McClung v. Hill

96 F.2d 236, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 3466
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 14, 1938
DocketNo. 8683
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 96 F.2d 236 (McClung v. Hill) 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
McClung v. Hill, 96 F.2d 236, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 3466 (5th Cir. 1938).

Opinion

HUTCHESON, Circuit Judge.

When, in September, 1936, Whitesell-McClung Hardware Company was dissolved by proclamation of the Governor, pursuant to chapter 16880, Laws of Florida, 1935, for failure to pay franchise taxes, appellants were minority stockholders; and with S. A. Whitfesell, its president, constituted the board of directors of the corporation. Thereafter, though, under White-sell’s management the corporation continued to do business, the internal dissension between the Whitesell-McClung interests, which had before the proclamation manifested itself in a struggle for the life of the corporation, became a struggle for control of its funeral obsequies and interment, and of the administration in liquidation of its property. The majority wished it decently buried by, and interred in, a federal cemetery, to wit, bankruptcy, and to have its assets liquidated in that jurisdiction. The minority sought state burial and administration. To attain its end the majority- caused involuntary bankruptcy proceedings to be instituted; the minority applied in the state court for a receiver. Thus raging on two fronts, the tide of battle rose and fell, with here a federal and there a state repulse, but no retreat. Like' the old Saxon warrior, each side, when repulsed, would “lie it down for to bleed a' while, and-then would rise and fight again.” Matters standing thus, but with victory wavering a little toward the banners of the minority, because of a finding in the bankruptcy proceeding that the act of bankruptcy relied on had not been committed by the corporation, the majority interests determined to, and did, take advantage of [237]*237chapter 17803, Acts of Florida, 1937, effective June 8, 1937, amending chapter 16880, Acts of 1935. This act provided that any corporation theretofore dissolved under the act of 1935 for failure to pay capital stock tax, might, by paying the taxes delinquent, and filing the reports called for, have its corporate entity restored, and that “the receipt of the Secretary of State shall be issued for such payments and in such cases shall recite that the said corporation has been fully restored to corporate entity * * * and the said restoration shall have effect ab initio from date of dissolution of -such corporation.” The delinquent taxes having been paid, and the receipt and certificate of the secretary received, at a stockholders’ meeting, notice of which was duly given, the act of the president in paying the taxes and reinstating the corporation was approved and ratified, new directors were elected, and a resolution was adopted admitting the insolvency of the corporation, and authorizing it to file a voluntary petition in bankruptcy. It did this on August 13, 1937, and it was on the same date adjudicated a bankrupt. Thereafter appellants, granted leave to intervene, moved to vacate the adjudication and to dismiss the petition. The motion was in substance that the Whitesell-McClung Hardware Company had been dissolved in September, 1936, under chapter 16880, Acts of 1935; that movants, together with Whitesell, had become trustees for the corporation, and that under chapter 17804, Florida Acts of 1937, amending chapter 16880, § 9, when the bankruptcy petition was filed, the corporation had ceased to exist as a corporation, and no person or persons had any right or authority to take any steps for the conservation or disposition of its assets, except the trustees.

The company filed an answer, in which it set fully forth against the movants its tale of ancient wrongs and grievances, and of all of the efforts, internal and external, the contending parties had made to control the corporation in its life, and its body after death, declared that the corporation had been revived by compliance with chapter 17803, Acts of 1937, and as revived, had, under due and proper authority, petitioned for adjudication as, and been adjudicated, a voluntary bankrupt.

The District Judge, of the opinion: (1) That the state having reinstated and revived the corporation, no one, except one who had acquired vested rights in the dissolution, had any standing to collaterally attack its corporate existence; (2) that though the charter was forfeited and the corporation dissolved by gubernatorial proclamation, a court of bankruptcy could adjudicate the corporation bankrupt and administer its assets for the benefit of its creditors; (3) and that the forfeiture provision of the 1935 act was merely a revenue measure, and the state could provide by statute for reinstatement of the corporation, upon its payment of the delinquent taxes, denied the motion to vacate the adjudication, and also the motion to dismiss the petition. This appeal challenges that order. By it appellants seek to maintain: (1) That a court of bankruptcy may not take jurisdiction of the assets of a dissolved corporation, to administer them in bankruptcy; (2) that whatever the case generally as to the jurisdiction of a court of bankruptcy over dissolved corporations, where that jurisdiction has been invoked by creditors in involuntary proceedings, Hammond v. Lyon Realty Co., 4 Cir., 59 F.2d 592, jurisdiction was not properly exercised here, because the corporation having been destroyed and the administration of its affairs having been vested in its trustees, those who attempted to file the petition as the act of the corporation were without authority to do so, In re 211 East Delaware Place Bldg. Corp., D.C., 14 F.Supp. 96; cf. Chicago Title & Trust Co. v. Wilcox Bldg. Corp., 302 U.S. 120, at page 127, 58 S.Ct. 125, 128, 82 L.Ed. —; (3) if after the dissolution the corporation could have been revived under the 1937 act, this could have been done only by the trustees or the stockholders as a whole, and not, as was done here, by one of the trustees, the president of the company, and there was therefore not only no authority in those who authorized the filing of'the voluntary petition to act for it, but there was no effective revival of the corporate life, and no corporation in existence to be adjudicated.

Appellees stand upon compliance with the revival act of 1937 as conclusively established by the receipt and certificate of the Secretary of State. They insist that the payment of and acceptance by the state of the delinquent taxes, evidenced by the issuance of the statutory receipt has, as between the company and the state, fully revived the corporate life ab initio as of the dissolution' in September, with the result that no one but the state can attack the corporate character of the company, none [238]*238but the state question its existence as a corporation.

Appellants put their confidence in Chicago Title & Trust Co. v. Wilcox Bldg. Corp., supra, holding that a court of bankruptcy will not entertain proceedings under section 77B, 11 U.S.C.A. § 207, to reorganize a corporation dissolved by judicial proceedings in accordance with the laws of the state of its creation, the time for winding up under the state law having expired. They put their confidence too, in Rossi v. Caire, 186 Cal. 544, 199 P. 1042, 1046, a decision of the Supreme Court of California holding that a solvent corporation, whose charter had been forfeited for nonpayment of its license tax, and which had been revived under a retrospective statute, may not, over the objection of a stockholder that he is entitled to have the assets distributed, carry on a continuing corporate existence. Appellees insist that neither of the cases are applicable here.

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Bluebook (online)
96 F.2d 236, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 3466, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcclung-v-hill-ca5-1938.