Schufeldt v. Smith

40 S.W. 887, 139 Mo. 367, 1897 Mo. LEXIS 178
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 25, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 40 S.W. 887 (Schufeldt v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schufeldt v. Smith, 40 S.W. 887, 139 Mo. 367, 1897 Mo. LEXIS 178 (Mo. 1897).

Opinion

Macfarlane, J.

On the eighteenth of March, 1893, the James Walsh Mercantile Company, a corporation under the laws of this State, which had since 1887 been engaged in the.business of wholesale merchants in the city of St. Joseph, under a resolution of the board of directors, executed to defendant Smith, as trustee, a deed of trust on all its property to secure its creditors. The deed was drawn in pursuance of the resolution under which the debts and liabilities were divided into five classes and preferences given to the creditors in the order of classification. The general mercantile creditors of the concern were placed in the fifth class, and the assets are insufficient to pay the debts in the preceding classes. These creditors sue to set aside the deed as being fraudulent. On the first trial the trial court found, as a fact, that the corporation was insolvent when it executed the deed of trust, and held, as a matter of law, that an insolvent corporation could not prefer some of its creditors, and therefore entered a decree annulling the deed of trust. Prom that decree defendants, the trustee and' -preferred creditors, appealed and the judgment was reversed and a new trial was ordered. The opinion, accompanied by a statement of the facts, will be found fully reported in volume 131, page 283, of Missouri Reports.

When the case went back to the circuit court an amended petition was filed, the case was retried, and a [373]*373judgment rendered for defendants, and plaintiffs appeal.

Upon this trial it was shown that for some years prior to the organization of the corporation, James Walsh & Company, a partnership composed of James Walsh, John Byrne, and Thomas Culligan, were engaged in business at St. Joseph as wholesale merchants. On the seventh of July they organized a corporation with a capital stock of $150,000 to conduct the same line of business. At the first stockholders’ meeting the following resolution was adopted:

“Be it remembered that on Friday, July 8th, 1887, in pursuance of a notice regulárly given by James Walsh, the stockholders of the James Walsh Mercantile Company met at the office of Thomas Culligan in St. Joseph,. Missouri, there being present James Walsh, John Byrne and Thomas Culligan. On motion of Mr. Byrne, James Walsh was elected president and S. A. Shoemaker was elected secretary of the meeting and of the corporation. Mr. Culligan moved that the corporation buy of James Walsh & Company their entire stock in trade as shown by their invoice taken July 6th, .1887, including fixtures, safe, other personal property, and also their real estate at prices fixed in the invoice, and in addition, sufficient of their accounts to be guaranteed by said firm to make the sum total of one hundred and twenty thousand dollars ($120,000). Seconded. and carried.”

At the time the corporation was organized the entire assets of the partnership, as estimated, amounted to about $259,000. This included the stock of merchandise on hand amounting in round numbers to about $50,000, the real estate, valued at $8,500, and the debts due the firm. In the latter item was included a suspense account amounting to about $140,000. The debts of the firm amounted at the time to about [374]*374$125,000, some of which are included in the debts secured under the deed of trust in question, and placed in the third and fourth classes.

When the coi'poration commenced business it took possession of all the assets of the partnership, out of which it realized about $165,000. It also carried on its books all the debts of the old firm, some of which it paid, some it renewed by giving its own notes, and some remained in their original partnership form until the deed of trust was executed. On these old firm debts it paid the interest annually. Witnesses testified to an oral understanding of the incorporators at the time the corporation was organized that the corporation should take the assets of the partnership and assume its liabilities.

It appears that several of the notes, preferred under the deed of trust, were secured by the personal indorsements of members of the board of directors, and some were originally executed by the partnership, and had not been changed.

As stated in the opinion on the former appeal, the resolution of the board of directors, directing the execution of the deed of trust, was adopted by the votes of the members thereof who were debtors of the corporation, and the debts for which they are bound were placed in the third and fourth classes and were thereby given a preference over the debts of plaintiffs, who are general mercantile creditors.

On the former appeal it was held that the board of directors, if acting in good faith, had the right to give a preference to one creditor, or class of creditors, over another, though the corporation was at the time insolvent, and that the deed of trust was not fraudulent in law, from the mere facts that the preferences were given and the corporation was at the time insolvent.

It was also held that a director of a corporation [375]*375had the right to vote a preference to himself provided the debt preferred was a bona fide obligation of the corporation; but that, in such cases, the burden of proving that the secured debt is fair, honest and justly due, rests upon him.

It appears from the evidence introduced at this trial that, at the date of the organization of the corporation, defendant Lutz held two notes executed by the partnership, aggregating $14,000. It was shown that these notes were given for money loaned the firm of James Walsh & Company which was used in the partnership business. No change in the notes were made after the partnership ceased to do business. These notes were secured by the deed of trust in question and were given a preference over the debts of pi aintiffs.

Plaintiffs insist that these notes are the obligations of the partnership, and not of the corporation, and that the application of the corporate assets to their payment as is attempted by the deed of trust, would be a fraud upon the creditors of the corporation, and the deed of trust is therefore void as to plaintiffs and should be set aside. There can be no doubt that the notes were originally the obligations of the partnership-and, unless released therefrom, that each partner is liable for their payment. It is also true that the corporation is not liable on the notes unless it has assumed their payment. The principle may be accepted as well established that the managing officers of an insolvent corporation can not, as against its existing creditors, lawfully appropriate its assets to the payment of their private debts.

If, then, the Lutz notes were not the legal obligations of the corporation, the deed of trust, in so far as it undertook to secure them, is fraudulent. Hall v. Goodnight, 37 S. W. Rep. 916; National Tube Works Co. v. Ring R. & I. Co., 118 Mo. 365. If the notes were [376]*376assumed by the corporation and became legal obligations, then the board of directors had the right to secure them with the corporate assets in preference to other creditors, though the directors themselves, as partners in the old firm, are also individually liable. Milling Co. v. Commission Co., 128 Mo. 486; Schufeldt v. Smith, 131 Mo. 283.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Scott v. Potter Plumbing & Heating, Inc.
596 S.W.2d 492 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1980)
Land Red-E-Mixed Concrete Co. v. Cash Whitman, Inc.
425 S.W.2d 919 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1968)
Wilson v. Harburney Oil Co.
89 F.2d 211 (Tenth Circuit, 1937)
Ziemer v. C. G. Bretting Manufacturing Co.
133 N.W. 139 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1911)
Pitman v. Chicago-Joplin Lead & Zinc Co.
87 S.W. 10 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1905)
McIntire v. Schiffer
31 Colo. 246 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1903)
State ex rel. Grimm v. Manhattan Rubber Manufacturing Co.
50 S.W. 321 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1899)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
40 S.W. 887, 139 Mo. 367, 1897 Mo. LEXIS 178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schufeldt-v-smith-mo-1897.