New York Trust Co. v. Island Oil & Transport Corporation

56 F.2d 580, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 2803
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMarch 7, 1932
Docket183
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 56 F.2d 580 (New York Trust Co. v. Island Oil & Transport Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New York Trust Co. v. Island Oil & Transport Corporation, 56 F.2d 580, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 2803 (2d Cir. 1932).

Opinion

MANTON, Circuit Judge.

This appeal seeks a review of an order confirming the report of the special master allowing the claims of the Oil Transport Company and the Sun Oil Corporation in participation with other creditors of the Island Oil & Transport Corporation against the assets in the name of the Island Oil Marketing Corporation and its receivers. The creditors of the Transport Corporation and the Marketing Corporation are to share in pari, passu.

The same persons were appointed receivers, on March 20 and 21, 1922, for both the Island Oil & Transport Corporation and the Island Oil Marketing Corporation. A special master passed" upon the respective claims of ownership to the moneys and assets which came into the possession and control of the receivers of the two companies. On April 15, 1927, the receivers of the transport company filed a claim to all the moneys and property in possession of themselves as receivers of the marketing company. The transport company was incorporated under the laws of Virginia; the marketing company was organized in Delaware, and was authorized to do business in New York state. Subsidiary corporations of the transport company were organized to hold leases to oil lands in Mexico. All the capital stock of the Mexican subsidiaries and the marketing company was owned by the transport company. The marketing company was organized for the sole purpose of marketing oil products from the Mexican properties and to manage the operations in Mexico and buy supplies. After marketing the oil, it made deposits in its account in New York City. It paid the cost of operation and other sales expenses out of this account.

The claim of the appellant, Oil Transport Company resulted from nonpayment of freight charges under a charter party entered into with the marketing company. A secondary liability was assumed by the transport company and the Massachusetts Oil Refining Company, both guaranteein'g performance by the marketing company. The claim ef the Sun Oil Corporation was also for freight charges under a charter party, likewise guaranteed by the transport company and the Massachusetts company.

At one time the transport company did the purchasing and selling necessary in the operation of its business, and kept all accounts, banking and otherwise, but since June, 1919, the date of its creation, the marketing company has attended to these incidents of the enterprise. Indeed, it was an instrumentality created for the purpose of purchasing and selling and otherwise acting as fiscal agent for the transport company. The method of accounting followed by the marketing company indicates that it did not derive any benefit from the transfer of the cash and accounts receivable, and that the entire beneficial interest remained in the transport company; the marketing company acted merely as the agent either for the transport company or the Mexican subsidiaries, without beneficial interest to itself, although such assets were formally placed in its name. The accountant testified that the monthly balances between the marketing and the transport companies in all eases represented the difference between the amounts entered in the books of the marketing company as due the Mexican companies and the total assets standing on the books in its name.-

The appellants claim that the funds in the hands of the marketing company at the time of the receivership and those having since come into the hands of the receivers, are trust funds for the benefit of the creditors who contracted directly with the marketing company, and that it assumed the direct obligations and must pay out of its assets; that the funds in question are its assets for the purpose of paying debts. The stock of the Mexican companies, while owned by the transport company, was pledged as security under the trust indenture to secure gold notes. The marketing company was found by the master to have been organized for, and did act as fiscal agent of, the transport company. The court below approved this finding, and allowed the creditors of the transport and marketing companies to share in pari passu in the general assets.

The funds in question arose (a) from moneys received from accounts receivable of the transport company which were carried in the name of the marketing company at the *582 time the receivers were appointed; and (b) the revenues received from postreceivership operations,' of which revenues the proceeds from the sale of oil from the Mexican properties constituted the larger portion.

It is significant that the appellants insisted upon, and received, the guaranty of the transport company to the payments due under these charter parties. The notes taken by the Oil Transport Company in connection with the charter party were indorsed by the Island Oil & Transport Company. Moreover, the marketing company’s current assets were used for the payment of the obligations incurred by the transport company. There is no evidence of any expressed or even implied representations to the appellants that the marketing company owned all the proceeds of the sale of oil as its separate estate. The reason for the organization of the marketing company is given as a means to avoid heavy taxation which would have resulted from qualifying the transport company to do business in Now York state. Therefore, to establish this fiscal or distributing agent, the receipts were credited on the books of the marketing company. We held in New York Trust Co. v. Island Oil & Transport Corp. (Ex parte Compania Petrolera Capuchinas), 34 F.(2d) 655, that the entries were not intended by the parties to represent genuine debits and credits as between the transport company and the Mexican companies, and that the real beneficiary of these entries, representing the profits derived from the operation of the Mexican companies, was-the transport company. It is not the property of the marketing company. There was no relationship disclosed between the marketing company and the Mexican companies which justifies the suggestion that the marketing company in any way is entitled to the realizable basic cost of oil as produced at the wells, plus the profit derived therefrom at sale. It was such items as cash and accounts receivable which were placed in the name of the marketing company, but title to the stock of the Mexican companies, whose properties produced the oil and who were entitled to the profits by way of dividends, was never transferred to the marketing company; that title remained in the transport company.

The contracts between the marketing company and the Mexican companies provided that the marketing company should act as purchasing and sales agent for the Mexican companies, and for such services an annual commission of $100, plus all expenses, was stipulated. Thus it appears clearly that the marketing company handled the transactions intrusted to it merely as an agent, without having any interest of its own in such transactions, or, therefore, in the assets resulting therefrom. The method of accounting employed under the agency contracts answers the contention that the marketing company had any interest other than that of an agent, or that the relation of debtor and creditor existed.

Nor do we find any representation made to the marketing company’s creditors that it in any way pledged the credit of these assets so that the marketing company’s creditors might, by the principle of estoppel, have a right prior to the creditors of the transport company to share in the assets now held by the receivers.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
56 F.2d 580, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 2803, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-trust-co-v-island-oil-transport-corporation-ca2-1932.