McGinnis v. Corporation Funding & Finance Co.

8 F.2d 532, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1653
CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 19, 1925
Docket137
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 8 F.2d 532 (McGinnis v. Corporation Funding & Finance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McGinnis v. Corporation Funding & Finance Co., 8 F.2d 532, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1653 (M.D. Pa. 1925).

Opinion

JOHNSON, District Judge.

Tho matters at issue arise from exceptions to the report of the special master, distributing the funds in the hands of the receiver of the Corporation Funding & Finance Company. From the evidence reported, it appears that the Corporation Funding & Finance Company is a Delaware corporation, chartered on the 23d day of October, 1908, with a. capital of $250,-000 to “purchase and otherwise acquire, hold, sell, assign, transfer, * * *' business concerns and undertakings, mortgages, shares, stocks, policies,, * *' * to acquire good will, rights, and property,” as expressed in its charter.

The Reading Mutual Life Insurance Company, also a Delaware corporation, chartered simultaneously with the aforementioned corporation, on October 23, 1908, promoted and developed a mutual insurance business, which business it was intended should be taken over by a stock insurance company, and, for this purpose, the Reading Life Insurance Company was chartered under the laws of the state of Delaware, with a capital of $300,-000, on tho loth day of April, 1909. The stock company, the Reading Life Insurance Company, could, however, not function under its Delaware charter as an insurance company until $100,000 of its capital stock was paid in. This company was registered and intended to do business in Pennsylvania, but it was not licensed to do business by tho insurance department of the latter state, because it had not qualified for this purpose under its laws, not having paid its capital stock into the treasury.

On October 29, 1908, in anticipation of the organization, of the Reading Life Company, the Corporation Funding & Finance Company passed the following resolution:

“That the Corporation Funding & Finance Company make a contract with the Reading Life Insurance Company to take the entire output of stock of said company and agree to pay the Reading Lile Insurance Company for tho stock when sold, as follows: $10 per share for the first 10,000 shares; $12.50 for tho next 10,000 shares; $15 per share for the remainder. And that the money for tho salo of said stock be turned over to the Reading Life Insurance Company once a month.”

Thereafter, the stock of the Reading Life was sold by the Corporation Funding & Finance Company, or through its authorized representatives, in excess of the price agreed to be paid to the Reading Life of more than $100,000, and the proceeds paid into tho treasury of the Corporation Funding & Finance Company; the stock certificates having boon issued as paid directly to the purchasers by tho officers of the Reading Life. None of the proceeds of this stock was ever paid into the treasury of the Reading Life in pursuance of tho above resolution, hut $5,000 thereof was deposited with the state of Delaware in compliance with its laws authorizing the Reading Life to engage in an insurance business. This sum of $5,000 was returned by the insurance department of tho state of Delaware to the receiver of the Reading Life, who was also the receiver of the Corporation Funding & Finance Company, and he erroneously charged himself with this item in his receiver’s account of the latter corporation. Although tho proceeds of the Reading Life stock sales, or any part thereof, were never paid into the treasury of this company, the Corporation Funding & Finance Company charged itself upon its books with an item of $166,670 as an obligation due the Reading Life for stock subscriptions. Tho proceeds of these stock sales were paid into the treasury and commingled with the funds of the Corporation Funding & Finance Company, by its directors, and a considerable portion thereof was disbursed to these same directors and stockholders of tho Corporation Funding & Finance Company, as salaries and dividends, in face of the fact that the Corporation Funding & Finance *534 Company was helplessly insolvent and had paid into its treasury funds of the stoekholders of the Reading Life Insurance Company, carried upon its hooks and in its reports as an obligation in the nature of a trust fund due the latter corporation.

The assets of the Reading Life, paid to the sales agent of its stoek, the Corporation Funding & Finance Company, by the purchasers of that stoek, was used wholly for the benefit of the Corporation Funding & Finance Company, and the Reading Mutual Life Insurance Company, and the business which was promoted through the Reading Mutual was finally sold and paid into the treasury of the Corporation Funding & Finanee Company.

By written contract dated January 1,1909, the Corporation Company became the agent of the Reading Mutual for a period of 20 years, to solicit and exploit its business, receiving as compensation for the services rendered the first year 80 per centum of all premiums on insurance written and issued, 15 per centum the second year, and 7% per eentum the next 18 years. On April 1, 1909, a new agreement was executed whereby the contract of January 1, 1909, was changed, inter alia, by fixing the commissions at 80, 30, and 22% per centum for the respective terms, and that a stoek company to be called the Reading Life Insurance Company should be formed, and all contracts and policies of the Reading Mutual should be transferred to the Corporation Company. '

At the first meeting of the board of direetors of the Reading Life, after its incorporation, the following resolution was passed:

“Upon motion duly made and seconded, it was resolved that the contract existing between the Corporation Funding & Finance Company and the Reading Mutual Life Insurance Company, dated 1st of January, 1909, and 1st of April, 1909, be and the same each are hereby, respectively, assumed and adopted by this company in all respects and conditions; to take effect as soon as the company commences active operation.” ,

Although some of the statements showed an indebtedness of $166,670 to the Reading Life for stoek sales, the sales books disclose the sale of only 13,461 shares, which, under the resolution of October 29, 1908, would have made the Corporation Company liable to the Reading Company in the aggregate sum of $143,262.50, being for 10,000 shares at $10' and 3,461 shares at $12.50.

The directorate of the three companies was interlocking, and with one or two exceptions was the same in each company. Approximately $744,000 passed into the treasury of the Corporation Company, and only $32,-324.80 of this amount was in the treasury when the receiver was appointed. The purchasers of the stock of the Reading Life were led to believe that their investment would function a stock insurance company, whereas no part of their contribution found its way into the treasury of the Reading Life, they had no voice in its disposition and their company received no benefits excepting the $5,000 deposited with the insurance department of the state of Delaware,

Two of the directors were convicted in the Berks county court, Pa., of a conspiracy to defraud; the ease was appealed to the Superior Court of Pennsylvania, and is reported in 64 Pa. Super. Ct. 395 to 427.

On June 5, 1912, John C. McGinnis was appointed receiver of the Corporation Funding &

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 F.2d 532, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1653, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcginnis-v-corporation-funding-finance-co-pamd-1925.