Lincoln Theatres Corp. v. Fleming

66 F.2d 441, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 2676
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJuly 13, 1933
DocketNos. 3481, 3482, 3486
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 66 F.2d 441 (Lincoln Theatres Corp. v. Fleming) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lincoln Theatres Corp. v. Fleming, 66 F.2d 441, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 2676 (4th Cir. 1933).

Opinion

SOPER, Circuit. Judge.

These companion eases grow out of the bankruptcy proceedings of Boggs-Riee Company, Incorporated, and relate to certain claims filed against the estate of the bankrupt. Case No. 3481 involves a claim of Lincoln Theatres Corporation for $26,000, secured by deed of trust of May 3,1032, upon the trucks and automobiles, furniture and fixtures, and the greater part of the accounts and notes receivable of the bankrupt; case No. 3482 involves (1) a claim of J. D. Lincoln for $2,-000, also secured by said deed of trust, and (2) a claim of J. D. Lincoln to the greater part of the accounts and notes receivable of the bankrupt outstanding on March 301,1932, under an assignment of that date, as security' for his indorsement of notes of the bankrupt in the aggregate sum of $14,466.38; and ease No. 3486 involves an unsecured claim of J. D. Lincoln as assignee of the Virginia Lincoln Furniture Corporation for $8,820'.13. The evidence discloses the attempts of certain persons, who owned a controlling interest in the corporation, to improve their condition on the eve of its bankruptcy, and the following preliminary statement will make more clear the nature of the transactions involved in the particular cases to be hereinafter discussed. By stipulation, the records in all of the cases may be considered and used in each appeal'.

The bankrupt, a Virginia corporation, had its principal office at Bristol, Va., and for many years had operated a chain of furniture stores at Bristol, Tenn., and at Marion, Appalachia, Glade Spring, and Wytheville, Va. On February 10, 1930, the Virginia Lincoln Furniture Corporation, a Virginia corporation, acquired 51 per cent, of the capital stock of the bankrupt, and thereafter its affairs were managed and controlled by the brothers, C. C. Lincoln, Jr., and J. D. Lincoln, and by their attorney, J. P. Buchanan. The Lincoln brothers, together with their mother, owned one-third each of the Lincoln Investment Corporation, a Virginia corporation, which owned the capital stock of the Lincoln Theatres Coloration, also incorporated in Virginia. The Lincolns also owned a controlling interest in the Virginia Lincoln Furniture Corporation. The brothers represented their mother in handling the affairs of these corporations. J. P. Buchanan was secretary and attorney of each of the four corporations, and was also attorney for the brothers, individually, and held a general power of attorney to bind them in any way. These three men dominated the business operations of all the corporations, and the Lincolns were well acquainted with the interrelated transactions now to be described either directly or through Buchanan, their attorney, who was authorized to represent them. For convenience in this discussion the corporations named will be designated as follows: The Boggs-Riee Company, Inc., as the “bankrupt”; Lincoln Investment Corporation as the “Investment Corporation” ; Lincoln Theatres Corporation as the “Theatre Corporation”; Virginia Lincoln Furniture Corporation as the “Furniture Corporation.”

Walter F. Boggs was the president of the bankrupt when the Lincolns acquired a controlling interest therein, and thereupon C. O. Lincoln, Jr., became chairman of the board, J. D. Lincoln, a director, and J. P. Buchanan, a director and the secretary. During the year 1931 the bankrupt made little or no net profit, [443]*443and from January 1 to May 31, 1932, when it voluntarily went into bankruptcy, it steadily lost money. Internal dissensions arose during this period. Boggs, the president, was called upon to resign, and in January, 1932, an arrangement was entered into, consummated at a later date, whereby he retired from the business, and the bankrupt obligated itself, amongst other things, to pay to Mm $25,-000 over a period of years in monthly installments, in consideration of a release by him of a salary contract and the surrender of certain stock which he held. A claim based on this contract was filed by Boggs in the bankruptcy proceedings, and is the subject-matter of another suit decided by this court this day. When Boggs retired as president, he was succeeded by Max Rice, and thereafter Rice and J. P. Buchanan were in active charge of the business, subject to the general control of the Lincolns.

It will he observed that the Boggs transaction, adding $25,000 to the indebtedness of the bankrupt, did not improve its financial condition. What that condition was on and after March 30,1932, it is important to ascertain in order to understand the significance of certain transactions carried out during this period under the guidance of the Lincolns and J. P. Buchanan, their attorney. The District Judge found that on March 30, 1932, the bankrupt was insolvent within the meaning of section 1 (15) of the Bankruptcy Act, 11 USCA § 1 (15), that is to say, that the aggregate of its property, exclusive of any property which it may have conveyed, transferred, concealed, or removed with intent to defraud, hinder, or delay its creditors, was not at a fair valuation sufficient in amount to pay its debts. This finding is challenged by the claimants cMefly because financial statements, taken from the books of the corporation, indicate solvency up to the very end; but the inescapable fact is that a voluntary petition in bankruptcy was filed on May 31, 1932, only two months after the date under discussion; and, when we consider this weighty cirenmstaneo in connection with an appraisal of the asseis made under the direction of the trustees, and other evidence indicating the true condition of the business, we have no hesitation in accepting the finding of fact of the trial judge as correct. Indeed, no other conclusion is possible in view of our determination that the transfers of the bankrupt’s property described below were made in fraud of creditors, for, under the statute, property so transferred may not be taken into consideration in the comparative valuation of assets and liabilities. Lansing Boiler & E. Works v. Joseph T. Ryerson & Son (C. C. A.) 128 F. 701; Acme Food Co. v. Meier (C. C. A.) 153 F. 74. Furthermore, it is manifest that the true condition was known to those in charge of the Lincoln interests, for their complete control over all of the corporations, and the intimate relations between them, indicate quite clearly that they had accurate information of the real situation.

C. C. Lincoln, Jr., and J. D. Lincoln became indorsers for the bankrupt, and the series of transfers of the bankrupt’s property, which we shall now consider, wore inspired by this fact:

(1) On March 30,1932, the bankrupt corporation executed an assignment wherein the indorsement of the Lincolns in the sum of approximately $60,000 on the notes of the bankrupt, held in divers hanks in Tennessee and Virginia, was recited, and the bankrupt, acting through Max Rice and J. P. Buchanan, as officers of the corporation, assigned and transferred to a trustee all accounts and notes receivable belonging to the corporation payable more than 30- days thereafter, and all installment accounts due 60 days thereafter, with power in the trustee to collect the same and pay the proceeds thereof to the indorsers to the extent that they should he compelled to pay any amounts or suffer any damage by reason of their indorsement of the notes. This instrument purports to have been executed in consideration of a promise on the part of the Lincolns to indorse the notes of the corporation, but the fact is that the indorsement of C. C. Lincoln, Jr., on divers notes had been previously given, and that J. D. Lincoln regarded himself as hound thereby, and the assignment was executed for the purpose of protecting the indorser after the insolvency of the debtor had become manifest.

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66 F.2d 441, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 2676, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lincoln-theatres-corp-v-fleming-ca4-1933.