayhurst-v-boyd-idaho-1931.