Manufacturers' Savings Bank v. Big Muddy Iron Co.

97 Mo. 38
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 97 Mo. 38 (Manufacturers' Savings Bank v. Big Muddy Iron Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Manufacturers' Savings Bank v. Big Muddy Iron Co., 97 Mo. 38 (Mo. 1888).

Opinion

Black, J.

This is a suit begun by the plaintiff and now prosecuted in its name for the purpose of compelling the directors of Big Muddy Iron Company to account for property which it is alleged they fraudulently and secretly sold, and by reason of which alleged fraudulent and secret sale it is claimed the stock held by the plaintiff was rendered worthless. It is also alleged that the defendants converted to their own use pig iron of the value of §126,000.

It appears that Benjamin White owned seventy-five shares of preferred and one hundred and fifty shares of common stock in the Big Muddy Iron Company. He transferred this stock to Mr. Harding, president of the plaintiff, a banking corporation. The transfer is absolute on its face ; but it was made to secure a debt owing by White to the bank. The transfer was. made in November, 1872, and in the fall of 1873, the bank caused the stock to be sold and became the purchaser of it. This suit was commenced in 1874, and slumbered along until 1879, when the bank transferred the stock to Cook, who transferred the one-half to P. C. Bulkley, and this suit seems to be prosecuted by then? in the name of the bank. It may be here stated that Bulkley was a director and the secretary of the Big Muddy Iron Company, during the entire time of its existence, though it seems he opposed the sale of which complaint is made.

The general facts are not disputed and they are [42]*42these: The defendants, O ’ Reilly, Whitman, Mills, Lancaster and White' and other persons purchased an iron furnace and certain personal property at an assignee’s sale in bankruptcy, on the twenty-third of March, 1872, for $139,000. They were stockholders in and, creditors of the bankrupt corporation. On the fifth of April, 1872,- they organized the Big Muddy Iron Company, transferred the property so purchased to it, and the corporation became liable for the payment of the $139,000. The company was organized with 1,570 shares of stock of the par value of two dollars per share. But nine hundred and thirty shares of stock were ever taken, so that the company had a capital of only $1,860". The company conducted the business until the last of December, 1872, when it became involved, unable to pay its debts, and the directors sold the furnace to a new company by the same name. This new company was organized with a capital of $200,000 for the express purpose of buying the property of the old company, and the defendants were stockholders and officers in the new company, so that in effect the sale was one by themselves to themselves.

So far as the manufactured pig iron on hand is concerned, it is sufficient to say that it was sold by the directors in the usual course of business for about $105,000, and the proceeds were applied to the payment of the debts of the company. This they had a right and were in duty bound to do.

The sale to the new company included the furnace, machinery, implements and raw material on hand. The new company paid for the furnace and existing contracts for material, the sum of $156,000. It also took the raw material on hand at the cost price. There were other assets, such as bills receivable, not included in the sale. It is this sale of which complaint is made. The plaintiff alleges that the old company was solvent and [43]*43was doing a large and profitable business in the manufacture of pig iron at the time of this sale, and that the sale rendered the stock worthless. The cas.e was heard by a referee who made a report and upon which there was judgment for the defendant.

For the purpose of determining whether the company was solvent when the defendants made the sale, the referee made an estimate of all the assets at that date. The sale did not take effect until the first of January, 1873, and this is made the date of the estimate. In this estimate the referee places the furnace and works at $129,120, and the plaintiff insists that it should have been put down at not less than $156,000. The evidence of the value of the furnace ranges from $70,000 to $250,000, so that there is abundant evidence to support the finding of the referee, and it will not be disturbed. He places the value of the pig iron on hand at $105,335. This value he gets by taking the sales of it actually made, and it was clearly the correct method, for it appears that the accounts of iron made and shipped, as they were kept at the furnace, were unreliable and conflicting. Objections were also made to other of the items of this estimate, but the plaintiff has furnished no abstract of the evidence and for this reason we decline to go through the great mass of evidence found in the manuscript record. The referee gives his detailed findings on these disputed items and his reasons for his conclusions as to the amounts to be set down, and with them we are satisfied. The report shows much care taken by the referee on the trial, and is not to be disturbed as to the finding of facts, except upon a clear showing of mistake, and that has not been done in any instance.

The referee places the assets at $304,023 and the liabilities at $288,942, thus showing a surplus of a little over fifteen thousand dollars. But these assets were not money and the company needed a large amount of [44]*44cash to enable it to go on with its business, and the assets were not available at the prices stated, and hence the referee finds that the company “was insolvent: and that it was not possessed of sufficient assets wherewith to pay its liabilities in the usual course of business as they matured ; nor sufficient assets to meet and discharge its liabilities by any usual or ordinary disposition and application of the same.” He also finds that the $156,000 was paid by the new company in debts of the old company, which debts were for the most part held by the defendants and were then cancelled ; that the sale was open and authorized and ratified by a majority of the stockholders in open meetings called for that purpose. Many efforts had been made to sell the property, and we do not see that the company' had any prospect of making a sale to persons, other than the defendants,, for a price in excess of $75,000. This seems to have been the highest offer made, yet the defendants, for the new corporation, took the same property in payment of debts to the amount of $156,000.

We held in Hutchinson v. Green, 91 Mo. 367, that when a corporation became unable to meet its obligations in the usual course of business, the directors could make a voluntary assignment for the benefit of all of the creditors, and that they could do this without the consent of stockholders. So, too, it is the duty of the directors to pay the debts of the company ; and they are justified in using the property for that purpose; they may use the property for such a purpose, though the company be thereby disabled from carrying on its business, if they act in good faith. Morawetz on Priv. Corp. [2 Ed.] sec. 513. Here, the corporation was insolvent, unable to go on with its business. As said by the referee, it had to go into liquidation of some sort. Had this sale been made to persons other than the directors themselves, its validity could not be questioned by the stockholders in any form of action.

[45]*45Directors of a corporation have no right to nse their official position for their own benefit; nor can they represent the corporation and themselves in the same transaction. They may be made to account to the corporation for all profits made by the use of the corporate property. Ward v. Davidson, 89 Mo. 440; Keokuk Packet Co. v. Davidson, 95 Mo. 467. But according to what we held in

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Bluebook (online)
97 Mo. 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/manufacturers-savings-bank-v-big-muddy-iron-co-mo-1888.