In the Matter Of: H. J. Cohn Furniture (No. 2) Co., Bankrupt. H. J. Cohn Furniture (No. 2) Co. v. Texas Western Financial Corporation

544 F.2d 886, 11 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 147, 1977 U.S. App. LEXIS 10735
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 3, 1977
Docket76-3019
StatusPublished

This text of 544 F.2d 886 (In the Matter Of: H. J. Cohn Furniture (No. 2) Co., Bankrupt. H. J. Cohn Furniture (No. 2) Co. v. Texas Western Financial Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In the Matter Of: H. J. Cohn Furniture (No. 2) Co., Bankrupt. H. J. Cohn Furniture (No. 2) Co. v. Texas Western Financial Corporation, 544 F.2d 886, 11 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 147, 1977 U.S. App. LEXIS 10735 (5th Cir. 1977).

Opinion

GOLDBERG, Circuit Judge:

This case raises the question whether a Texas corporation’s written guaranty of a debt owed by a second corporation is a “stock or bond” of the guarantor for purposes of article XII, § 6 of the Texas Constitution. Article XII, § 6 provides:

No corporation shall issue stock or bonds except for money paid, labor done, or property actually received, and all fictitious increase of stock or indebtedness shall be void.

We hold that in the circumstances of this case a corporate guaranty is not a “stock or bond.” Accordingly, the guaranties are not rendered unenforceable against the guarantor merely by virtue of the latter’s failure to receive money, property, or labor in return for entering its obligation.

I. Facts

In 1972 Harold J. Cohn, principal stockholder and president of the debtor, H. J. Cohn Furniture Co., executed certain guaranties on behalf of the debtor for debts of Alamo Carpet Showroom, Inc., Surplus Carpet Sales, Inc., and Signal Carpet, Inc., owed to the appellees. The guaranties were apparently executed to ensure that these corporations would continue to supply the debtor with trade items it needed. 1 The debtor subsequently filed a petition under *888 Chapter XI of the Bankruptcy Act. It now contests those guaranties as invalid under the Texas Constitution.

Cohn Furniture did not raise as a defense to the appellees’ claims in Bankruptcy Court either that Harold Cohn’s executing the guaranties was ultra vires or that such guaranties were unenforceable for failure of consideration. The debtor’s sole defense is that article XII, § 6 applies to corporate guaranties and in the absence of certain consideration renders the guaranties unenforceable.

The Bankruptcy Judge upheld the validity of the guaranties. The district court agreed, finding that article XII, § 6 was intended to limit a corporation’s ability to incur capital indebtedness rather than other forms of liability such as guaranties.

II. Discussion

Whether corporate guaranties are “stocks or bonds” for purposes of article XII, § 6 depends in the first instance on the intentions of the authors of the Texas Constitution. Their purposes may best be inferred from the historical context and the particular set of problems to which they were responding.

In the Interpretive Commentary to the Constitution of 1876, article XII, § 6 is characterized as “a guaranty against the issue of what is known as ‘watered stock’ ” that “was included in the Texas Constitution as an answer to the Credit Mobilier scandal.” 2 See Texas.Const. art. XII, § 6 (Vernon).

After the Credit Mobilier scandal in 1872 and the Panic of 1873, when the failures of watered corporations carried thousands of stockholders to ruin, many southern states grew impatient with Congress’s failure to enact laws governing corporate practices such as issuing watered stock. Some, such as Texas, decided to include in their constitutions provisions outlawing such practices.

Article XII § 6, represents an attempt by the state of Texas to protect its corporate creditors and stockholders against impairment of the capital structure of corporations. This provision removed from promoters and directors of corporations the absolute discretion to decide the consideration in exchange for which the corporation would issue debt or equity securities. Instead of the speculative promise of future services, money or property, as in the Credit Mobilier, article XII, § 6 requires that stock or bonds be issued only for “money paid, labor done or property actually received.”

The appellees would interpret the word “bond” in § 6 to apply to all corporate indebtedness, rather than merely capital indebtedness, and would thus construe “stocks or bonds” to include corporate guaranties. This proposition is on the face of it, unpersuasive, and reflection favors it with little more plausibility.

Were “stock and bonds” construed to include all forms of corporate indebtedness, as the debtor contends then no Texas corporation could be held to an obligation undertaken in exchange for future benefits, and certainly no corporation could guaranty the loan of another for future consideration. It is unimportant in this case whether the debtor was to receive future consideration; in all likelihood it was not. The point remains that article XII, § 6 manifestly did not purport to limit the universe of a corporation’s obligations to those incurred for money, labor or property actually received, but merely to preclude stock or bond issues *889 for all other more speculative or contingent forms of consideration. After all, the evil expressly addressed by the statute is not primarily the absence of any corresponding benefit or even the absence of a proportionate benefit. It is, rather, the absence or incompleteness of present benefit. Money promised but not yet paid, work begun but not completed, property assigned but not yet received — these are insufficient to support a binding stock or bond issue under article XII, § 6. See, e. g., Vermillion Parish Peat Co. v. Green Belt Peat Moss Co., 465 S.W.2d 950 (Tex.Civ.App.1971); United Steel Industries, Inc. v. Manhart, 405 S.W.2d 231 (Tex.Civ.App.1966). There is no reason, however, why future consideration is constitutionally inadequate to support other forms of corporate liability, such as ordinary trade debts, as the debtor would have us hold.

Accepting the debtor’s argument would have another untoward result: it would entail the unconstitutionality of a Texas statute enacted to ensure the enforceability of certain corporate guaranties, Tex.Rev. Civ.Stat. art. 1302-2.06B (Supp.1975) (Vernon). That article, enacted in 1973 and therefore not directly controlling here, provides in part:

Notwithstanding Section A of this Article, any corporation, domestic or foreign, doing business in this state shall have the power to make a guaranty respecting the contracts, securities, or other obligations of any person (including, but not limited to, any domestic or foreign corporation, partnership, association, joint venture, or trust, but excluding any officer or director of such guarantor corporation) if such guaranty may reasonably be expected to benefit, directly or indirectly, the guarantor corporation. The decision of the Board of Directors that the guaranty may reasonably be expected to benefit, directly or indirectly, the guarantor corporation shall be binding upon the guarantor corporation, and no guaranty made by a corporation in accordance with the provisions of this Section B shall be invalid or unenforceable as against such corporation, unless such guaranty is sought to be enforced by a person who participated in a fraud on the guarantor corporation resulting in the making of the guaranty or by a person who had notice of such fraud before he acquired his rights under the guaranty.

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544 F.2d 886, 11 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 147, 1977 U.S. App. LEXIS 10735, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-matter-of-h-j-cohn-furniture-no-2-co-bankrupt-h-j-cohn-ca5-1977.