Mayo v. Pioneer Bank & Trust Co.

274 F.2d 320
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 20, 1960
DocketNo. 17540
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 274 F.2d 320 (Mayo v. Pioneer Bank & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mayo v. Pioneer Bank & Trust Co., 274 F.2d 320 (5th Cir. 1960).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

The Trustees in Bankruptcy of Twin City Construction Company, a Louisiana corporation, sued the Pioneer Bank and Trust Company of Shreveport, Louisiana, to recover $69,145. The Trustees contended that, under Sections 60, sub. b, and 67, sub. d, of the Bankruptcy Act, 11 U.S.C.A. §§ 96, sub. b, 107, sub. d, the bankrupt corporation made three voidable transfers to the Pioneer Bank: (1) one for $50,125; (2) one for $9000; and (3) one for $10,200. The district judge rejected all three claims of the Trustees. On appeal this Court affirmed the district court as to the first two claims, and reversed and remanded the case as to the third claim. 270 F.2d 823. The Trustees have applied for a rehearing as to the first two claims; Pioneer Bank has applied for a rehearing as to the third claim. Both applications are denied.

As to the $50,000 claim, the gist of the Trustees’ application for a rehearing is that the Court was not justified in disregarding the corporate fiction, They argue that Twin City was chartered as a corporation under the Louisiana Corporation Act, LSA-C.C. art. 427 et seq., a statute specifically providing that a corporation is a separate legal entity; that our failure to give effect to the corporation as a separate legal entity is unconstitutional and is a refusal to apply the substantive law of Louisiana, in direet contravention of the Erie doctrine.

We are not impressed. The corporation law of Louisiana is no different from the corporation law of all the other states in general recognition of a corporation as a separate entity — for purposes of con;e)™ anf to serve the ends of justice. But when the corporate fiction is a mere simulacrum, an alter ego or business conduit of an individual, it may be disregarded in the interegt of securing a just determinatioll of the action. See 13 Am.Jur., Corporations, § 7; 1 Fletcher Cyclopedia Corporations § 41 (1931); Latty, The Corporate Entity as a Solvent of Legal Problems, 34 Mich.L.Rev. 599 (1936), to cite just one of many law review articles on the subject; the cases collected in the annotations, 1 A.L.R. 610, 34 A.L.R. 597, 63 A.L.R.2d 1051; and Keller v. Haas, 1943, 202 La. 486, 12 So.2d 238 and Lindstrom v. Sauer, La. App.1936, 166 So. 636, to cite but two Louisiana cases for the general principle involved. Here especially, when the Court is exercising the traditional equity Powers of a court of bankruptcy, we will not permit justice to be frustrated by a fiction that in this case defies common sense and has ceased to have value as a convenient legal tool subserving justice.

Under Section 67, sub. d(2) (b)> u U>S.CJL § 107, sub. d(2) (b), whether a fair consideration has been given for a transfer is “largely a question 0f as £0 which considerable latitude must allowed to the trier of the facts” [270 F2d 829]. Under Subsection (d) 0f gecuon Q’j¡ sub. d(2), as distinguished from Subsection (b), there must be “actual intent” to deceive creditors. This too is largely a question of fact. A federal appellate court does not have the same latitude a Louisiana appellate court has in reviewing the facts. We have, however, restudied the entire record. Again we see no error in the district court finding that: (1) there was a fair consideration; (2) “there is no clear and convincing proof that in making the repayment Gray made it with actual intent [322]*322to defraud the future creditors of Twin City Construction Company.”

jj.

The $9000 deposited in the checking account of Gray Construction Company represented a transfer of $9000 of $10,-000 Twin City borrowed from the Bank. As to this, the Trustees urge that, at least to the extent of the covered overdraft of $4,398.69, the transfer was without consideration and voidable, under Section 67, sub. d(2) (a), (b), and (c), 11 U.S.C.A. § 107, sub. d(2) (a), (b), and (c). There is no merit to this contention.

In the section of the original opinion dealing with the $9000 claim we did not discuss the question of consideration moving to Twin City, because we looked through the corporate fiction and found that Twin City, Gray Construction Company, and Gray were one. Similarly, the district court found: “The Court finds as a fact that there was a considerable degree of commingling of the affairs of W. A. Gray Construction Company and Twin City Construction Company, The same office was occupied, the same personnel and central overhead staff was employed, and Gray, in practice, was using the W. A. Gray Construction Company in connection with the Twin City Blytheville contract being carried out. * * * In accepting the deposit of $9000.00, in giving the credit, and by paying the items subsequently paid and covering the previously paid items in-eluded in the overdraft, the Bank acted in good faith and furnished a fair consideration in the form of such payments and bank clearances * * * ” We agree.

The entire $9000 was transferred to W. A. Gray Construction Company, not pioneer Bank; although of course benefited from the automatic covering of the overdraft. As pointed out p»y- the trial judge in his opinion, “the Bank was merely a depository con¿uít through which the money passed” from Twin City to W. A. Gray Construction Company. We note that in Civil Action No. 5445 of the Docket of the District Court for the Western District of Louisiana the Trustees of W. A. Gray Construction Company are seeking rec°very of ^ amount of the overdraft on the theolJ *hat the S9000, wa® ^ay s money which was improperly paid to the Bank by Preference,

Colby v. Riggs National Bank, 1937, 67 App.D.C. 259, 92 F.2d 183, 114 A.L.R. 1065 was cited and discussed by both parties in their original briefs. The trustees state that they cited Colby only as authority for the proposition that under common law rules the Bank would be liable unless it could bring itself within one °f the statutory exceptions of the Uniform Fiduciaries Act. They contend that 111 the case at bar Section 6 of the Act gives no protection since it applies only to transfer by check; here the transfer was by a debit memorandum.

We recognize the force of the principie, clearly expressed in the Uniform Fiduciaries Act, that ordinary common law rules apply unless the Bank brings itself within a statutory exception. We reaffirm our holding however that Section 9 of the Uniform Fiduciaries Act,1 LSA-[323]*323R.S. 9:3809, protects the Pioneer Bank as to the entire claim of $9000. As for Colby, and as far as an overdraft is concerned, we feel that the dissent in that case presents the sound view that there is no basis for distinguishing between giving a check to a bank in payment of a personal indebtedness and depositing a check in overdrawn account. Similarly, for purposes of Section 9, we see no difference between giving a check to a bank in payment of a personal indebtedness (or depositing a check m an overdrawn account) and giving an order, for record purposes cast in the form of a debit memorandum, to a bank to deposit funds in an overdrawn account.

III.

As to the $10,020 claim, the Pioneer Bank argues that the Court erred in holding that the right of the Bank to its pledgee’s lien and privilege was not perfected by the payment to the Bank of the $10,020 of the proceeds of the Blythe-ville contract. The Bank relies on Ricotta, Trustee in Bankruptcy of Ricotta (L. E. Kimball Construction Co.) v. Burns Coal Building Supply Co., 2 Cir., 1959, 264 F.2d 749, a case not cited in the original briefs.

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