Miller v. South Hills Lumber & Supply Co.

6 A.2d 92, 334 Pa. 293, 1939 Pa. LEXIS 632
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 28, 1939
DocketAppeal, 83
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 6 A.2d 92 (Miller v. South Hills Lumber & Supply Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. South Hills Lumber & Supply Co., 6 A.2d 92, 334 Pa. 293, 1939 Pa. LEXIS 632 (Pa. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Chief Justice Kephart,

William F. Brown, as an individual, owned and operated the South Hills Lumber and Supply Company prior to its incorporation in 1930. He was then appellant’s husband, although by the time of the hearing in this case they had been divorced. J. T. Brady, whoi was interested in the business, placed securities belonging to him as collateral with the bank for a loan of !|15,000 to Brown in 1930, The understanding was that *295 a corporation was to be formed by Brown, and Brady was to receive shares of stock in the company. Brown gave his judgment notes to Brady to protect him against loss. The proceeds of the loans from the bank were immediately placed to the credit of the company, and in June, 1930, the corporation was formed as contemplated. The assets were turned over to the corporation, and Brown, president and director, received 1,200 of the 1,210 shares outstanding. The ten remaining shares were held by two of the other three directors.

Brady, dissatisfied with the arrangements, in September, 1930, threatened to force the corporation into receivership unless his collateral was released. The four directors apparently felt that Brady had a valid claim against the corporation, and to preserve the business they prevailed on appellant to replace Brady’s collateral with her own. On September 19, 1930, without any formal corporate action, Brown executed a new note to the bank for $20,000 in his own name, discharging the $15,000 obligation and Brady’s collateral, and appellant’s securities to the amount of $60,000 were pledged for payment of the $20,000 note. On the same day, the president and treasurer gave her a judgment note for $20,000 to protect her, the directors having informally consented to its execution. The proceeds of the $20,000 loan were used to pay the $15,000 obligation for which Brady’s shares had been pledged, and the balance for payroll and other corporate purposes.

On October 19, 1931, appellant was given a note executed by the president and treasurer for $1,050 to cover interest to that date. One week later, another creditor of the corporation having objected to appellant’s preferred status by virtue of the power to confess judgment in her note, she was induced to surrender her judgment note in exchange for the corporation’s written agreement, signed by the president and treasurer to protect her against loss. There was evidence the latter instrument was executed upon formal action of the di *296 rectors, but the entry of this action upon tbe minutes had been neglected by the secretary. It appears that nothing has been paid to the bank or to appellant on these obligations.

A receiver was appointed for the company in 1932. Appellant, having repeatedly but unsuccessfully requested him to pay her claim which she asserted against the corporation, filed an affidavit of claim in the court below on January 27, 1937, for $21,050, with interest from October 19, 1931, which, after hearing, the court dismissed on the ground that no properly authorized obligation of the corporation had been shown. The court also intimated that appellant was barred by laches in pressing her claim.

In view of the fact, as found by the court below, that Brown owned the company prior to its incorporation and thereafter owned 1,200 of 1,210 shares outstanding, the corporation was substantially a continuance of the old business in a new form. Brown continued to dominate the business. The old name was retained. The assets of the old company were transferred to the new one. Under such circumstances, the courts will not permit the assets in the new company to escape the claims of creditors of the old. The corporate fiction will be disregarded and a continuing liability will be imposed on the business for obligations accrued before incorporation, at least to the extent of pursuing the assets transferred. See Kulka v. Nemirovsky (et al.), 321 Pa. 234, where the cases are collected and fully discussed. 1 Nor will courts, permit such claims to be defeated where, in a close corporation, transactions concerning them are apparently made with corporate authority although none actually existed. 2 The corporate liability comes through *297 the continuing liability of the assets for the debt prior to incorporation. This is one of those instances where courts will, for the purpose of effecting substantial justice and protecting innocent parties, look through the corporate form and regard the corporation and the individuals owning its stock as identical. Thus the corporate screen was torn down in Tucker v. Binenstock, 310 Pa. 254, 263, to prevent the consummation of an illegal transaction; in Stony Brook Lumber Co. v. Blackman et al., 286 Pa. 305, 309-310, to permit the disposal of property where the rights of innocent third parties did not intervene; in Waring v. WDAS Broadcasting Station, Inc., 327 Pa. 433, to permit the actual owner of a one-man corporation to maintain an action as a real party in interest; and in Warburton v. John Wanamaker et al., 329 Pa. 5, to give major effect to the intent of the individual who really owned the corporation.

While Brady, by depositing his collateral with the bank, may have been a creditor consenting to the transfer of the property to the corporation, it did not appear that he relinquished any claim against the assets transferred. On the contrary, he not only contemplated corporate liability but undoubtedly pledged his collateral on that condition, and asserted corporate liability in his action toward receivership which brought about a release of his collateral by the bank.

Appellant substantially assumed the position occupied by Brady and acted for the benefit of the corporation. It cannot deny liability on the agreement to protect appellant’s collateral for the succeeding loan. The claim that arose under that agreement was valid. It was in effect the note given her, which had its inception in the continuing liability of the assets for a debt prior to incorporation. The corporate obligations arising therefrom were executed in appellant’s favor by the president and treasurer, to refund that claim. Although, a corporation cannot assume a private obligation of one of its officers where the funds are used for his private *298 purposes (Culver v. Reno Real Estate Co., 91 Pa. 367; Fehr v. Campbell, 288 Pa. 549; Bank of Shamokin v. Waynesboro Knitting Co., 314 Pa. 365), it can do so where, as here, the funds are borrowed and used for the benefit of the corporation: Buse and Caldwell Dissolution Case, 328 Pa. 211. See also Siegel v. Chidsey, 28 Pa. 279; Walker v. Marine Nat. Bank of Erie, 98 Pa. 574; Larzalere & Son v. Tiel & Tooley, 3 Pa. Superior Ct. 109.

These obligations were incurred when the Act of May 12, 1925, P. L. 615, section 2, was in force.

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Bluebook (online)
6 A.2d 92, 334 Pa. 293, 1939 Pa. LEXIS 632, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-south-hills-lumber-supply-co-pa-1939.