People's Bank v. Shreveport Ice & Brewing Co.

77 So. 636, 142 La. 802, 1918 La. LEXIS 1435
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 3, 1918
DocketNo. 22779
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 77 So. 636 (People's Bank v. Shreveport Ice & Brewing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People's Bank v. Shreveport Ice & Brewing Co., 77 So. 636, 142 La. 802, 1918 La. LEXIS 1435 (La. 1918).

Opinion

SOMMERVILLE, J.

The People’s Bank of Mobile alleges itself to be an ordinary creditor of the defendant company; that the directors and other officers of that corporation are jeopardizing the rights of its creditors by grossly mismanaging the business; that the property of the corporation has been seized under judicial process through fraud and collusion between the defendant corporation, its officers and stockholders, and a named creditor. It sets forth the acts of mismanagement, collusion, and fraud in its petition, and it asks for the appointment of a receiver to the defendant to take charge of and manage the affairs of the corporation for its benefit and for the benefit of other creditors.

Defendant filed an exception of no cause or right of action, based upon the ground that plaintiff was not a creditor, and, if a creditor, that the acts of alleged mismanagement occurred prior to the time that plaintiff became such creditor. The exception was overruled. Defendant answered, denying the allegations of plaintiff.

Judgment was rendered for plaintiff, and two receivers were appointed for the defendant corporation. Defendant has not appealed; but the St. Louis Union Trust Company, alleging itself to be a'creditor of the defendant company, has appealed.

Plaintiff alleges that it is the trustee of the mortgage bondholders of the Shreveport Brewery, amounting to $71,500 in outstanding bonds, and that by certain acts of compromise and sale between the Shreveport Brewery and its stockholders, on the one part, and of defendant, the Shreveport Ice & Brewing Company, on the other part, the latter assumed the payment of the interest on the outstanding bonds.of the Shreveport Brewery held by plaintiff and the payment of the taxes due on the brewery property in consideration of a release of a certain claim of $35,000 due by defendant to the Shreveport Brewery, and the transfer by the stockholders of the Shreveport Brewery of more than 75 per cent, of the capital stock of the Shreveport Brewery to the defendant, and that plaintiff was notified of said assumption by defendant, and it accepted same. This act of compromise was said to be attached to the petition, but it was not.

As the allegations in the petition are clear that plaintiff is a creditor of defendant, and as to how it became a creditor, they must be taken as true for the purposes of the exception of no cause and right of action filed by defendant.

As the acts of mismanagement enumerated in the petition are alleged to have been parts of a fraudulent scheme carried out by collusion between defendant, its officers and stockholders, and a creditor thereof, which resulted in the seizure of all of defendant's property under judicial process, which seizure was made while plaintiff was a creditor, plaintiff alleges a cause of action.

The record presents a rather anomalous condition of interlocking corporations contracting with one another; one holds about all of the stock of another, and an individual, or a set of individuals, holds all. of the stock and bonds of the holding corporation.

The Shreveport Brewery was a Louisiana corporation organized in 1903. It issued mortgage bonds, and also $300,000 of capital stock. It was engaged in brewing beer and manufacturing ice in Shreveport, La., until it was absorbed in 1905, under a ten-year lease, by defendant, the Shreveport Ice & [805]*805Brewing Company. Under the terms of that lease the latter company was obligated to operate the plant of the former company together with its own, and to divide the profits in the proportion of 65 per cent, of the profits to itself and 35 per cent, to the Shreveport Brewery. Out of the 35 per cent, going to the Shreveport Brewery the lessee was to pay the yearly taxes on the property of the Shreveport Brewery, and the interest semiannually on the outstanding bonds of said corporation, amounting to $71,500, in the hands of plaintiff as trustee. The Shreveport Ice & Brewing Company thus became the codebtor of the Shreveport Brewery to the bondholders of the Shreveport Brewery.

The lessee operated the Shreveport Brewery for six or seven months at the beginning of the lease; but it did not operate the ice plant at all.

Under that contract, the Shreveport Brewery went out of business for ten years, and the Shreveport Ice & Brewing Company became its representative.

The Shreveport Ice & Brewing Company had absorbed the Shreveport Brewery for ten years; and the latter was entirely out of business, and was not producing anything with which to pay interest on its bonds. The object of the Shreveport Ice & Brewing Company in agreeing to pay this interest evidently was to hold off the bondholders from seizing the property of the Shreveport Brewery on which they held a mortgage, and also to prevent the use of that brewery property by any one during the ten year period. The Shreveport Ice & Brewing Company paid the interest to the trustee of the bondholders as agreed upon.

Shortly before the expiration of the lease the Shreveport Ice & Brewing Company acquired more than 75 per cent, of the stock.of the Shreveport Brewery at 20 cents on the dollar, with money furnished by the AnheuserBusch Brewing Association of St. Louis.

In taking the stock of the Shreveport Brewery in 1915 the Shreveport Ice & Brewing Company stipulated that:

The “officers, directors, and stockholders of the Shreveport Brewery shall not, for a period of ten years after they so sell their shares of stock in said Shreveport Brewery, engage, either directly or indirectly, as proprietors, partners, stockholders, agents or in any other manner, in the business of either manufacturing, selling, or dealing in ice or beer, or in the business of conducting or selling cold storage facilities in any form, or in the brewing business, within the city of Shreveport, La., or in any other part of Caddo parish, La.”

In this sale of stock it was further stipulated that “all of the ten directors and officers of the Shreveport Brewery” should deposit their written resignations as directors and officers of the Shreveport Brewery in the South Side Bank of St. Louis. Thus all of the officers of the Shreveport Brewery passed out of office; and the stock representing all of the property and assets of the Shreveport Brewery passed into the hands of the Shreveport Ice & Brewing Company.

The Shreveport Brewery now holds a mere paper charter. It was absorbed by the Shreveport Ice & Brewing Company, and it became a part of the latter. Even the stockholders of the Shreveport Brewery were bought by the Shreveport Ice & Brewing Company, or,. rather, they were deprived by the latter of the right to engage in the ice, cold storage, and brewing business for a term of ten years.

In acquiring the stock of the Shreveport Brewery the Shreveport Ice & Brewing Company did not acquire the mortgage bonds of the Shreveport Brewery, which are held by plaintiff, as trustee of the bondholders of that corporation. But in taking over the property of the Shreveport Brewery it as-' sumed the payment of the interest on the bonds of that corporation in discharge of an indebtedness of $35,000. The real estate belonging to the Shreveport Brewery, or to the stockholders of that corporation, passed from [807]

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Bluebook (online)
77 So. 636, 142 La. 802, 1918 La. LEXIS 1435, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peoples-bank-v-shreveport-ice-brewing-co-la-1918.