Mock v. P.F. Goodrich Corporation

38 N.E.2d 900, 110 Ind. App. 685, 1942 Ind. App. LEXIS 188
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 22, 1942
DocketNo. 16,530.
StatusPublished

This text of 38 N.E.2d 900 (Mock v. P.F. Goodrich Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mock v. P.F. Goodrich Corporation, 38 N.E.2d 900, 110 Ind. App. 685, 1942 Ind. App. LEXIS 188 (Ind. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

Curtis, J.

The controlling facts herein, each established by at least some competent evidence, are substantially as follows: Prior to January 1, 1930, the State Bank of Warsaw, hereinafter referred to for brevity as thé State Bank, and the Indiana Loan and Trust Company, hereinafter for brevity referred to as the Trust Company, had been operating as two separate and distinct state banking institutions in the City of Warsaw, Indiana. On that date both banks were solvent going institutions, at which time there was executed a written contract in which all of the stockholders of each of said two banks joined. This contract made provision for the unification of said two banks into one institution. This unification was accomplished ; and the name of the new institution was Indiana State Bank and Trust Company, which for the sake of brevity is hereinafter referred to as the Uni *688 fied Bank. The important provisions of the said contract provided that the capitalization of the Unified Bank should be $200,000.00 in paid-up capital stock and $25,000.00 in surplus; that the banking plant of the said State Bank was to be abandoned and the plant of the Trust Company would be used to carry on the banking business of the Unified Bank. Paragraph 11 of the said agreement provided that each of said banks was required to put into the Unified Bank $112,500.00 of the $225,000.00 Unified Bank aggregate banking . capital.. Said contributions were to consist of the said banking plant used and assets to be valued and approved by a joint committee named in the agreement. A sufficient amount of approved assets of each of said banks, to equal and cover their respective deposits and all other liabilities, was likewise to be selected and placed into the Unified Bank. We now quote paragraph 23 of said agreement as follows:

“All property of every kind belonging to The Bank and all property of every kind belonging to the Trust Company, which is not put into the Consolidated institution in accordance with paragraph 11,” (providing the mode of making up capital, surplus and banking assets to cover liabilities) “shall become respectively the joint property of the stockholders of The Bank and the Trust Company, in proportion to their several stock inter- . ests, immediately prior to the consolidation, and shall be managed as trusts by the trust department of the consolidated institutions, in the usual way and at the usual and established compensation, and reports of such property held in trust shall be rendered to each of such stockholders from time to time by the consolidated institution.”

Provision was also made in the said agreement authorizing the committee named therein to take the necessary steps either to form a new corporation or to amend the charter of the Trust Company so as to *689 bring the said union into legal being at the time the agreement was to be consummated. The committee was granted full power to carry the provisions of the agreement to a completion, and was to have powér to arrange and determine the details of procedure whére no specific provision was made in the agreement, and to meet any contingency that might arise. As paragraph 24 of the said agreement has some relation to the matter under consideration, we now set it forth as follows:

“24. Taxes under either Federal or State laws, on account of property owned or business done, prior to January 1, 1930, by The Bank and by the Trust Company shall be the obligations of the respective stockholders of these corporations in proportion to their several stockholding interests on January 1, 1930, immediately prior to the consummation of the merger. Primarily such taxes shall be paid by the trust department of the consolidated institution and it shall be entitled to immediate reimbursement from the funds of the respective trusts described in paragraph 23. If funds for that purpose are not available from said respective trustee, then each such stockholder hereby promises to pay his proportionate shares on demand, and on failure so to do, the amount with interest at the prevailing rate shall be a lien on his interest in the consolidated institution, and shall be deducted from his next ensuing dividend.”

In carrying out its powers, the committee caused the name of the Trust Company to be changed and the capital stock to be increased from one thousand shares of common stock of the par value of $.100.00 each to two thousand shares of common stock of the par value of $100.00 each, and made the required exchange of stock certificates to' all former stockholders of the two institutions whG were issued stock proportionate to *690 their holdings in the respective banks. In carrying out the agreement, each bank duly delivered to the Unified Bank approved assets to cover its portion of the capital structure of the Unified Bank, to wit, $112,500.00, together with other sufficient approved assets to cover the deposits and liabilities of each, all of which assets were placed upon the books of the Unified Bank pursuant to such agreement.

Each bank had assets which, at the time of the unification, were not needed for use to form its respective portion of said new capital structure and to cover completely its respective deposits and other liabilities. During the trial of this cause, these remaining assets were called and referred to as overplus. This so-called overplus was treated as in the nature of a dividend in kind, declared by the stockholders of each institution and held in trust by the Unified Bank for them respectively under the provisions of paragraph 23, above quoted.

There was a record made by the committee of these so-called dividends in kind of the Trust Company. This record was lost or destroyed and not produced at the trial, but there was oral evidence from a member of the committee that such said so-called dividend in kind was' made up substantially of the items of property listed and set forth in the petitioner’s amended petition and consisted of specifically described real estate and choses in action and the like. These overplus assets were carried on the statement of the Unified Bank as a trust fund and dealt with by it as a trust account for the benefit of the shareholders of the Trust Company and of the State Bank respectively, the evidences of debts being filed in separate portfolios. There was some evidence that meticulous care was not exercised entirely in the segregation, but that in the main there *691 was substantial segregation. The overplus account in the Trust Company (the one under consideration herein) consisted of choses in action, promissory notes, certificates of deposit, and five separate parcels of real estate which the Trust Company owned at the time of the unification. There never was any formal conveyance of this real estate to the Unified Bank as Trustee, but the title continued in the name of the Trust Company. It appears from the evidence that the trust ledger items were not accurately described; and the principal evidence of identification at the trial consisted of personal recollection of the officers of the Trust Company and of the Unified Bank, who were actively in contact with the said items both before and after the unification.

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Bluebook (online)
38 N.E.2d 900, 110 Ind. App. 685, 1942 Ind. App. LEXIS 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mock-v-pf-goodrich-corporation-indctapp-1942.