Potts v. Wallace

146 U.S. 689, 13 S. Ct. 196, 36 L. Ed. 1135, 1892 U.S. LEXIS 2225
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 12, 1892
Docket41
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 146 U.S. 689 (Potts v. Wallace) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Potts v. Wallace, 146 U.S. 689, 13 S. Ct. 196, 36 L. Ed. 1135, 1892 U.S. LEXIS 2225 (1892).

Opinion

Me. Justice Shieas

delivered the opinion of the court.

The assignments in error are nineteen in number, but they present substantially but one question: Did the court err,-in view of all the evidence, in directing the jury to find a verdict for the defendant ?

*698 There were no fi-adings of fact by the court or jury, and no charge or opinion1,of the court is shown by the record. We are therefore left to; draw the materials upon which we are to revise the judgment bf the court below from the various offers of evidence and exceptions thereto, read in the light afforded .by the respective briefs and arguments of counsel. .

Taken in logical order, the first ground of defence is found in the position that the assignment to Potts for the benefit of creditors was'invalid,'and the want of validity is supposed to be found in the fact ’thpt, in executing the deed of assignment, the president did notj follow certain instructions and conditions imposed upon him by the board. Undoubtedly, the act of the president, in executing and delivering the deed of assignment, was fully warranted by the resolution of the board of August 3, 1880,- but it is claimed that, by reason of proceedings at the stockholders’ meeting, held on August 12, 'and at a meeting of the board of directors on August 20, the authority of the president, granted by the resolution of August 3, was modified, or made conditional on certain other acts that he was to do.

: At the stockholders’ meeting a resolution was passed directing the president, directors and officers of the company to execute a bond and mortgage to secure A. B. Wood, one off the directors, for certain trust moneys he. had advanced to the company, and also to make an assignment to said board of the leasehold and fixtures of the company in payment of moneys alleged to have been advanced by him for the use of the company.

The resolution of the board of directors of August 3, authorizing the president to make a deed of assignment for the benefit of creditors, was laid before the stockholders, and, upon motion, was approved and ratified; and the president was authorized to execute a general assignment after the mortgage and assignment of lease . to A. B. Wood should be duly executed and delivered.

, At the meeting of the board, held on August 20, 1880, the notion.^ of the stockholders in directing the execution of a mortgage and\assignmentof the lease to A. B..Wood was reported, ahd was, by a resolution, approved.

*699 ' It would seem that the mortgage and assignment of lease to Wood were never executed, and that the-president on September 14,1880, executed and delivered the deed of assignment to Potts.

As already stated, this action of the president in making the deed of assignment, without the mortgage and assignment to Wood having been executed, was sought to be repudiated by the board at a meeting held on September 16, 1880.

Whether the proposition to secure Wood, one of the directors-of an insolvent company, by a mortgage covering all the property of the company, would have been valid as against the other creditors of the company, is more than doubtful. However that may be, the record does not show that any steps were ever taken to prevent the assignment to Potts from taking effect. There is no evidence that Potts was ever noti-' lied of the action of the .directors, attempting to make the deed of general assignment subject to a prior mortgage and assignment in favor of Wood. Nor does it appear that any effort was made in the court having jurisdiction of the subject to set aside the deed to Potts. On the contrary, it appears that the assignee was suffered to-proceed in the execution of his duties as assignee by filing his bond and inventory and an account, and, upon the death of Henry Potts, Jr., no objection was made on behalf of Wood or the company to resist the appointment of a successor.

The proposition that Wallace, when called upon by the assignee to pay for his stock, could take refuge in the abortive attempt of the directors to prefer one of their own number,, seems to us to be altogether inadmissible.

Another ground of defence urged was that the plaintiff had mistaken his remedy; that the proceeding to enforce the lia- • bility of Wallace should have been by a bill in equity. v

We might dismiss this position by the observation that it does, not appear to have been taken by the defendant in his answer, or. to have been brought to the attention of the court at the trial.

As, however, for other reasons, the case has to go back for another trial, it may be well for us to briefly consider the ■ merits of the suggestion..

*700 It is undoubtedly true that, in Pennsylvania, in the case of an insolvent corporation, its assets, including unpaid capital stock, constitute a- trust fund, and that such fund cannot be appropriated by individual .creditors, by means of attachments or executions directed against particular assets, but should be distributed,.on equitable principles, among;the creditors at large.

Accordingly, it was ruled by the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania in Lane's Appeal, 105 Penn. St. 49, and in Bell's Appeal, 105 Penn. St. 88, cases cited by defendant’s counsel, that a bill in equity is a ^proper remedy whereby to subject the property of an insolvent corporation to the claims of its creditors.

Some general expressions were used in those opinions, cited in the brief of defendant’s counsel, which seem to countenance the proposition that the only remedy .in each case is by a bill in equity. But an examination of the facts of the cases and of the reasoning of the opinions clearly shows that what the '.court meant was that the proceeding must, in some form, be a remedy for all, and not for some, of the creditors — that the remedy must be coextensive with the nature of the property as a trust fund.

That this is thej proper reading of those cases is shown by the later case of Citizens' Savings Bank v. Gillespie, 115 Penn. St. 564, 572. That was the case of a suit brought by an assignee of an insolvent bank for the benefit of creditors against' a subscriber for stock remaining unpaid, and the Supreme Court, per Paxson, C. J., said:

“ There being no. assessment in evidence, the learned judge left it to the jury to find whether the whole of the unpaid subscription was required to pay the debts of the company. We see no error in this. If the unpaid subscriptions were required to pay the creditors, no assessment was necessary, .under the authority of Yeager v. Scranton Trust Company, (14 Weekly Notes of Cases, 296.) . ... It was there said that ‘ the uncontradicted evidence shows that it was necessary to collect the whole of this stock subscription in order to pay the sums due the depositors' of this insolvent corporation.’ *701 There is not even an apparent conflict between the case referred to and the later cases of Lane’s Appeal, 105 Penn. St. 19, and Bell’s Appeal, 115 Penn. St. 88, 561.

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Bluebook (online)
146 U.S. 689, 13 S. Ct. 196, 36 L. Ed. 1135, 1892 U.S. LEXIS 2225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/potts-v-wallace-scotus-1892.