Masco Building Products Corp. v. Indisco, Inc.

2 Mass. L. Rptr. 125
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedMay 15, 1994
DocketNo. 91-3181
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Mass. L. Rptr. 125 (Masco Building Products Corp. v. Indisco, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Masco Building Products Corp. v. Indisco, Inc., 2 Mass. L. Rptr. 125 (Mass. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

Fremont-Smith, J.

In this case, the plaintiffs Masco Building Products Corp.’s Thermador division (“Thermador”) and Sub-Zero Freezer Co. Inc. (“SubZero”) sold electrical appliances, including refrigeration equipment and freezers, to Indisco, Inc. (a subsidiary of Boyd Corporation) which was a wholesaler of electrical appliances, including those manufactured by the plaintiffs. James C. Boyd (“Boyd”) is the president and chief executive officer of Boyd Corporation and treasurer of Indisco. The plaintiffs contend that they are owed substantial money by Indisco for goods sold and delivered, but have not been paid because Indisco provided a guarantee of Boyd Corp.’s indebtedness and a security interest in all of its merchandise to Shawmut Bank, N.A. (“Shawmut”) and to Baybank Harvard Trust Company (“Baybank") in order to secure payment of $9.5 million of Boyd Corp.’s debt to said banks.3 Plaintiffs seek to have this court annul the security interest and enter judgment against Shawmut and Baybank for the amount of Indisco’s unpaid balance to each plaintiff, on the ground that Indisco’s guarantee of Boyd Corp.’s debt and Indisco’s provision of a securiiy interest to the banks was without fair consideration and rendered Indisco insolvent, and therefore constituted a fraudulent conveyance in violation of G.L.c. 109A. The plaintiffs also seek judgment against Indisco, Boyd Corp. and Boyd individually for misrepresentations and against Indisco and the Boyd Corporation for violations of c. 93A, §11.

The case was tried jury-waived on April 11-14, 1994. Based on all of the credible evidence, the court makes the following findings of fact and rulings of law.

FINDINGS OF FACT

On August 11, 1992, this Court entered an order of partial summary judgment for Masco (here “Therm-ador”) in the amount of $234,692.69 plus interest and for Sub-Zero in the amount of $501,721.64 plus interest, against Indisco.

The evidence was also undisputed that, in early 1991, the Boyd Corp. began the process of closing its businesses, including Indisco, and liquidating assets in order to pay creditors, and that pursuant to the guaranty and securiiy interest from Indisco, all of the proceeds from the sale of Indisco’s assets, including Sub-Zero and Thermador inventory, were applied to pay down the banks’ loans.

Prior to October 11, 1988, when Indisco guaranteed Boyd Corp.’s debt and provided a securiiy interest to the banks, Indisco was the only profitable Boyd Corp. affiliate or subsidiary, i.e., the only such company with a positive cash flow. Boyd Corp., however, was operating at a loss, with negative cash flow, and cash generated by Indisco was being deposited into Boyd Corp.’s bank account and used to service Boyd Corp.’s bank loans, which then totalled about $10.5 million.

In April 1988, representatives of Shawmut met with James Boyd to review the debt of the Boyd Corp. to Shawmut. The bank representatives reviewed the increased expenses, decreased sales, increasing operating losses, lack of depth in financial management and the likely further erosion of profit margins due to competition from the new superstores, and informed James Boyd that they required, among other items, that Indisco guarantee payment of the Boyd Corp. debt to the banks4 and provide a securiiy interest in all the inventory and receivables of Indisco.

On October 11, 1988, Indisco provided to Shawmut and Baybank a security interest in all its personal property and fixtures including its inventory, equipment, bank deposits, receivables, proceeds and accounts, to secure the debt of the Boyd Corporation to Shawmut and Baybank, and guaranteed the payment of the debts and obligations of the Boyd Corporation to Shawmut and Baybank.5

The financial condition of Boyd Corp. continued to deteriorate and, in October or November 1990, Indisco and the Boyd Corp. proposed to the banks a schedule of payments to Thermador and Sub-Zero on the outstanding balance due each company and the banks agreed to fund certain payments by Indisco to SubZero and Thermador. In return for the Boyd Corporation’s agreement in January 1991 to pay the outstanding debt of Indisco to Thermador in weekly payments of approximately $50,000, Thermador agreed to continue to ship products to Indisco. Similarly, Boyd Corporation agreed to make weekly payments to Sub-Zero on behalf of Indisco, in amounts ranging from $25,000 to $108,000, so that Indisco’s debt to Sub-Zero would be fully paid by April 26, 1991. All of the agreed payments, however, were not made.

I find that Indisco received no valuable consideration from Shawmut or Baybank for its grant of the securiiy interest or its guaranty of payment of the debt of the Boyd Corporation to Shawmut and Baybank. Defendants argue that the guarantee and security interests allowed Boyd Corp. to stay in business by [127]*127providing it with a continued line of credit, and thereby to continue to fund Indisco’s business operations. Defendants argue that therefore Indisco received, indirectly, fair consideration from the transaction. Here, however, unlike the situation in In Re Lawrence Paperboard Corp., 76 B.R. 866 (Bkrtcy. D.Mass. 1987), all of the intercompany benefits from the transaction flowed only one way (from Indisco to Boyd Corp.), and Indisco received nothing of value in return. Nor was there here, as in Lawrence, any identity of interest or identity of officers and directors between the parent and subsidiary corporations. Here, moreover, Indisco held itself out to the public as an independent distributing company, from which its name “Indisco” is derived. In these circumstances, there is no justification to pierce Indisco’s corporate veil. Moreover, Boyd Corp. and Indisco were separate corporations, and Indisco required no cash from Boyd Corp., or any line of credit from the banks, except that necessitated by Boyd Corp.’s siphoning of Indisco’s cash and surplus to pay Boyd Corp.’s debts.

I find, moreover, that Indisco’s assumption of Boyd Corp.’s debt rendered Indisco insolvent within the meaning of c. 109A, §2(1). When Indisco guaranteed payment of the full amount of the Boyd Corporation’s debt to the banks and granted a security interest in all its assets, the guarantee of Boyd Corp.’s payment became a contingent liability or a loss contingency of Indisco, which Financial Accounting Standards Board (“FASB”) Standard No. 5, paragraph 4(h), required, under accepted accounting practice, be recorded on the balance sheet of Indisco. This is because FASB Standard No. 5 requires a contingent liability to be rendered on the balance sheet when the occurrence of the entity is “probable”6 and the amount of loss can be reasonably estimated.7

In view of the financial condition of Boyd Corp. and the economic recession at that time (October 1988), I find that it was probable, within the meaning of the FASB Rules, that Indisco would be called upon to pay, under its guarantee, the debt of the Boyd Corporation to the Banks, and that the contingent liability of Indisco to pay the debt of the Boyd Corporation to the banks should have been recorded as a liability on the balance sheet of Indisco.

While Indisco itself had a positive net worth of over $600,000 and was solvent before the October 11, 1988 transactions, Indisco’s guarantee of Boyd Corp.’s $7.7 million dollar liability produced a negative equity (i.e. an excess of liabilities over assets) of about $7 million.

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2 Mass. L. Rptr. 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/masco-building-products-corp-v-indisco-inc-masssuperct-1994.