Stolman v. Boston Furniture Co.

180 A. 507, 120 Conn. 235, 1935 Conn. LEXIS 33
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 12, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 180 A. 507 (Stolman v. Boston Furniture Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stolman v. Boston Furniture Co., 180 A. 507, 120 Conn. 235, 1935 Conn. LEXIS 33 (Colo. 1935).

Opinion

Foster, J.

An involuntary petition in bankruptcy was filed against Frank J. Resnikoff, to whom reference is hereinafter made as Resnikoff, who was engaged in the furniture business. A settlement of his debts was effected with his creditors by a composition of 22% per cent., of which 15 per cent, was payable in cash and 7% per cent, in notes. The necessary cash was loaned to Resnikoff by Benjamin Stolman and Isadore Opper under a written agreement, by the terms of which Resnikoff was to secure them for such loans. It was agreed that he would cause to be organized a corporation named The Boston Furniture Conjpany, Incorporated, to take over all of the assets that he had owned and used in his furniture business and that he would assign unto Stolman and Opper all of the corporate shares in the corporation to be held by them until his debts owed to them were paid. Such corporation was organized with an outstanding capital stock of $50,000 divided into five hundred shares of no par value. In practical conformity with the agreement *238 above mentioned, two hundred and forty-nine shares of the stock were issued to Stolman, two hundred and forty-nine shares to Opper, one share to Frank J. Resnikoff and one share to Oscar Resnikoff.

In issuing the notes for the 7% per cent, of his indebtedness in accordance with his composition in bankruptcy, Resnikoff signed them “Frank J. Resnikoff” and “The Boston Furniture Co., Inc., by Frank J. Resnikoff, Pres.” Eventually legal action was threatened against the corporation for the collection of these numerous notes by the holders.

Upon this state of facts Stolman and Opper instituted this action, alleging in their complaint that as a result of the execution of the notes by Resnikoff as president of the corporation for his own private indebtedness, the assets of the corporation were in imminent danger of waste through attachment and litigation and praying for the appointment of a receiver and dissolution of the corporation and such other equitable relief as might be just and proper in the premises. A receiver was appointed, and the assets of the estate appraised at $45,534.14. After continuing the business for a short time, certain of the assets were sold under order of the court, and the operation of the business was discontinued. On April 27th, 1934, upon the filing in court by the receiver of a “tentative report,” the receiver was ordered by the court to pay all allowed claims in full.

On May 25th, 1934, the court on written application of the receiver passed an order concerning the distribution of the assets of the receivership then in his hands to stockholders of the corporation. In the application, of which as a part of the file of this case we take judicial notice, it is stated that all of the creditors whose claims had been allowed had been paid in full, that the receiver and his attorney had been paid in *239 full to date, and that a balance sheet, filed as of April 18th, 1933, represented the exact status of the corporation; and the receiver petitioned the court for advice and authority in regard to the distribution of the balance of the assets. The order of the court was that the receiver was authorized and ordered to distribute the balance of the assets on hand to the stockholders. The assets consisted largely of a great number of leases or conditional bills of sale of furniture, the face value of which was in excess of $40,000. The order did not provide for the sale of the leases, but directed their distribution in kind. The receiver did not wholly comply with this order, but he did pay to the stockholders $7760.62 in cash. At the time of such order of distribution, the receiver had never given notice of disallowance of claims to creditors whose claims had been disallowed, as is required under § 240 of the Rules of Court. Such notice was later given, whereupon, within the time provided by the Rules of Court, more than sixty claimants presented to the court their application that their claims be allowed. After formal and extended hearings by the court, all of these claims were disallowed and finally barred. Frank J. Resnikoff, Opper and Oscar Resnikoff, owners of a majority of the stock of the corporation, thereupon filed in court a written motion reciting that the corporation was fully solvent and was desirous of resuming its business and praying that the assets in the hands of the receiver be by him turned over and distributed unto the corporation, and the receiver filed a written motion in court for advice as to the disposal of the assets remaining in his hands. The receiver filed his final account, which, among other matters, showed accounts receivable of $40,117.04.

At the hearing upon the motions of the stockholders and the receiver no evidence was received, but *240 the receiver and all stockholders were represented by counsel, and upon the pleadings and representations and admissions of counsel the court found that the cash value of the accounts receivable was at least $18,000. Stolman and Opper were each paid during the receivership $3864.79, and less than $6000 of the amount which Stolman loaned to Resnikoff, as security for which he holds 49 per cent, of the stock of the corporation, remains unpaid to him. The stockholders of the corporation duly elected officers to succeed those whose terms had expired during the pendency of the receivership proceedings and passed a resolution that the corporation receive from the receiver all assets belonging to it and resume its business. All of the debts of the corporation have been paid. All parties in interest having been heard, the court passed an order that the receiver turn over all assets in his hands to the corporation, and the court later denied a motion to vacate and reopen the order. From this order of the court and its denial of a motion to vacate and reopen the order the appellant appeals.

There are certain fundamental principles of law, elementary though they be, upon which the determination of this case rests. An action in receivership is an action in equity. “This proceeding for the appointment of a receiver to take possession of all the assets and for the dissolution of the Hotel Corporation, was an action in equity.” Beach v. Beach Hotel Corporation, 117 Conn. 445, 450, 168 Atl. 785. A court of equity does full and equal justice to all having an interest in the subject-matter. As tersely expressed in one of our cases, “Equity never does anything by halves.” Barber v. International Co. of Mexico, 73 Conn. 587, 605, 48 Atl. 758.

There stands in the name of the appellant 49 per cent, of the stock of the corporation. He did not buy *241 it, nor does he own it in fee simple. He holds it as security for a loan to Resnikoff of $12,600, on which debt less than $6000 is now due. The assets of the corporation are worth at least $18,000. There are no creditors of the corporation. If the assets are turned back to the corporation by the receiver, as ordered by the court, the appellant will hold as security for his present debt of $6000 or less, 49 per cent, of the stock of a corporation whose assets are worth at least $18,-000. The other stockholders are equally well protected and are receiving the same equitable treatment. That the court below granted an order that did full equity to all parties interested, there can be no question.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
180 A. 507, 120 Conn. 235, 1935 Conn. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stolman-v-boston-furniture-co-conn-1935.