In Re Kansas City Journal-Post Co.

144 F.2d 791
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedAugust 11, 1944
Docket12791
StatusPublished
Cited by78 cases

This text of 144 F.2d 791 (In Re Kansas City Journal-Post Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Kansas City Journal-Post Co., 144 F.2d 791 (8th Cir. 1944).

Opinion

144 F.2d 791 (1944)

In re KANSAS CITY JOURNAL-POST CO.
BOSTIAN
v.
SCHAPIRO.

No. 12791.

Circuit Court of Appeals, Eighth Circuit.

August 11, 1944.
Rehearing Denied September 5, 1944.

*792 *793 *794 *795 A. J. Granoff and Samuel W. Sawyer, both of Kansas City, Mo. (Claude A. Ferguson, of Kansas City, Mo., on the brief), for appellant.

R. B. Caldwell, of Kansas City, Mo. (John W. Oliver, of Kansas City, Mo., on the brief), for appellee.

Before GARDNER, JOHNSEN, and RIDDICK, Circuit Judges.

JOHNSEN, Circuit Judge.

The proceeding is one in reclamation in the estate of the Kansas City Journal-Post Company, bankrupt, publisher of the former Kansas City Journal-Post. The trustee of the estate has appealed from an order of the District Court granting the petition of Morris Schapiro to reclaim the building, the machinery, and the other equipment of the newspaper plant, and directing the trustee to turn the property over to him. See 51 F.Supp. 1009. The referee had denied Schapiro's right to reclamation and at the same time had subordinated his rights in the property to the claims of general creditors.

Schapiro's title to the property rested upon his purchase of it at a foreclosure sale, held between the filing of the involuntary petition in bankruptcy and the date of the adjudication, under a power of sale in a Missouri deed of trust securing a $500,000 bond issue. Schapiro had acquired all of the bonds a few months before the bankruptcy and some time later had directed the indenture trustee to foreclose. After the foreclosure sale, Schapiro took possession of the property, but, following the adjudication and the referee's appointment of a receiver, he surrendered the property to the receiver, under protest and without prejudice to his right of reclamation.

The referee denied the reclamation, set aside the foreclosure sale, and subordinated Schapiro's rights on the bonds and the deed of trust to the claims of general creditors, on the grounds that Schapiro had violated a fiduciary duty to the creditors; that he was in fact guilty of perpetrating a gross fraud upon them; that his fiduciary obligation arose out of his having also become the owner of the capital stock of the corporation in the same transaction by which he acquired the bonds; that the contract *796 with the former holder of the bonds and stock required the purchaser, as part of the consideration for the transfer, to put $100,000 new working capital into the corporation — the seller being desirous of having the newspaper kept going as long as possible; that this provision of the contract conferred a benefit and a right upon the creditors of the corporation, which became vested when the transaction was closed; that while the $100,000 new capital purported to have been put into the corporation's treasury at the time the seller transferred the bonds and stock to Schapiro, the money (except $100) was almost immediately withdrawn — a check for $24,000 thereof going into Schapiro's hands the very same day, and $75,000 being drawn out a few days later and appropriated by Harry Newman, who had been instrumental in getting Schapiro into the deal and had been made president of the corporation at the time the transaction was closed;[1] that Schapiro and Newman intended from the start that the $100,000 never should become available to the corporation and its creditors; that Schapiro acquired the bonds and stock with the intention of liquidating the business of the corporation, becoming the owner of all its property and assets, and allowing general creditors to "hold the sack"; that the foreclosure proceedings were part of this fraudulent scheme; and that Schapiro's conduct in the entire situation was so grossly inequitable in relation to his fiduciary duty to the general creditors as to require that the foreclosure sale (held after the institution of bankruptcy) be set aside, Schapiro's lien under his bonds and deed of trust be forfeited to general creditors, and his claim upon the bonds generally be subordinated to the claims of all other creditors. We have stated merely the effect of the referee's memorandum opinion, findings and conclusions, without any attempt to use his exact language.

The District Court held that the referee was not warranted in thus forfeiting Schapiro's lien rights under the bonds and deed of trust to the general creditors; that the evidence did not establish any fiduciary relation and duty to general creditors in respect to Schapiro's purchase and enforcement of the bonds, which could afford the foundation for a subordination of any part of his acquired rights; that Schapiro was not the holder of the corporation's capital stock at the time he contracted to purchase the bonds, nor was his transaction one with the corporation, but it was an arm's-length purchase from a third party of the valid and defaulted obligations of the corporation, without any contractual limitation imposed by the seller on the purchaser's enforcement-rights in favor of the corporation and its other creditors; that Schapiro manifestly was not acquiring the bonds as a philanthropy to the general creditors, but for the obvious purpose at some time of realizing a personal profit thereon; that as an outsider to the corporation he could owe no duty to creditors that would make it inequitable for him to enter into such a deal; that his taking over of the worthless capital stock in connection with the transaction was simply an incident to his acquisition of the bonds, since it clearly appeared that it was his intention to dispose of the stock; that the acquiring of the bonds and the foreclosure of the deed of trust therefore could not be claimed to involve any violation of fiduciary duty or to constitute a fraud upon the general creditors; that general creditors could in no way be injured thereby, because there was no possible equity in the lien property; that the only wrong shown by the evidence to have been done to general creditors was the subsequent withdrawal of the $99,900 new working capital from the corporation's treasury; and that, if Schapiro could be claimed to have been in any way a party to this fraud,[2] and thereby to have violated a fiduciary obligation by virtue of his having become the owner of the capital stock, this still would not warrant the wiping out of his validly-acquired lien rights, under the guise of equitable subordination, since the fraud was wholly unrelated to the transaction by which he had acquired his bond rights. Here also, as in the case of the referee's holdings, we have attempted *797 only to state the effect of the District Court's memorandum opinion, findings and conclusions.

The contentions raised by the trustee on the appeal go generally to the questions whether the District Court took proper cognizance of the findings of the referee, under Order 47, General Orders in Bankruptcy, as now existing, 11 U.S.C.A. following section 53, and whether it was justified in reversing the referee's order on the basis of the principles which it thought controlling. Some of the history preceding the bankruptcy and the foreclosure, as it appears in the record, will perhaps be helpful to a proper perspective and sound weighing of the opposing views of the referee and the District Court.

I.

In 1931, Henry L.

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Bluebook (online)
144 F.2d 791, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-kansas-city-journal-post-co-ca8-1944.