Tepel v. Coleman

229 F. 300
CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 15, 1914
DocketNo. 203A
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 229 F. 300 (Tepel v. Coleman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tepel v. Coleman, 229 F. 300 (M.D. Pa. 1914).

Opinion

WITHER, District Judge.

The plaintiff, trustee in bankruptcy of the West Branch Box & Lumber Company, here seeks cancellation of a bond and mortgage, dated May 5, 1913, given by the corporation to John J. Coleman, trustee, in trust for himself and the other defendants, for the sum of $9,915.56, now in custody of this court, being the pro-ceeds of six policies of fire insurance, covering the mortgaged premises and certain personal property of the bankrupt, which sum was paid into court upon an adjustment of the fire loss subsequent to the adjudication in bankruptcy.

The action is brought under section 70c of the Bankruptcy Act.

The facts are: The West Branch Box & Lumber Company is a corporation chartered under the laws of Pennsylvania on the 26th day of [302]*302January, 1911, with, an authorized capital stock of $40,000. Stock was subscribed for, paid by, and issued as follows: John Coleman, $5,000; John J. Coleman, $5,000; C. H. McLaughlin, $1,500; John Lush, $2,-500; F. W. Cole, $5,000; and William J. Campbell, $1,000 — with the exception that McLaughlin yet owed at the adjudication the sum of $400 on his stock for which the corporation had his note. The stock continued to be owned and held by the above parties, without change, until the 5th day of May, 1913. From the inception of the company to this date John Coleman was president of the corporation, Hartman was its general manager and treasurer, and the directors were John Coleman, Hartman, Bright, McLaughlin, and Campbell.

The company began business on January 1, 1911, having about that time purchased from John Coleman a box manufacturing plant, located outside the city limits of Williamsport, this district. It continued to operate the plant until February 13, 1914, on which day the plant and all books of the corporation were destroyed by fire. February 27, 1914, the company was adjudicated an involuntary bankrupt.

The company paid John Coleman $30,000 for the plant, but this did not include any lumber in the yard. It paid a dividend the first year, but at the annüal stockholders’ meeting for the year 1912, held in January, 1913, the general manager, Hartman, read a statement showing, a loss for the year just closed. Whether the loss was $2,500 or $10,-000, Hartman, in his deposition on behalf of the defendants, was unable to- say. About the time the corporation began business it borrowed $10,000 on first mortgage from the Board of Trade of the City of Williamsport. At the time of the annual stockholders’ meeting' mentioned, this mortgage had been reduced to $7,000; but on February 27, 1913, the company again borrowed the $3,000 paid. The old mortgage was satisfied and a new one taken for the sum of $10,000. This mortgage, and the bond secured thereby, remained a debt for the full amount at the date of adjudication. At the time of making application for this new loan, February 1, 1913, the corporation rendered a financial statement to the Board of Trade, and Hartman testified that the condition of the company remained about the same May 5, 1913.

For some time prior to the annual meeting of January, 1913, it was known by some of the directors that no dividend would be declared for the year 1912, for the reason that none was earned, and, when Hartman read the statement for the year’s operation showing a loss, the Colethans, father and son, together with D. J. Bright, three of the defendants, ’ criticized the management and complained about the failure to earn dividends. After considerable discussion, Hartman offered to take ov.er the stock of any dissatisfied stockholder on par. John Coleman agreed to sell, but wanted security which Hartman could not furnish. The meeting adjourned without any definite action taken. Before the meeting adjourned, however, John Coleman suggested to Hartman, Campbell, and McLaughlin: .

“Why don’t yon give a second mortgage on the plant and, for that, we will return the stock to the company?”

The parties acting upon this proposition, on May 5, 1913, the stock was delivered by the vendor stockholders to the corporation, and the [303]*303latter executed and delivered a second mortgage on the real estate, buildings, and fixtures or machinery in the plant, for $15,500 real debt, in favor of John J. Coleman, trustee, to secure a bond of the company in favor of said trustee for a like amount. The mortgage was recorded in Lycoming county, Pa., on May 13, 1913, and no payment was made on account by the bankrupt. This mortgage required the mortgagor to carry at least $12,000 fire insurance on the buildings for the benefit of the mortgagee. This amount was in force at the time of the fire, but of the .$9,915.56 paid into court thereof the sum of $479.41 was on stock and personal property. The policies contained the usual loss clause, “Loss, if any, first payable to John J. Coleman, trustee, as his mortgage interest may appear.” Four policies were issued and indorsed January 1, 1914, while two others were issued September 23 and 24, and indorsed January 2, 1914.

Immediately before this second mortgage was given to Coleman, trustee, the corporation owed, exceeding the Board of Trade mortgage, $18,049.15, and of this it owed $13,127.53 at its adjudication. Exclusive of the amount in controversy, the assets of the corporation will not pay the costs of administration.

[1] Coming now to the law of the case, be it said that much evidence was taken upon the question of corporate solvency on May 5, 1913; but the view taken by the court eliminates the necessity of deciding this question. It may be said in passing, however, that the court is of the opinion that capital stock is not a liability to be taken into account in determining whether a corporation is solvent. There does not seem to he any case wherein this precise question has been raised and decided.

“A stockholder is not, by virtue of the fact that he holds the stock, a creditor of flic corporation whose stock he holds. The rights of the stockholders are all subordinate to the rights of the creditors of the corporation. The stockholders are not entitled to any of the assets of the corporation or its property until all just debts due by the corporation are paid. The stockholder does not stand on an equal footing with creditors and is not jointly entitled with them to the fund. His claim begins only after every creditor has been satisfied.” 4 Thomp. Corp. (2d Ed.) § 4463.

The definition of “insolvency” in section 1a(15) of the federal Bankruptcy Act indicates that the capital stock of a corporation is not to be taken into account in determining whether a corporation is insolvent. Capital stock is a liability, but in no sense can it be said to be a corporate debt to be reckoned with in ascertaining whether the company is insolvent.

It is not necessary to decide whether a preference was created by the indorsements on the insurance policies January 1, 1914, or if on those days the company was insolvent. Neither is the court required to decide whether, under the terms of the mortgage and the policies, Coleman, trustee, is limited to the insurance paid on the buildings, as contended by the plaintiff.

[2] The plaintiff insists that the bond and mortgage are void because the capital stock taken by the mortgagor, in consideration therefor, being its own capital stock, was not property, and furthermore because the bond for which the mortgage was given as security is a [304]

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Bluebook (online)
229 F. 300, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tepel-v-coleman-pamd-1914.