Madden v. Mac Sim Bar Paper Co.

103 F.2d 974, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 3705
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMay 8, 1939
DocketNo. 7716
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 103 F.2d 974 (Madden v. Mac Sim Bar Paper Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Madden v. Mac Sim Bar Paper Co., 103 F.2d 974, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 3705 (6th Cir. 1939).

Opinion

HICKS, Circuit Judge.

Appellant is a manufacturer of printer’s ink in Chicago. Appellee,, a Michigan corporation, manufactures paper board for packing cases. Its plant and principal of.fice are located at Otsego, Michigan.

The Wolverine Paper Company, having a plant near that of appellee, manufactured waxed paper. Some time prior to 1925 the Wolverine Company went into bankruptcy, which resulted in a loss of about $18,000 to appellee. S. B. Monroe, one of appellee’s directors, acquired the property of Wolverine, as trustee for its bondholders. In an effort to recoup its loss appellee purchased the Wolverine inventory, and with the permission of Monroe, used the Wolverine mill to convert this inventory into finished products which it sold. In this way appellee substantially retrieved its losses and thereafter continued to operate the Wolverine plant, by permission of Mon"roe, as the “Otsego Waxed Paper Company, Division of Mac Sim Bar Paper Company.” The product' of this Division, as the name indicates, was waxed paper.

The profits of the Division from November, 1925, 'to November 1, 1929, were about $26,000. The profit from January 1, 1929, to October 3.1, 1929, was $14,780.76, but the profit for October, 1929, had dwindled .to $160.11. The court will take [975]*975judicial notice that by October the country was in the throes of an economic depression.

About October, 1929, the directors of appellee decided to incorporate the Division under the name of The Otsego Waxed Paper Company, herein called Otsego.

The organization was completed by November 1 and Otsego took over the Division and began business on that date. Its capital stock was $100,000 divided into shares of $10 each. The Division at that time had an inventory of cash, accounts receivable and merchandise in the amount of $88,443.59; but it owed $29,003.57 and appellee had made additions to the buildings, machinery and equipment during October of $3,984.83. An appraisal by a public accountant indicates that these: figures represent sound values and it was agreed between Otsego and appellee that in consideration of appellee’s investment of around $64,000 in the Division, Otsego would issue to appellee $50,000 of its stock and execute a note for $14,000.' This agreement was carried out but Monroe, Trustee, still owned the lands, buildings, machinery, etc., so that it was agreed between appellee, Otsego and Monroe, Trustee, that Monroe would transfer title to this property for $50,000 of the stock of appellee and a note of Otsego for $17,000, thus making the price of the property sold by Monroe, Trustee, $67,000. It was further agreed that Otsego would issue $50,-000 of its stock to appellee to compensate it for the stock it had issued to Monroe. This agreement was likewise carried out. The appraisal and the weight of the proof indicate that the property so conveyed was worth $67,000 at a fair valuation.

The directors of Otsego were Charles E. Nelson, Lewis W. Dickinson, Marvin A. Hart, E. W. Stone and three others. Of these Nelson, Stone and two others were also directors of appellee. Nelson was President and General Manager of appellee and President of Otsego. Dickinson was Assistant Treasurer of appellee and Treasurer of Otsego. Hart, an employee of appellee, was Secretary of Otsego. Otsego’s board did not hold regular monthly meetings but did hold six or eight meetings a year and for convenience these were held immediately after the adjournment of appellee’s board and at appellee’s office. At these meetings the usual business of a board of directors was transacted. Otsego had its own bookkeeper who kept the books in the Otsego plant. Its books were audited annually as a separate and distinct audit, from the books of appellee. It filed its annual reports with the State and paid an annual franchise tax. It filed financial reports with credit agencies and these reports were kept separate from the financial statements of appellee. Mail for both companies was delivered at appellee’s office and there separated and that belonging to Otsego was sent over to it.

Otsego’s general managers and superintendents were employed by its board at fixed salaries. The manager ran the business. He had entire charge of the plant, did the buying and selling and fixed the sales prices but the Company lost from the beginning. It lost $6,229.58 during the first two months of operation and there is evidence tending to show that it'lost $66,000 up to March 20, 1931.

In an effort to stop these losses Joseph T. O’Rourke, experienced in the waxed paper business, was made General Manager and Vice-President of Otsego by its board; but the losses continued, largely due, no doubt, to the general business' depression. O’Rourke was never identified in any capacity with the affairs of appellee. He began to purchase ink from appellant about May, 1931, and his purchases, averaging more than $400 per month, were, charged solely to the account of Otsego. Appellant and O’Rourke both testified that O’Rourke told appellant that any credit would be guaranteed by appellee, but Dickinson testified that he told O’Rourke several times that appellee was not behind the accounts. O’Rourke did not display a particularly friendly attitude toward appellee as a witness, due perhaps to the fact that dissatisfaction arose as to the terms of his contract.

Otsego began to fall behind in its payments and although it would occasionally send a check, the account grew until it finally amounted to about $22,000. In October, 1932, appellant began strenuous efforts to collect. He met Nelson in Chicago and testified that Nelson told him that he would shortly get a check for the account; and that the stockholders of Otsego and appellee were one and the same people and that appellee was back of Otsego, and that he, Nelson, called his attention to a paragraph in a financial statement to the effect that when Otsego got into difficulty there were funds available from appellee. Nelson denied that he ever made such [976]*976statements. Appellant testified that he later went to Otsego and saw. Dickinson and Stone, who advised him that appellee owned Otsego “lock, stock and barrel” and intended to liquidate it; that he thereupon at Nelson’s request called a creditors’ meeting in Chicago; .that Nelson, Dickinson and Stone were there and that Stone spoke for appellee and that various propositions and counterpropositions were made without avail.

Soon thereafter appellant filed garnishments against Otsego’s bank accoxint for $7,500 and $4,500 respectively. These garnishments were largely the actuating causes of Otsego’s bankruptcy in February, 1933. Appellant filed its claim in the bankruptcy proceedings and eventually received dividends aggregating $10,099.93. The final dividend was paid in June, 1935, and in November appellant filed his bill of complaint against appellee, seeking to recover the balance of its claim, $12,611.84, and interest.

The gravamen of the bill is (1) that Otsego was a mere agent of appellee and (2) that it was fraudulently created and used by appellee as a sham or dummy to protect itself' against its liabilities to- appellant and other creditors. It is also urged, in the assignment of errors, though not averred in the bill, that appellee guaranteed -thé payment of its account.

The District Court dismissed the bill.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Precision, Inc. v. Kenco/Williams, Inc.
66 F. App'x 1 (Sixth Circuit, 2003)
Burch v. Reading Company
140 F. Supp. 136 (E.D. Pennsylvania, 1956)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
103 F.2d 974, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 3705, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/madden-v-mac-sim-bar-paper-co-ca6-1939.