Security Savings & Trust Co. v. Portland Flour Mills Co.

261 P. 432, 124 Or. 276, 1927 Ore. LEXIS 277
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedApril 19, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 261 P. 432 (Security Savings & Trust Co. v. Portland Flour Mills Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Security Savings & Trust Co. v. Portland Flour Mills Co., 261 P. 432, 124 Or. 276, 1927 Ore. LEXIS 277 (Or. 1927).

Opinion

RAND, C. J.

The plaintiff, Security Savings & Trust Company, as the assignee of M. H. Houser under an assignment for the benefit of creditors, brought this suit in equity to recover from the Pacific Coast Elevator Company the sum of $64,835.82 and interest thereon since July, 1920, at the rate of 6 per cent per annum, and to compel the defendant, Portland Flour Mills Co., to account for and pay said sum to plaintiff out of certain moneys, which it is alleged have been received by it and should, under equitable principles, be applied in payment of said sum.

The suit grows out of the following facts: In July, 1920, Houser sold and conveyed certain warehouses to the defendant, Pacific Coast Elevator Company, for the agreed price of $64,835.82 and received a credit on its boohs for that amount, no part of which has ever been paid. At that time he was indebted in a much larger sum to the Portland Flouring Mills Company, of which company the defendant, Portland Flour Mills Co., is the successor in interest. At the time referred to, the Portland Flouring Mills Company and the Pacific Coast Elevator Company were corporations which had been organized for a great many years; the first for the purpose of purchasing and selling grain and the manufacture and sale *282 of flour, and the latter for the purpose of owning and operating warehouses for grain storage. Each owned assets and properties of great value and were transacting a very large volume of business. The Portland Flouring Mills Company owned all of the capital stock of the Pacific Coast Elevator Company and all of its capital stock, except a few shares which were owned by the Houser Investment Company, was owned by Houser and Houser owned all of the stock of the last named company. He was the president of both companies and, through his stock ownership, had absolute control of the corporate business i of both. These corporations, however, had always maintained their separate corporate existence, conducted business in their own names, kept separate books of account, and each had its own individual assets and creditors. Their offices were maintained separately and neither corporation was a mere adjunct or instrumentality of the other.

In February, 1921, the Portland Flouring Mills Company issued bonds aggregating $3,000,000, which were secured by a mortgage given by the Portland Flouring Mills Company, Pacific Coast Elevator Company and four other corporations whose stock was also owned by the Portland Flouring Mills Company. By the terms of this mortgage, all of the properties and assets of these various corporate mortgagors, then owned or thereafter to be acquired, were pledged for the payment of said bonds, and the plaintiff, Security Savings & Trust Company, was named in said mortgage as the trustee for the bondholders.

Before the execution of said mortgage, Houser employed the firm of Haskins & Sells, who were public accountants, to audit the books and to prepare a consolidated financial statement of the combined assets and liabilities of the six corporate mortgagors for *283 use in the sale of the bonds and, at the same time, he contracted with Blyth, Witter & Company, investment bankers, to underwrite the bonds. While auditing the books, R. J. Leo, who was the manager of the Portland office of Haskins & Sells, found that the books of the Portland Flouring Mills Company showed that Houser owed to that company, upon an open, unsecured account, the large sum of money above referred to. Thinking that this large indebted-, ness upon an open, unsecured account by the president of one of the corporate mortgagors might affect the sale of the bonds, Leo called this matter to the attention of George Leib, the vice-president of Blyth, Witter & Company, and together they went to the office of Houser and stated to him, in effect, that his large indebtedness to the Portland Flouring Mills Company, of which he was president, upon an open, unsecured account might defeat the sale of the bonds. Thereupon Houser paid to the Portland Flouring Mills Company the sum of.$29,000 as part payment of his said indebtedness and both Leo and Leib testified that. Houser instructed Leo to make the financial statement he was about to prepare show a set-off of the amount due him from the Pacific Coast Elevator Company against the amount he was owing to the Portland Flouring Mills Company. Pursuant to such instructions, Leo prepared a consolidated financial statement, showing the combined assets and liabilities of the corporate mortgagors and a copy of this financial statement, attached to which was a letter written by Haskins & Sells to Houser, was delivered to Houser, which financial statement and attached letter were offered and received in evidence as Defendants’ Exhibit 147.

On June 30, 1921, Houser made an assignment to plaintiff for the benefit of his creditors and, as such *284 assignee, plaintiff is now seeking to recover the amount originally owed by the Pacific Coast Elevator Company to Houser and upon the trial of the cause obtained a decree against the Pacific Coast Elevator Company and the Portland Flour Mills Co. for the full amount claimed.

The defendants, Portland Flour Mills Co. and the Pacific Coast Elevator Company, by their separate answers, alleged and it is now contended that Houser’s directions to Leo to set off one account against the other in said financial statement and the acts done by Leo pursuant to such directions in combining the two accounts, as shown in Exhibit “C” of Defendants’ Exhibit 147, constituted a set-off of the amount due Houser from the Pacific Coast Elevator Company against the amount due from him to the Portland Flouring Mills Company and resulted in the cancellation and discharge of the debt before the assignment was made and, therefore, was not a valid and subsisting obligation when the assignment was made and, that plaintiff, as the assignee of Houser, is and of right should be estopped to contend that the alleged set-off was not consummated or that the obligation of the Pacific Coast Elevator Company to pay Houser was not canceled and discharged by said alleged set-off. These contentions will now be considered in their order.

j The only attempt appearing in the evidence to combine the items in question at any time prior to the making of the assignment is that shown on Exhibits .“A” and “C” of Defendants’ Exhibit 147, to which we will again refer. The letter of Haskins & Sells to Houser, which is attached to Exhibit 147, contains no reference to this alleged set-off. The consolidated statement consists of what is termed in the letter as three pages of comments, attached to which are three *285 documents, designated by Leo as Exhibits “A,” “B” and “C.” Exhibits “A” and “C” contain a consolidated and combined statement of all of the properties, assets and liabilities of the six corporations which were to become the corporate mortgagors. Exhibit “A” shows under “Current Assets” that M. H. Houser was indebted to the six corporations, when treated as a unit, in the sum of $203,050.39 and that his indebtedness to these corporations treated as a unit increased from $50,000 on June 30, 1920, to the sum just stated. There are no figures given in Exhibit “A” in explanation of what amounts made up said increased amount.

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Bluebook (online)
261 P. 432, 124 Or. 276, 1927 Ore. LEXIS 277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/security-savings-trust-co-v-portland-flour-mills-co-or-1927.