Simplex Paper Corp. v. Standard Corrugated Box Co.

97 S.W.2d 862, 231 Mo. App. 764, 1936 Mo. App. LEXIS 199
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 10, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 97 S.W.2d 862 (Simplex Paper Corp. v. Standard Corrugated Box Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Simplex Paper Corp. v. Standard Corrugated Box Co., 97 S.W.2d 862, 231 Mo. App. 764, 1936 Mo. App. LEXIS 199 (Mo. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

*767 HOSTETTER, P. J.

The Simplex Paper Corporation, plaintiff-respondent, is a corporation organized under the laws of Michigan; the Standard Corrugated Box Company, defendant, is a corporation *768 organized under tbe laws of Missouri, and tbe Hinde & Daueb Paper Company, appellant, is a corporation organized under tbe laws of Ohio and both of tbe said foreign corporations were duly authorized to do business in Missouri.

Tbe Simplex Paper Corporation will be referred to hereinafter as plaintiff and tbe Standard Corrugated' Box Company will be referred to hereinafter as Box Company and tbe Hinde & Daueb Paper Company will be referred to hereinafter as Paper Company.

This action was begun in tbe Circuit Court of tbe City of St. Louis on tbe 26th day of February, 1929, for tbe recovery of tbe sum of $1778.89 on account for goods sold and delivered by plaintiff to tbe Box Company and also for tbe appointment of a receiver for said Box Company. As tbe action was originally brought the Paper Company and twenty-six stockholders of tbe Box Company were made parties defendant.

Upon the filing of tbe petition, the plaintiff filed an application for tbe appointment of a receiver for the Box Company, notice being served on that corporation. On March 7, 1929, tbe court beard the application and, acting upon it, appointed John E. Witt-baus and William E. Feutterer as receivers for tbe Box Company.

The Paper Company, as one of tbe defendants, filed its separate demurrer to tbe petition, 'and, on June‘7, 1929, filed its amended demurrer.

On December 9, 1929, tbe amended demurrer filed by tbe Paper Company was overruled, and, on December 31, 1929, tbe Paper Company filed its answer to plaintiff’s petition.

Tbe Box Company, though duly served, filed no answer.

Tbe petition was very voluminous, and, boiled down, after tbe usual averments in respect to the corporations involved, its averments may be summarized as follows :

That Harry L. Borders, a resident of tbe City of St. Louis, was secretary and treasurer of tbe Box Company and that the latter is indebted to plaintiff in tbe sum of $1178.89 for goods sold and delivered by plaintiff to it; that there are a large number of creditors of tbe Box Company to each of whom it is indebted, totalling a large sum; that plaintiff brings this suit in its own behalf and in behalf of all tbe other creditors of said Box Company; that on August 1, 1928, Harry L. Borders- and other stockholders of tbe Box Company, in fraud of tbe rights of plaintiff and tbe other creditors, made a sale to tbe Paper Company of tbe business, goodwill, plant, machinery, real estate and all tbe assets of tbe Box Company except bills receivable due and owing to it, amounting to $25,000; that as payment for tbe property so conveyed, tbe Paper Company paid to said Harry L. Borders $123,333.23, which said Borders received on behalf of himself and other stockholders; that having received said sum of money said Borders proceeded to dis *769 tribute the same to the stockholders of the Box Company, resulting in the conversion of the assets of the Box Company by the Paper Company and in the diversion of the funds which were the proceeds of the sale of the assets of the Box Company into the hands of its stockholders and that the acts of said Borders in such transaction were in breach of his fiduciary duty as secretary and treasurer of said .Box Company and in fraud of said Box Company; that the assets of the said Box Company were impressed with a trust in favor of plaintiff and the other creditors of said Box Company; that the money paid to said stockholders as the proceeds of the sale of said assets were impressed with a trust in favor of plaintiff and the other creditors of said Box Company; that the result of such sale was the transfer to the Paper Company of all or nearly all of the assets of the Box Company; that the money received from the Paper Company as the purchase price, or a part of the purchase price, of said assets, belonged to the Box Company and not to its stockholders ; that the said stockholders appropriated said’ money to themselves and converted said money to their own use and benefit in fraud of plaintiff and the other creditors; that the paper company acted in full privity with said Borders and the stockholders of said Box Company in that said Paper Company employed said Borders in the aforesaid transaction and had full notice of the existing debts of the Box Company and was a party to said transaction and through said transaction acquired all, or nearly all, of the assets of the Box Company and' converted them to its own use and assisted in the diversion of the purchase price of said assets into the hands of the stockholders of said Box Company in fraud of plaintiff and the other creditors of said Box Company and that, by so doing the said Paper Company took said assets into its possession charged with a trust in favor of plaintiff and other creditors; that the price paid for the assets of the Box Company by the Paper Company was inadequate and was fraudulently determined as against the Box Company and against the plaintiff as a creditor, and as aginst the other creditors in whose behalf the suit is brought, by reason of the fact that said Borders was acting as agent of the Paper Company in bringing about the sale of the assets of the Box Company, and, while pretending to represent himself and the stockholders of the Box Company he was, in realty, representing the Paper Company, and that the inadequate price was fraudulenty and collusively determined between the Paper Company and the said' Borders in violation of his fiduciary duty to the Box Company and its creditors; that there is due to the Box Company from various debtors sums of money totalling $25,000, evidenced by bills receivable; that said bills receivable were not transferred to the Paper Company, but remained the property of the Box Company; that said bills receivable have been only partly paid and are in a large part left uncollected *770 and that said Borders as secretary and treasurer of the Box Company has been remiss and negligent in failing to prosecute the collection of said bills; that, as a. result of said transaction the business of the Box Company had. been destroyed and terminated and has passed into the hands of the Paper Company; that said Box Company is now no longer a going concern and has ceased to do business; that it has been denuded of its assets and rendered insolvent and incapable of meeting the claims of its creditors for the just debts owing by it to them; that the plaintiff and other creditors have no adequate remedy at law and unless the court takes jurisdiction of this cause in equity irreparable injury will be done to plaintiff and the other creditors.

It was further alleged that it was necessary that the court should appoint a receiver to collect, keep and preserve the monies, property and assets of the Box Company and all claims and choses in action, both legal and equitable belonging to the Box Company before the same should become lost or uncollectible.

The petition closed with a prayer that plaintiff have judgment against the Box Company for the sum of $1778.89 with interest and that judgment be declared a

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Bluebook (online)
97 S.W.2d 862, 231 Mo. App. 764, 1936 Mo. App. LEXIS 199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simplex-paper-corp-v-standard-corrugated-box-co-moctapp-1936.