In re Builders' Finance Ass'n

26 F.2d 123, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1173
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. California
DecidedFebruary 6, 1928
DocketNo. 10364
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 26 F.2d 123 (In re Builders' Finance Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.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 Builders' Finance Ass'n, 26 F.2d 123, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1173 (S.D. Cal. 1928).

Opinion

McCORMICK, District Judge.

This issue arises on exceptions to tbe findings of fact and report of tbe special master, wherein be concludes that tbe Builders’ Finance Association, Inc., a corporation, was solvent [124]*124on October 18, 1927, tbe date on which a creditors’ petition in bankruptcy was filed in this court asking that said corporation be declared bankrupt; The alleged bankrupt will be referred to herein as the association.

This matter was referred to the special master upon motion of the association for the purpose of determining the issues raised by the answer and specifically whether the association was insolvent and should be adjudged bankrupt pursuant to the National Bankruptcy Law (11 US CA). The order of reference was not made by consent of the parties, and of course, under such circumstances, not only the legal conclusions drawn by the master, but his findings of fact as well, are properly before the court for decision under the exceptions on file. These exceptions are several, but under the conclusions reached it is only necessary to consider those which find and determine that the association was solvent at the time of the filing of the creditors’ petition, and that therefore the petitioning and intervening creditors are not entitled to have the association adjudged a bankrupt within the meaning of the Bankruptcy Law.

The master bases his findings and decision of solvency upon his determination that certain transfers or exchanges of stock of the association, amounting in the aggregate to $214,567, were .void, because made contrary to the terms of the California Blue Sky Law (St. Cal. 1917, p. 673), and .that because of such illegal and void transactions the purchasers are not valid stockholders, and have no provable claims against the association on account of the value of the property which they transferred and delivered at the times of such purported transactions, and that their claims cannot be considered as liabilities of the association in determining whether it is insolvent, as defined in subdivision 15 of section 1 of the Bankruptcy Law (11 USCA § 1, subd. 15). If these claims are liarbilities, the insolvency of the association is unquestionable.

It should be noted that the bankruptcy of the association is wholly dependent upon the question of insolvency, as it is a matter of record in this court that on October 10, 1927, in cause No. N-105-J,' being a suit in equity at the instance of a creditor of the association, a receiver was appointed and thereafter such receiver was put in charge of all of the property of said association. See subdivision 4, section 3, of the National Bankruptcy Law (11 USCA § 21, subd. 4).

The report of the master contains a stipulation of facts made by the parties which shows the manner and details of the stock purchases that are the basis of the master’s decision. Such stipulation recites: “It is hereby stipulated, * * * for the purpose of this hearing, that *’ , * * the

court may consider and pass upon the effect of the following testimony upon the following agreed statement”: That the evidence would substantially be “that the stock purchaser assigned mortgages or conveyed prop- ■ erty and delivered the same to the defendant company after, but substantially at the same time he signed a stock subscription in the same form as Exhibit 12 or 26, already offered in evidence; that at the same time and place a check of the defendant company was made out in favor of the purchaser for the amount of his property, and was immediately indorsed upon the back by the stock purchaser and left with-the company and treated by the parties as payment of the subscription agreement; that at the same time and place certificates of stock were issued in favor of the prospective stockholder and were received by him, and the stock certificate stubs were signed by said prospective stock purchaser; that the prospective purchaser did not take any money into the office or take any money out of the office in connection with said stock purchase, other -than as herein indicated; that the purchasers were first told that the permit authorized the sale for cash only, and were asked to purchase stock for cash, and stated that they had no cash; that they had property or mortgages; that thereupon the company agreed to issue its check for the property or mortgages, and the purchaser agreed to indorse said cheek'as purchase price for the stock; that the cheek issued by the company was immediately indorsed back to the company; that all of said transaction above mentioned was completed at substantially the same time; that from the time of said transaction to the time of this hearing said stockholder has not returned nor offered to return said stock to the company, has not demanded the return of his notes, mortgages, or other property delivered to the company, has received dividends on said stock, and has not exercised any acts of ownership- over the property formerly owned by him; that said stock purchaser received the original of the stock subscription agreement, which was delivered to him, at the time of the signing of said subscription agreement, and retained by him.”

It was through such transactions described in the stipulation that many persons desiring to subscribe for and purchase the [125]*125stock of the association received stock certificates from the association aggregating 2,-138 shares of the preferred and 767 shares of the common stock of said company, and in consideration therefor transferred and delivered to the association their property, amounting to the sum of $214,567. There can be no doubt, under the California Corporate Securities Act (St. Cal. 1917, p. 673) and the applicable decisional interpretations thereof by the California courts, that the stock sales, having been made in violation of the Corporate Securities Act, are illegal and void, and that the courts will afford no relief to either party in an action predicated and founded upon such illegal and void sales. Domenigoni v. Imperial Live Stock & Mortgage Co., 189 Cal. 467, 209 P. 36.

But in this matter at this' time we are not considering, or called upon to consider, whether the purchasers at such stock sales are entitled to relief against the association other than an adjudication in bankruptcy because of the insolvency of the association. It may be that, when the purchasers seek to assert relief against the association that will affect or be prejudicial to the rights of other general creditors of the association, estoppel may conclude them from enforcing their claims against the association until other general creditors have received complete satisfaction of their claims, but no such situation exists at this time. The sole question here is whether the purchasers are in pari delicto with the association, so as to destroy their claims against the association for money had and received, and thus eliminate such claims as liabilities of the association, which must be considered in determining whether it is insolvent within the meaning of the National Bankruptcy Law. The Corporation Commissioner’s permit authorized the association to sell its stock for cash only.

The provisions of the Blue Sky Law requiring that corporate securities be sold in strict conformity with the permit of the commissioner of corporations is for the benefit of the public, so as to prevent the sale by corporations and their agents of spurious and illegal stock and to safeguard the purchasers against the perpetration of fraud by the seller in corporate stock sales.

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Bluebook (online)
26 F.2d 123, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1173, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-builders-finance-assn-casd-1928.