Sawyer v. Hoag

84 U.S. 610, 21 L. Ed. 731, 17 Wall. 610, 1873 U.S. LEXIS 1406
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 22, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by251 cases

This text of 84 U.S. 610 (Sawyer v. Hoag) 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
Sawyer v. Hoag, 84 U.S. 610, 21 L. Ed. 731, 17 Wall. 610, 1873 U.S. LEXIS 1406 (1873).

Opinion

Mr. Justice MILLER

delivered the opinion of the court.

The first aud most important question to be decided in this case is whether the indebtedness of the appellant to the insurance company is to be treated, for the purposes of this suit, as really based on a loan of money by the company to him, or as representing his- unpaid stock subscription.

The charter under which the company was organized'authorized it to commence business upon a capital stock .of $100,000, with ten thousand paid in, and' the remainder •secured by notes with mortgages on'real estate or otherwise. The transaction by which the appellant professes to have paid up his stock subscription.is, shortly, this:' He gave to *619 the company his check for the full amount of his subscrip: tion, namely, $5000.1 He took the cheek of the company for $4250, being the amount of his subscription less the 15 per cent, required of each stockholder to be paid in cash, and he gave his note for the amount of the latter check, with .good collateral security for its payment, with interest at 7 per cent, per annum. The appellant and the company, by its. officers, agreéd to call this latter transaction a loan, and the check of the appellant payment in full of his stock; and on the books of the company, and in all other respects as between themselves, it was treated as payment of the subscription and a loan of money. It'is agreed that at- this time the current rate of interest in Chicago was greater than 7 per cent., and it is not stated as a fact whether these checks were ever presented- and paid.at any bank, or that any money was actually paid or received by either party in the transaction. It must, therefore, be treated as an agreement between the corporation, by its officers, on the one part, and the appellant, as a subscriber to the stock of the company, on the other part, to convert the debt which the latter owed to the company for his stock into a debt for the loan of money, thereby extinguishing the stock debt.

Undoubtedly this transaction, if, nothing unfair was in-• tended, was one which the parties could do effectually as far as they alone were concerned. Two private persons could thus change the nature of the indebtedness of one to thé other if it was found to be mutually convenient to do so. And in any controversy wffiieh might or could grow out of the matter between the insurance company and the appellant we áre not prepared to say that' the company, as a corporate body, could deny-that the stock was paid in full.

And on this consideration one of'the main arguments on which the appellant seeks-to reverse the decree stands. He. assumes that the assignee in bankruptcy is the representative alone of the corporation, and can assert no right which it could not have asserted. The weakness of the argument is in this assumption. The assignee is the representative of the creditors as well as the bankrupt. He is appointed *620 by the creditors. The statute is full of authority to him to sue for and recover property, rights, and credits, where the bankrupt could not have sustained the action, and to set aside as void transactions by which the bankrupt himself would be bound. All this, of course, is in the interest of the creditors of the bankrupt.

Had the creditors of this insolvent corporation any right to look into and assail .the transaction .by which the appel-' lant claims to have paid his stock subscription ?.

Though it be a doctrine of modern date, we think it now well established that the capital stock of a corporation, especially its unpaid subscriptions, is -a trust fuud- for the benefit of the general creditors of the corporation. And when we consider the rapid development of corporations as instrumentalities of the commercial and business world in the last few years, with the corresponding necessity of adapting legal principles to the new and varying exigencies of this business, it is no solid objection to such a principle that it is modern, for the occasion for it could not sooner have arisen.

The principle is fully asserted in two recent cases, in this court, namely, Burke v. Smith, * and in New Albany v. Burke. Both these cases turned upon the doctrine we have stated, pud upon the necessary inference from that doctrine, that the governing officers of a cprporation cannot, by agreement or other transaction with the stockholder,-release the latter from his obligation to pay, to the prejudice of its creditors-, except by fair and honest dealing and for a va’uable consideration.

In the latter case, a judgment creditor of an insolvent railroad company, having exhausted his remedy at law, sought to enforce this principle by a bill in chancery against the stockholders. The court, by affirming the right of the corporation to' deal with the debt due it. for stock as with any other debt, would have ended the case without further inquiry. But asserting, on the contrary, to its” full'extent, *621 tba^such stock debts were trust funds in their hands for the benefit of the corporate creditors, and must in all cases be dealt with as-trust funds are dealt with, it was found necessary to go into an elaborate inquiry to ascertain whether a violation of the trust had been committed. • And though the court find that the transaction by which the stockholders had been released was a fair'and valid one, as founded on the conditions of the original subscription, the assertion of the general rule on the subject is none the less authoritative and emphatic. *

In the case before us the assignee of the bankrupt, in the interest of the creditors, has a right to inquire into this conventional payment of his stock by one of the -shareholders of the company; and on that inquiry, we are of opinion that, as to these creditors, there was no valid payment of his stock by the appellant". "We do not base this upon the ground that no money actually passed between the parties. It would have been just the same if, agreeing beforehand to turn the stock debt into a loan, the appellant had brought the money with him, paid it, taken a receipt for'it, and carried it away with him. This would be precisely the equivalent of the exchange of checks betweeu the parties. It is the intent and purpose of the transaction which forbids it to be treated as valid payment. It is the chauge of the character of the debt from one of a stock subscription unpaid to that of a loan of money. The debt ceases by this operation, if effectual, to be the trust fund to which creditors can look, and becomes ordinary assets, with which the directors may deal as they choose.

And this was precisely what was designed by the parties. It divested the claim against the stockholder of its'character of a trust fund, and euabled both him and the directors to -deal with it freed from that charge. There are three or four of these cases now befoi’e us in which precisely the same thing was done by other insurance companies organ *622 ized in Chicago, and we have no doubt it was done by this company in regard to all their stockholders.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
84 U.S. 610, 21 L. Ed. 731, 17 Wall. 610, 1873 U.S. LEXIS 1406, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sawyer-v-hoag-scotus-1873.