In Re Kelly-Springfield Tire Co.

10 F. Supp. 414, 1935 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1703
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedMarch 2, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 10 F. Supp. 414 (In Re Kelly-Springfield Tire Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Kelly-Springfield Tire Co., 10 F. Supp. 414, 1935 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1703 (D. Md. 1935).

Opinion

CHESNUT, District Judge.

Gentlemen, I shall be very happy to give you my views and ruling about this matter *415 that has been presented. I am exceedingly obliged to the numerous gentlemen, counsel and others who have attended this hearing and given the Court the benefit of their views about the affairs of the Kelly-Springfield Tire Company. The discussion has reached over a wider range of subjects than are really presented to the Court at this time.

The petition of the Kclly-Springfield Tire Company is filed under section 77B of the Bankruptcy Act (11 USCA § 207), and the duty of the Court on presentation of a petition of this kind is rather more limited than the range- of discussion that has taken place with regard to it. The language of the act, subsection (a) of section 77B (11 USCA § 207 (a), provides that upon the filing of such a petition the Judge shall enter an order either approving it as properly filed under this section if satisfied that such petition or answer complies with this section and has been filed in good faith, or dismissing it.

Now, that is the sole question that is before the Court at this time and one or the other of the alternatives must be adopted. It must either be approved or it must be dismissed, and I understand the clear indications of this section are that if the Judge is satisfied that such petition complies with this section and has been filed in good faith, then it should be approved.

It seems to me there arc three questions that are relevant to the consideration of whether it should be approved or dismissed. To comply with the section, it must be filed in good faith. And the three questions that are raised, it seems to me are, first, the jurisdiction of the Court with respect both to subject matter and also, subordinately, with respect to venue; then on the merits of the face of the petition whether it seems to be filed in good faith; and if in compliance with the section on other matters of substance.

As to the jurisdiction in the sense of venue, that is to say the proper district court in which such a petition may be filed, the language of subsection (a) of section 77B (11 USCA § 207 (a) is that, “The petition shall be filed with the court in whose territorial jurisdiction the corporation, during the preceding six mouths or the greater portion thereof, has had its principal place of business or its principal assets, or in any territorial jurisdiction in the State in which it was incorporated.”

Now, this particular corporation was formed under the laws of New Jersey. It has a manufacturing plant in Cumberland, Maryland, where it employs over a thousand employes, and the papers indicate that the plant originally cost $16,000,000, and has been written down on the books now to about $6,000,000. The corporation also has had a place of business in New York, which it is suggested is its principal place of business, so that it is obvious that any one of three districts of the United States might have been invoked in the filing of the petition, either in New York, in New Jersey or in Maryland. However, the petition which is before me has, in fact, been filed here, and I do not know that I am concerned at this time with the question as to why it was filed here. So far as jurisdiction is concerned in the sense of venue, Maryland is one of the districts in which it might be filed under the Statute, and it has been filed here. Therefore, this Court has jurisdiction in the sense of venue, because I take it there really is no controversy under the allegations of the petition and indeed under what I understand to be the facts that are practically conceded by all interests, that the principal assets of the corporation are here in Maryland.

I have listened with interest to the suggestion in argument of counsel who took some exception to the fact, on the factual ground, but I have not been impressed by it. I think it very clearly appears from this petition that the principal assets of the Kelly-Springfield Tire Company are in the State of Maryland.

For what it may be worth, I may also say that I have long been impressed, in professional practice, as well as on the Bench, with the consideration that a corporation has its principal habitat, outside of technical provisions of the law, in the place where it has its plant, and I do not think that it can be seriously debated that where a corporation has a thousand employes, a plant costing millions of dollars, and has always had its plant in a particular state, it is in economic and financial substance, and in the language of business, the corporation of that state.

We know, of course, with the facilities existing now of incorporating in any one of the forty-eight states of the Union, many corporations for the purpose of taxation, or because solicited or advised by lawyers, go outside of their real homestead to become incorporated. Whether that is a for *416 túnate dr unfortunate practice, we need not stop to consider here. Many people call such corporations “tramp” corporations. I would not suggest that is true with regard to this corporation. No doubt it was formed in New Jersey for very good reasons at the time, and it was entitled to have its home in Maryland, it selected Maryland as its place of manufacture,, and it has clearly, I think, under the language of the petition, its principal assets in the State of Maryland. So I have no hesitation whatever in finding that there is jurisdiction here in the venue sense.

The next question is whether the petition is filed in good faith, and I have been at some pains to inquire whether the action of the Executive Committee of the Corporation in filing this petition here can be properly taken as the authorized action of the Corporation as such. It is by no means unusual in corporate affairs, in the management of corporate business, for the Executive Committee to act for the whole Board of Directors, and in matters of this kind, where decisions have sometimes to be reached promptly with regard to litigation, especially when the affairs of the Company are in more or less of a complicated legal situation, it is not surprising to me that the Executive Committee should have undertaken to act for the Board of Directors.

If it had been brought to my attention in any formal way, on which I could have based a conclusion that the Executive Committee did not fairly at the present time legally represent the Corporation, I would have regarded that as unquestionably bearing on the validity of the filing of the petition and the selection of venue; but I find nothing on the face of the paper, nothing has been brought to my attention by the numerous gentlemen who have expressed their views, to convince me, or to give me any reasonable doubt, that prima facie the Executive Committee at least was authorized legally to act for the Corporation.

So that I do not understand how it can properly be suggested at this stage of the proceedings, at least, that it was not filed in good faith.

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Bluebook (online)
10 F. Supp. 414, 1935 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1703, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-kelly-springfield-tire-co-mdd-1935.