In Re Belmetals Mfg. Co.

299 F. Supp. 1290, 1969 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13339
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedMay 21, 1969
Docket101309
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 299 F. Supp. 1290 (In Re Belmetals Mfg. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Belmetals Mfg. Co., 299 F. Supp. 1290, 1969 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13339 (N.D. Cal. 1969).

Opinion

ORDER AFFIRMING REFEREE

WOLLENBERG, District Judge.

The petitioners, Mr. and Mrs. John Eranosian and Mr. and Mrs. Henry Pah-land, together with two other individuals who were minority shareholders, owned all of the 1,000 shares of the bankrupt corporation, Belmetals. During 1964, one Robert Jernberg entered into negotiations, to purchase these shares. Pursuant to these negotiations, Jernberg himself purchased the 75 shares held by the two minority shareholders, together with 120 of the 500 shares owned by the Eranosians and 102 of the 425 shares owned by the Pahlands, all for the price of $240 per share, or a total of $168,-720, to be paid for in cash, notes, and the purported transfer of certain personal property of the corporation to Eranosian and Pahland, to take place on April 1, 1965. By an agreement dated January 2, 1965, but which the Referee found to have been executed “simultaneously” with the December 31, 1964 agreement, Eranosian and Pahland agreed to sell back to the corporation the same personal property, also on April 1, 1965, for $121,131.00, payable $50,381 in cash and $70,750 by note.

The agreement also provided that if an amount then accrued on the books as a potential liability to the profit sharing plan did not have to be so paid, then the interest of Eranosian and Pahland therein would be paid to them as part of the stock purchase price. The Referee found that under this provision there becáme payable to Eranosian $2,000.31 and to Pahland $1,610.35.

On the notes executed by the corporation in payment for the stock, there remains unpaid to Eranosian $18,909.96 and to Pahland $16,073.42.

On the corporate note of $70,750 purportedly given for the repurchase by the corporation for its equipment, $43,701.82 remains unpaid.

Petitioners contend that the intermediate equipment sale-repurchase transaction here was suggested by the attorney for Jernberg in order to give the corporation a stepped-up basis for its equipment so that it could obtain the benefits of additional depreciation deductions for tax purposes. But the Referee found that at least an equally important purpose of the equipment transaction was to circumvent the limitations of California Corporations Code § 1707(c) upon corporate stock repurchases in amounts exceeding the corporation’s earned surplus fund.

Petitioners filed a reclamation petition seeking the recovery from the trustee of all amounts not yet paid on both the direct stock purchase transaction and the intermediate equipment transaction. Based upon his conclusion as to the motive for the equipment transaction, the Referee denied the reclamation petition.

As part of his answer to the reclamation petition, the trustee sought affirmative judgment for the amount already paid by the corporation to Eranosian and Pahland for their stock, pursuant to Cal.Corp.Code, § 1715, which deals with such stock repurchases where the corporation’s earned surplus was insufficient to pay for the stock at the time the transaction was agreed upon, and the stockholders had knowledge of facts indicating such impropriety. The Referee found that Eranosian had already received $60,214.93 and Pahland had already received $50,547.12, and he granted the trustee judgment for these sums against petitioners.

Petitioners appeal from the Referee’s denial of their reclamation petition and his judgment against them for the sums they have already received. This Court *1293 affirms both aspects of the Referee’s decision.

I

PETITIONERS’ CLAIMS FOR AMOUNTS UNPAID ON THE STOCK REPURCHASE TRANSACTION — CAL.CORP.CODE, § 1707(c)

A. PETITIONERS’ MOTIVE

Cal.Corp.Code, § 1707(c) provides in part: “A corporation may * * * purchase shares issued by it, or by a corporation of which it is a subsidiary, in any of the following cases: * * * (c) Subject to any limitations contained in its articles, out of earned, surplus. * * * ”

Petitioners contend that the transcript affords no evidence for the Referee’s finding that petitioners’ motive in undertaking the corporate equipment transaction was to circumvent the requirements of § 1707(c). They quote the testimony of the attorney who represented them in the transaction, Mr. Charles Tuckman, who testified that the equipment purchase transaction was carried out only at the behest of the attorney for Jernberg, in order to obtain a stepped-up basis on the equipment, and that Tuckman himself would otherwise have arranged the sale for cash and promissory notes. But the Referee did not find this testimony credible, since such a direct arrangement would on its face have violated § 1707(c), and Mr. Tuckman, whom petitioners themselves describe as “an active member of the California and San Francisco bars, and a certified public accountant” must have known this.

Under General Bankruptcy Order 47, the Referee’s findings are binding on this court unless “clearly erroneous”, and the finding on motive here does not appear to fail this test, especially since the Referee had the advantage of observing the witness in determining the credibility of his testimony. 2 Collier, Bankruptcy, § 39.28, p. 1524 (1968 ed.).

Moreover, it should also be noted that § 1707(c) does not speak in terms of motive, but only in terms of consequence. And the consequence of the total stock transaction here, when we look through the intermediate equipment transaction, is a purchase by the corporation of its own stock in excess of available earned surplus funds.

B. ADEQUACY OF THE EARNED SURPLUS

Petitioners have made various attempts to show that the corporation’s earned surplus as of the date of the basic stock transaction (December 31, 1964) was adequate to cover the purchase price for the stock.

The corporation makes its accounting on a fiscal year basis commencing April 1 of each year. In his Memorandum Opinion dated March 13, 1968, the Referee included as part of earned surplus the item of $19,500 shown on the corporation’s balance sheet of December 31, 1964 as “Net Profit for Nine Months Ended December 31, 1964 (After Provision for Federal Income Taxes)”. The Referee thereby calculated an earned surplus of $128,273.59. But in his Findings and Conclusions dated September 4, 1968, the Referee ignored this net profit item and so found the earned surplus as of December 31, 1964 to be only $108,-773.59.

Since this Court takes the view, to be discussed below, that any deficiency in the corporation’s earned surplus makes the stock purchase void in toto, it is not necessary to decide whether the net profit figure should be included in earned surplus here, since even with such an inclusion the earned surplus was insufficient to cover the sale price of $168,720. This is:because, for reasons which will appear shortly, this Court refuses to find the earned surplus augmented by the hypothetical allowance for prior over-depreciation, as petitioners urge, and without such an addition the *1294 earned surplus as of December 31, 1964 does not even approach the sale price figure.

1. Increasing the Earned Surplus Account by Allowance for a Profit Sharing Contribution Plus Allowance for Prior Over-Depreciation of the Equipment Involved in the Stock Sale.

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Bluebook (online)
299 F. Supp. 1290, 1969 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-belmetals-mfg-co-cand-1969.