Proctor v. Norris

188 N.E. 625, 285 Mass. 161, 1934 Mass. LEXIS 896
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJanuary 13, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 188 N.E. 625 (Proctor v. Norris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Proctor v. Norris, 188 N.E. 625, 285 Mass. 161, 1934 Mass. LEXIS 896 (Mass. 1934).

Opinion

Lummus, J.

This suit is brought by the trustee in bankruptcy of Phoenix Bond & Mortgage Company, a Massachusetts corporation, to recover funds alleged to have been wrongfully diverted from the treasury of the corporation.

In the fall of 1927, one MacClaskey, who died on December 14, 1930, and one Cashman were substantially equal owners of a Massachusetts corporation known as Hodgdon, Cashman Company, which was doing business as a stockbroker. MacClaskey also controlled another Massachusetts corporation engaged in the same business, Phoenix Bond & Mortgage Company, of which he was president, treasurer, one of four directors, and with his wife the holder of a majority of the capital stock. Two of the other three directors were mere employees, and the third was the attorney for MacClaskey. Although Phoenix Bond & Mort[163]*163gage Company observed the formality of holding meetings of stockholders and directors, MacClaskey was in complete control of the corporation, and the other directors knew nothing about it except what MacClaskey occasionally chose to tell them.

Hodgdon, Cashman Company was in financial difficulties, some of its customers were asserting claims against MacClaskey and Cashman individually as well as against the corporation, and money was needed to satisfy these claims. In December, 1927, MacClaskey called upon the defendant, who had recently been admitted to the bar, and said that he wished to pay some of the creditors of Hodgdon, Cashman Company out of his own funds in such a way that Cashman would be obligated to repay his share. MacClaskey asked the defendant to receive from him funds with which to pay creditors of Hodgdon, Cashman Company, deposit them in a bank account which the defendant already had in the name of “Thomas E. Norris, Trustee,” draw checks in favor of creditors as directed by MacClaskey, and receive from Cashman notes of Hodgdon, Cashman Company for the amount of the checks. MacClaskey said that he wished Cashman to think that the defendant was lending the money to Hodgdon, Cashman Company. The defendant undertook the task, believing that MacClaskey was using his own funds as represented.

In fact, without authority to do so from the Phoenix Bond & Mortgage Company beyond his implied authority as treasurer, MacClaskey drew checks payable to the defendant upon the bank account of Phoenix Bond & Mortgage Company, signed by himself “Phoenix Bond & Mortgage Co. Frank A. MacClaskey Treas.,” had the checks certified in some instances, and delivered them to the defendant, who then carried out the plan proposed. The defendant examined the checks and observed the signatures, but believed that MacClaskey had the right to draw them. The master finds that in this way funds of Phoenix Bond & Mortgage Company to the amount of $8,094.21 were wrongfully diverted from its corporate purposes and applied to the use of MacClaskey and Hodgdon, Cashman [164]*164Company. He finds that there was no consent and no ratification by the officers or stockholders of Phoenix Bond & Mortgage Company. He finds that the defendant, though acting honestly and though ignorant as to whether that company was a corporation or not, could easily have discovered the truth.

After allowance of a credit resulting from a sale of furniture of Hodgdon, Cashman Company which had been taken as security in the transactions, the indebtedness of the defendant to the plaintiff, including interest to the date of the master’s report, November 15, 1932, was established as $9,885.44, and interest thereon was awarded from that date, with costs. The defendant appealed.

No error appears in overruling the exceptions to the .master’s report, if indeed they are open in the absence of an appeal from the interlocutory decree.

The defendant argues the denial of his motion to recommit, but since he took no appeal therefrom that matter is not open.

From the standpoint of the defendant, it was possible that the name Phoenix Bond & Mortgage Company meant MacClaskey doing business individually in that name, with the right to draw checks for his private purposes. But that was not probable. The name suggested rather a corporation, or perhaps a partnership, and for the purposes of the principle controlling this case it is not important which. Durrell v. Staples, 169 Mass. 49. Brickett v. Downs, 163 Mass. 70. Shapira v. Budish, 275 Mass. 120, 125. Jones v. Turner, 249 Mich. 403. Wile, Weill & Co. v. Denison Clothing Co. 158 Iowa, 109. The defendant knew that the checks were drawn for a purpose unconnected with the business of Phoenix Bond & Mortgage Company, and was charged with notice that MacClaskey probably had no right to draw them. In fact MacClaskey had none. The defendant thus came into possession of funds which apparently and in fact belonged to the corporation, and assisted MacClaskey in diverting them to an unlawful use. This was a wrong to the corporation. Johnson & Kettell Co. v. Longley Luncheon Co. 207 Mass. 52. Childs, Jeffries & Co. [165]*165Inc. v. Bright, 283 Mass. 283. See also Dolphin v. A. C. Lewis Leather Co. 269 Mass. 132, 145; American Agricultural Chemical Co. v. Robertson, 273 Mass. 66, 83; Tingley v. North Middlesex Savings Bank, 266 Mass. 337. In those cases, it is true, the person held liable received the money for his own benefit, and not merely for the purpose of distribution to others. But personal benefit is not essential to liability. See Newburyport v. Spear, 204 Mass. 146, 150, 151; Pratt v. Higginson, 230 Mass. 256, 258. An agent of a fiduciary who receives trust property and disposes of it in a transaction beyond the legal powers of the fiduciary is liable as a constructive trustee to the beneficiary. Andrews v. Tuttle-Smith Co. 191 Mass. 461. Barnes v. Addy, L. R. 9 Ch. 244. Lee v. Sankey, L. R. 15 Eq. 204. Morgan v. Stephens, 3 Giff. 226. Soar v. Ashwell, [1893] 2 Q. B. 390. In re Barney, [1892] 2 Ch. 265. Maxwell v. Adams, 130 Maine, 230. Hindmarch v. Hoffman, 127 Penn. St. 284.

The case is to be distinguished from those in which the payee of a check did not receive it from the drawer corporation or its officers, but from a third person who apparently had a right to it (McLaughlin v. Paine Furniture Co. 245 Mass. 377, and cases cited; see also Russell v. Bond & Goodwin Inc. 276 Mass. 458); from those in which the person taking a corporate check in payment of the private debt of the treasurer was not the payee but an indorsee (Johnson & Kettell Co. v. Longley Luncheon Co. 207 Mass. 52, 56; Eastern Mutual Ins. Co. v. Atlantic National Bank of Boston, 260 Mass. 485, 489, 490; compare Newburyport v. Spear, 204 Mass. 146); from those in which a bank credited trust funds, knowing them to be such, to the personal account of the trustee or to the trust account, and then merely permitted the trustee to draw checks payable to himself as he had a right to do by the terms of the deposit, without taking any active part in the distribution of the funds and without knowledge that the funds were being misappropriated (Ogden v. Atlantic National Bank of Boston, 276 Mass. 130, 133; Eastern Mutual Ins. Co. v.

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Bluebook (online)
188 N.E. 625, 285 Mass. 161, 1934 Mass. LEXIS 896, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/proctor-v-norris-mass-1934.