Standard Planing Mill v. Pacific Coast Paper Co.

59 F.2d 29, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 3300
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedMay 31, 1932
DocketNo. 6540
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 59 F.2d 29 (Standard Planing Mill v. Pacific Coast Paper Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Standard Planing Mill v. Pacific Coast Paper Co., 59 F.2d 29, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 3300 (9th Cir. 1932).

Opinion

WILBUR, Circuit Judge.

On June 29, 1931, the receiver of the Routt Lumber Company, an alleged bankrupt, was directed by the trial court to take' charge of all the assets of the Standard Planing Mill. From this order the Standard Planing Mill appeals. The order was based Upon the conclusion that the alleged bankrupt corporation was so intimately related with the Standard Planing Mill and its business as to justify the court in concluding that they were in substance and effect one and the same. The order was made upon the petition of Pacific Coast Paper Company, Pacific Portland Cement Company, Sloss & Brittain, and A. Holm, assignee of Redwood Manufacturers’ Company, Wendling-Nalhan Company, and Sugar Pine Lumber Company, Limited, all alleged creditors of the alleged bankrupt, whose claims aggregated over $25,-000, who alleged that “the Standard Planing Mill, a corporation, and the Routt Lumber Company, a corporation, are the business conduit and alter ego each of the other, and that the Standard Planing Mill is in fact and in substance the Routt Lumber Company under another name.” The petition then asserts the reasons for the contention which the creditors thus advanced. These reasons may be summarized as follows. That the assets and goods of the two corporations are intermingled and confused; that the two corporations use the same office and equipment in Fresno, Cal.; that the managing officers of the two corporations have been the same since December, 1928; that from December, 1928, to March 3, 193.1, the Routt Lumber Company owned over two-thirds of the capital stock of the Standard Planing Mill and had a, contract with M. V. Bishop, the owner of the other one-third of the capital stock, for the purchase of such interest; that the two companies used the same billhead; that a hook transfer was made of a 5-ton truck from the Routt Lumber Company to the Standard Planing Mill, and also of accounts and notes receivable amounting to $6,224; that the Routt Lumber Company purchased 950 sacks of cement from the Yosemite Portland Cement Company to be delivered directly to Walter Harris; that Harris paid the Standard Planing Mill therefor, that the Standard Planing Mill has never credited the Routt Lumber Company therewith, and that the Rontt Lumber Company still carries on its books a debit for this amount owing to the Yosemite Portland Cement Company; . that the Routt Lumber Company, while insolvent, had purchased shingles, asphalt sheeting, paints, glassware and mirrors, lumber, etc., and the Routt Lumber Company still carries among its accounts payable debits for these items thus purchased, while the Standard Planing Mill lists these same items in its inventory and has them in its possession although neither the' books of the Routt Lumber Company nor those of the Standard Planing Mill show any such transfer has been [30]*30made; that A. Holm, one of the petitioners, had attached the properties and assets of both the Routt Lumber Company and the Standard Planing Mill and that the sheriff of Fresno county was in possession of properties of the Standard Planing Mill at the time of the application; that a suit by the assignee of the brother of one of the officers of the Standard Planing Mill was commenced against the Standard Planing Mill for $8,500, and that a default judgment had been entered in such suit; and that the Standard Planing Mill was not conducting any business, had no officers to take care of its assets which had been intermingled with those of Routt Lumber Company. It will be observed in passing that the petition alleges that one-third of the stock of the Standard Planing Mill is outstanding in the name of M. Y. Bishojj and that the Routt Lumber Company had transferred the remaining two-thirds of the stock before the petition in bankruptcy had been filed. It also appears from the allegations of another petition filed by the creditors and made a part of the record at the hearing upon the foregoing petition that the purchase price agreed to be paid by the Routt Lumber Company for the 11,500 shares owned by M. Y. Bishop was the amount of $11,500 with 8 per cent, interest from January 1, 1929. Affidavits .were filed in reply to and in support of the creditors’ petition. The supporting affidavits made by the receiver and by an expert accountant tend to sustain the petition in some but not in all particulars. Among the counter affidavits is one by Leonard W. Routt, secretary of the Standard Planing Mill, in which he alleges it is not true that the assets of the Standard Planing Mill were intermingled and confused with those of the Routt Lumber Company, but that they had always been kept separate and distinct and that the inventories of the properties of the two cqmpanies are in the hands of the sheriff of the county of Fresno, state of California, that although the two companies had the same office and place of business they had been maintained separately until the fire in 1928 destroyed the office of the Standard Planing Mill; he alleges it is not true that the officers of the two corporations are the same, alleging that they have never been the same and that in no instance has the president of one company been the president of the other; he alleges that the stock in the Standard Planing’ Mill formerly owned by the Routt Lumber Company had been transferred by it to W. E. Opie and to Builders’ Finance Company; that the statement in the petition in regard to purchase of supplies on the credit of the Routt Lumber Company and the transfer thereof to the Standard Planing Mill are untrue; that the transactions fully appeared upon the books of the corporation; he alleges that the property is being taken care of by a keeper employed by the sheriff of Fresno county; and that there is no necessity for a receivership. He also alleges, and as to this there is no conflict, that the Standard Planing Mill is not insolvent. A separate affidavit by H. W. Hills, a certified publie accountant, with reference to . the alleged purchase of supplies by the Routt Lumber Company and transfer thereof to the Standard Planing Mill without consideration, states that the books of both companies show that the goods were sold and paid for in cash. The bookkeeper of the two corporations, Miss Betty Pohl, who kept the books of the two corporations for more than three years, testified the two corporations kept separate books and separate inventories of property of each corporation. She states that “separate balance sheets were kept and maintained, and that the two sets of books were always absolutely separate and distinct in all details.” The receiver, C. W. Krumbholz, filed an affidavit in which he stated that prior to June 5, 1931, he examined the books of the two corporations and that these books did not show any transfer to the Standard Planing Mill of the various items of goods purchased as hereinbefore stated and that the books of the Standard Planing Mill did not show such transfer. He then states that subsequently to the making of such statement he again examined the books in conjunction with a certified public accountant and discovered “that the Routt Lumber Company had transferred these items to the Standard Planing Mill and showed such transfer in its accounts receivable, and from the books of the Standard Planing Mill and of the Routt Lumber Company, these indicate that such items were paid”; that his former statement was made in good faith. Oliver M.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 F.2d 29, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 3300, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standard-planing-mill-v-pacific-coast-paper-co-ca9-1932.