Landa v. Whitfield

131 S.W.2d 310, 1939 Tex. App. LEXIS 751
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 21, 1939
DocketNo. 10542.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 131 S.W.2d 310 (Landa v. Whitfield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Landa v. Whitfield, 131 S.W.2d 310, 1939 Tex. App. LEXIS 751 (Tex. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

SMITH, Chief Justice.

This action was brought by G. D. Whitfield, receiver of Adams Company, a corporation, against M. A. Keller and Harry Landa, to recover the sum of $25,000. Upon a jury trial Whitfield recovered the *311 sum sued for with interest, from both Keller and Landa, jointly and severally. Landa alone has appealed.

Adams Company, capitalized at $40,000, was organized in 1906 and operated a general store in the town of Devine, in Medina County, until it was closed in November, 1937, by the receiver, who was appointed in March, 1937.

At the inception of the transaction here under inquiry, and for many years before, the capital stock of the corporation was owned as follows: Appellant, Harry Landa, a corporate director, owned $25,000; L. F. Price, $10,000; M. A. Keller, director, president and treasurer, $5,000. It is true, but apparently immaterial to this inquiry, that at the time in question two •employees of the corporation, and one of Danda,' all serving as corporate directors, ■each supposedly held, but did not in fact own or possess, a qualifying share of stock. Owning no stock, they were prohibited by the corporate charter from acting as directors.

In March, 1936, Keller purchased 'all of Landa’s stock at par, paying him therefor by checks upon the corporate accounts in banks at Pearsall, Lytle and San Antonio, over a period ending in August, 1936. As Keller thus drew upon the corporation funds he charged the amounts of the withdrawals against himself on the books of the corporation. Later in the year Keller also purchased all of Price’s stock in the corporation, at 140, or $14,000 for stock of the par value of $10,000. He paid Price ■for that stock as he had paid Landa, by cheeks upon the corporation’s bank accounts, and, as before, charged the amounts ■against himself on the. company’s books.

By these processes, and by November, 1936, Keller, had become and thenceforth •remained the sole owner of all the capital •stock of the corporation. The business of the corporation was continued under Keller’s ownership and management. It .aggregated something like half a million dollars in the year 1936, in which Keller .acquired all the stock in the corporation, .and at the end of that year it distributed .a 10% dividend to its lone stockholder, Keller, and $2000 in bonuses to its employees. From December 4, 1936 (several .■months after Keller purchased Landa’s stock), to March 16, 1937 (when the receiver was appointed), its deposits and ■withdrawals from the Alamo National Bank of San Antonio, its principal depository, approximated $300,000. So that, whatever may be said of the legality of the transaction by which Keller acquired Landa’s stock, it did not affect the solvency of the business, which remained solvent and continued its operations as a going concern.

However, on March 31, 1937, Keller being still the owner of all of said stock, four individuals and Alamo National Bank of San Antonio, claiming to be creditors of the corporation, filed their petition in a District Court of Bexar County, praying that a receiver be appointed for the corporation, upon' allegation, in effect, that although the corporation was solvent, with only $175,000 liabilities as against $300,000 assets, it was nevertheless in imminent danger of becoming insolvent, unless placed in receivership; that under receivership the corporation’s property “can be preserved, administered and liquidated, in whole or in part as may appear necessary, in an orderly manner and a reasonable time, for prices and amounts sufficient to pay in full the just claims of all creditors and probably leave a substantial equity for the stockholders.”

On the same day an attorney purporting to act for the corporation filed answer for it, admitting as true the facts alleged, waiving service and agreeing to the appointment of a receiver as prayed for, and, again on the same day, the court appointed appellee as receiver, it being recited in the order therefor that

“It appearing to the Court that Defendant is solvent but is unable to meet its current obligations as they are presented, and is in imminent danger of insolvency * * *, and that the appointment of a receiver will make possible an orderly liquidation which will probably permit the payment of all liabilities; and

“It further appearing that such orderly liquidation can best be attained by the continuation of the business of Defendant by such receiver as a going concern; and that for all these reasons the appointment of a receiver with full powers as set out below is justified and proper, and for the best interests of all parties; * *

The receiver took over the affairs of the corporation and continued to operate its business as an admittedly solvent and going concern until sometime in November, 1937, when he discontinued active operations.

In the meantime, however, on August 28, 1937, appellee as receiver brought this *312 suit in behalf of the corporation to recover of both Keller and Landa the amount the former had paid the latter for his shares of the corporate stock. The receiver rested his cause, and recovered, upon the contention that Keller’s use of corporate funds with which to purchase Landa’s stock was without the knowledge or approval of the board of directors, as such, consisting of Landa, Keller and the three “dummy” directors, and was therefore illegal and a conversion of the corporate funds.

Keller did not resist the suit, but Landa, denying knowledge that Keller had paid him out of corporate funds, defended upon the ground that the corporation, being a solvent and going concern at the time and for eighteen months thereafter, and not yet shown to be insolvent; and the questioned act having been committed by and with the present knowledge and subsequent ratification of the owners and holders of all its capital stock, the corporation, or the receiver suing in its behalf, had no cause of action against Landa.

As a practical matter the suit is one in equity, partaking somewhat of the nature of an action for accounting. It rests upon the theory that Keller and Landa converted funds of the corporation to their own uses, wherefore, they must make restitution to the corporation.

It is not a suit at law to recover or protect title to specific property belonging to the corporation.

The distinction between the suit in equity on the one hand and at law on the other is important, and, in cases of this character, controlling.

For, while a corporation (in this case acting through a receiver) may maintain a suit in its own behalf as a legal entity to protect or recover title to property, it can maintain a suit in equity only as the representative of its stockholders. So that, if its stockholders are themselves not entitled to equitable relief, they cannot obtain such relief through the corporation or in its name, whether the action be brought directly by the corporation or by a receiver or trustee in its name. Home Fire Ins. Co. v. Barber, 67 Neb. 644, 93 N.W. 1024, 1032, 60 L.R.A. 927, 108 Am. St.Rep. 716, and authorities there cited. In that case it was said by Commissioner Roscoe Pound, for the Supreme Court of Nebraska, after announcing the above rules: “It would be a reproach to courts of equity if this were not so.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
131 S.W.2d 310, 1939 Tex. App. LEXIS 751, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/landa-v-whitfield-texapp-1939.