Otte v. Landy

143 F. Supp. 893, 1956 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3054
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedSeptember 12, 1956
Docket1346
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 143 F. Supp. 893 (Otte v. Landy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Otte v. Landy, 143 F. Supp. 893, 1956 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3054 (E.D. Mich. 1956).

Opinion

PICARD, District Judge.

Plaintiffs, trustees in bankruptcy of Paper Corporation of America, a Delaware corporation, seek to set aside a mortgage held by defendants of bankrupt’s assets (all in Michigan) on the ground that it is in fraud of creditors.

*895 Findings of Fact.

Suit was started in 1953 to reorganize the Delaware corporation under Chapter X and the case has been in this court since December 8, 1953. Delay has been occasioned due to several reasons, among them an attempt to carry out the original objective of reorganization, kindred suits between parties, demands for admissions, changes in counsel and the taking of depositions. Reorganization failing, the Delaware corporation was declared bankrupt in February, 1955 and hearings in the present case were held in Bay City last May.

Defendant Lesavoy has never filed an answer but his deposition was taken. He was not called as a witness at the hearing although present for some time and up to its last day.

The fraud claimed by plaintiffs, if any, emanates from facts surrounding organization of the Delaware corporation in 1947 at which time Delaware took over payment of a government income tax obligation amounting to a little over $500,-000 and other indebtedness of to wit $213,000 all owed by a Pennsylvania corporation of the same name operating in Michigan. In addition, vendee Delaware assumed the obligation to pay these grantor defendants the balance due on the purchase of the Pennsylvania assets $3,-150,000, for which Delaware gave defendants, who owned the Pennsylvania corporation and sold it to Delaware, its note in the amount of $3,150,000 secured by a mortgage on all its assets. This was really a purchase money mortgage, the amount of the sale price being $3,-350,000 of which $200,000 had been paid.

Incidentally, the government has not become a party to this suit to recover the remainder of the plus $500,000 still due, a sum of approximately $160,000 and defendant Landy freely admits that the claim of the government on the assets involved is superior to his mortgage. In fact an arrangement was entered into between the Delaware corporation and the government by which the government would be paid.

All indebtedness of the original Pennsylvania Paper Corporation of America other than to wit $160,000 still due the government as that indebtedness existed when the Delaware Paper Corporation of America took over in 1947, has been paid. The present indebtedness of the Delaware corporation came into existence in the years 1951 and 1952 — four years after the events with which this court is concerned took place, and under the management of the Delaware corporation. Regardless of this fact plaintiffs’ counsel has made a valiant attempt to subject all assets of the Pennsylvania corporation as they came to the Delaware corporation, to the payment of debts strictly those of the Delaware corporation incurred four years after the deal was closed, and to extinquish all rights of Landy who was one of the majority owners of all those assets back in 1947 and who accepted the mortgage as security for the sales prifce.

Here are more facts essential to a better understanding of the 1947 transaction.

Murray Landy and I. Lawrence Lesavoy back in 1944 organized the Paper Corporation of America, a Pennsylvania corporation and got an option on a paper mill in Cheboygan, Michigan. They put in $150,000. Later they bought the mill and in 1945 made $14,888.81 clear; in 1946 their profit was $321,923.60 and in the year 1947 this corporation made the almost unbelievable sum of $1,062,657.-55 net profit. It happened, however, that near the end of the fiscal year 1947 Lesavoy and Landy were not getting along together and were individually in such a high income tax bracket that any dividends received by them from their different corporations would call for a staggering income tax. So they decided to sell and get out of the paper business, which would help them tax-wise since sale of their stock would require a 26 per cent tax to the government instead of the high bracket tax in which they • would find themselves as the result of a dividend. Obviously, a business that had made over $1,000,000 that year should not be hard to sell.

*896 After several suggestions and offers submitted, the Juvenile Service League, Inc., of New York, a New York corporation, became interested. This particular corporation had a great advantage over other vendees. It was an eleemosynary-institution and any monies which it made used for charity would not be subject to tax. This fit in with the legal advice initially given Landy and Lesavoy, who, of course, realized that a corporation that didn’t have to pay any income tax would be in a much better position to pay off sale price installments when due than one that must pay such a tax.

Therefore it was agreed and finally carried out that the 1,500 shares owned by Lesavoy, Getz 1 and Landy, being all shares of the Paper Corporation of America (Pennsylvania corporation) should be turned over to Juvenile, and Juvenile would incorporate a Delaware corporation of the same name as the original Cheboygan Company to wit Paper Corporation of America. In carrying out the deal, assets of the Pennsylvania Paper Company were turned over to the Delaware Company and Delaware issued 100 shares of stock which it turned over to Juvenile in exchange for the 1,500 shares of the Pennsylvania Paper Company which had been sold to Juvenile by the Pennsylvania corporation owners. 2 Finally and as security to Lesavoy and Landy, Delaware gave them a mortgage covering all assets of the Delaware corporation in the amount of $3,150,000. The original sales price was $3,350,000 but the vendors had been paid $200,000 on account when the deal was consummated and at the end of December were given another $500,000.

There is no denying that the intention of Lesavoy and Landy was primarily to arrange their business affairs so they would have to pay 26 per cent tax on their capital gains rather than a much larger amount on dividends and this court finds that they had a right to do this providing they did it legally. Incidentally, the legality has been accepted by the United States government which was informed about the entire deal and what Landy and Lesavoy did has never been questioned by the government.

Now comes the main reason charged by plaintiffs why the mortgage given by the Delaware corporation to Lesavoy and Landy was fraudulent. According to the books of the Pennsylvania corporation its fixed assets were valued at $265,732.04, its other assets at $2,083,-992.47, a total of $2,349,724.51. However, in March of 1947 the Pennsylvania corporation had an appraisal made of its fixed assets by a reputable, efficient firm and the value of those assets according to the appraisal was placed at $1,-944,723.62 which was increased in December 1947 by the Delaware corporation to $2,027,780.33 in considering further machinery purchased in the last nine months (March through December 1947) for the total valuation of $3,961,772.80. The indebtedness of the Pennsylvania corporation as against these assets was $713,985.58.

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Related

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43 F.3d 244 (Sixth Circuit, 1994)
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Otte v. Landy
256 F.2d 112 (Sixth Circuit, 1958)

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Bluebook (online)
143 F. Supp. 893, 1956 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3054, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/otte-v-landy-mied-1956.