Hoagland v. United States Trust Co.

160 A. 662, 110 N.J. Eq. 489, 9 Backes 489, 1932 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 131
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 4, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 160 A. 662 (Hoagland v. United States Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoagland v. United States Trust Co., 160 A. 662, 110 N.J. Eq. 489, 9 Backes 489, 1932 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 131 (N.J. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

Berry, V. C.

The complainants seek to set aside as fraudulent, under section 64 of the General Corporation act, a payment of $20,000 to the United States Trust Company on account of a note of the bankrupt held by that company on April 1st, 1930, and a payment of $4,500 to the defendant Clifford E. MacEvoy Company in satisfaction of a note of the bankrupt in that amount held by this defendant on April 4th, 1930. The W. J. MacEvoy Construction Company was adjudicated a bankrupt on July 2d, 1930, a voluntary petition having been filed on June 11th, 1930. Both of the payments involved were made for past indebtedness.

Section 64 of the General Corporation act provides in part that “whenever any corporation shall become insolvent or *491 shall suspend its ordinary business for want of funds to carry on the same, neither the directors nor any officer or agent of the corporation shall sell, convey, assign, or transfer any of its assets, effects, choses in action, goods, chattels, rights or credits, lands or tenements; nor shall they or either of them make any such sale, conveyance, assignment or transfer in contemplation of insolvency, and every such sale, conveyance, assignment or transfer shall be utterly null and void as against creditors.” The sole question here involved is whether or not, on the dates of these two payments, the W. J. MacEvoy Construction Company was insolvent. The question of the payments being “in contemplation of insolvency” may be entirely eliminated, as I find no evidence which would indicate that insolvency was in contemplation either by the bankrupt company itself or the defendants on the dates in question, except in the sense stated by Vice-Chancellor Grey in Reed v. Helois Carbide Specialty Co., 64. N. J. Eq. 231 (at p. 243). In that case Vice-Chancellor Grey said:

“In all business enterprises which are threatened with financial embarrassment, insolvency is necessarily within contemplation. It is very rarely, indeed, that the financial situation of a corporation is so perfectly defined that it continues solvent up to a given instant, and is immediately thereafter insolvent. In almost all such cases there is a period of struggle, during which efforts are made to rescue the enterprise from threatened insolvency.”

But in Regina Music Box Co. v. F. G. Otto and Sons, 65 N. J. Eq. 582 (at p. 586), Vice-Chancellor Stevens said: “To contemplate insolvency within the meaning of the act, is to have in mind something more than the mere possibility of insolvency.” And, indeed, counsel for complainants in their brief abandon any claim that the two payments in controversy were made in contemplation of insolvency and frankly concede that unless the fact of insolvency on the dates of the payments is established the bills must be dismissed.

There is no doubt in my mind but that at the time these payments were made W. E. MacEvoy, who was the controlling *492 factor in the bankrupt company, had no thought but that he would be able to carry on. There is no evidence whatever from which knowledge of the company’s alleged financial embarrassment might be imputed to the defendant trust company. The other defendant was fully aware of the financial condition of the W. E. MacEvoy Construction Company, but that knowledge, in my judgment, justified the belief that the debtor company was entirely solvent. But knowledge of insolvency, either by the officers of the debtor corporation itself or by the creditors who received the contested payment is, of course, immaterial. The fact of solvency or insolvency is controlling. But “the mere circumstance that the liabilities of a corporation exceed its assets does not necessarily constitute insolvency. A corporation, so circumstanced, which is actively pursuing its regular business with reasonable expectations of business conditions improving may not be deemed insolvent within the intent of section 64.” Turp v. Dickinson, 100 N. J. Eq. 41 (at p. 45).

In Schneider v. Hamilton Trust Co., 105 N. J. Eq. 373, Vice-Chancellor Backes said (at p. 375) :

“There can be no doubt that the liabilities of the Savoy Company exceeded its assets and that it was in fact insolvent when the exchange was made. Calling the creditors together shortly thereafter indicates that; but that it was at the time insolvent in the statutory sense, i. e., 'a general inability to meet pecuniary liabilities as they matured, by means of either available assets or an honest use of credit,’ is by no means established. It was functioning normally. It had not actually suspended its ordinary business. Its mill was in full operation, and the exchange was in the regular course of business.”

The word “insolvent” as used in section 64 of the General Corporation act must be defined the same as “insolvent” as used in section 65 of that act; that is, a corporation is insolvent when there is a general inability to meet pecuniary liabilities as they mature by means of either available assets or an honest use of credit. First National Bank of Lyndhurst v. Bianchi & Smith, Inc., 106 N. J. Eq. 333. See, also, *493 Skirm v. The Eastern Rubber Manufacturing Co., 57 N. J. Eq. 179; Wright v. American Finance and Securities Co., 85 N. J. Eq. 181 (at p. 183); Hoover Steel Ball Co. v. Schafer Ball Bearings Co., 89 N. J. Eq. 433.

It is pertinent, therefore, to inquire as to what condition of solvency or insolvency will justify the appointment of a receiver to wind up the affairs of a corporation.

In The Atlantic Trust Co. v. The Consolidated Electric Storage Co., 49 N. J. Eq. 402, which involved an application for a receiver of a corporation on the ground of insolvency, Vice-Chancellor Yan Fleet said:

“The principle which I think should control the court in the exercise of this power is this: never to appoint a receiver unless the proof of insolvency is clear and satisfactory, and unless it also appears that there is no reasonable prospect that the corporation, if let alone, will soon be placed, by the efforts of its managers, in a condition of solvency.”

This language was quoted with approval by Chancellor McGill in Fort Wayne Electric Corporation v. Franklin Electric Light Co., 57 N. J. Eq. 7, and by Vice-Chancellor Stevens in Regina Music Box Co. v. F. G. Otto & Sons, supra. In the latter case Vice-Chancellor Stevens added:

“If this be the true principle where the appointment of a receiver is concerned, certainly a fortiori must it be the true one where the dispute is over the validity of a mortgage, taken by a creditor in good faith, in the ordinary course of its business, a considerable period of time before its failure.”

As pointed out by Vice-Chancellor Leaming in

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Bluebook (online)
160 A. 662, 110 N.J. Eq. 489, 9 Backes 489, 1932 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoagland-v-united-states-trust-co-njch-1932.