Vogt v. General Necessities Corp.

247 N.W. 707, 262 Mich. 409, 1933 Mich. LEXIS 888
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 4, 1933
DocketDocket No. 12, Calendar No. 36,635.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 247 N.W. 707 (Vogt v. General Necessities Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vogt v. General Necessities Corp., 247 N.W. 707, 262 Mich. 409, 1933 Mich. LEXIS 888 (Mich. 1933).

Opinion

Wiest, J.

This is a proceeding, in behalf of the receivers of the General Necessities Corporation, to recover moneys in the hands of defendant David A. Brown and claimed to belong to the corporation. Defendant David A. Brown was president of the General Necessities Corporation. In April, 1928, the Necessities Corporation borrowed $75,000 from the Madison investment Corporation. Mr. Brown indorsed the notes given for this loan, and, as security, executed a trust mortgage to the Guardian Trust Company, covering real property owned by him. "When the indebtedness was due, an extension of time and an increase of $25,000, for the benefit of Mr. Brown, was desired, and Mr. Brown again gave a mortgage on his property to secure the loan of $100,000, evidenced by a series of notes, payable over a period of one'year. It is claimed that he did this under an agreement with the directors of the Necessities Corporation that the loan would be repaid out of a prospective sale of the ice cream plant, and the proceeds from such sale would be placed in his hands for that purpose. The ice cream plant of the Necessities Corporation was sold to the Borden Company, and the purchase price was paid in stock of the Borden Company, having a market value, it is *411 claimed, of $650,000. The Borden Company stock was placed in the hands of Mr". Brown, who pledged the same with a New York bank for a loan of $300,000 to the Necessities Corporation. Sales of the pledged stock were authorized and made, and the loan from the bank was finally satisfied. This left to the Necessities Corporation, out of the Borden Company stock, the sum of $56,378.26, and Mr. Brown received that sum from the New York bank on March 17,1930, and claims right to hold the amount here involved for the purpose of paying the Madison Investment Corporation’s loan to the Necessities Corporation, and relieve his property from the mortgage securing that loan, as well as his personal liability as an indorser of the notes evidencing the loan. Two of such notes of $4,000 each matured in March and April, 1930, and were paid out of the fund held by Mr. Brown.

April 28, 1930, receivers were appointed for the General Necessities Corporation, qualified as such, and, on April 30, 1930, demanded of Mr. Brown that he turn over to them, as such receivers, the money in his hands, derived from sale of the Borden Company stock. Mr. Brown refused to do so, and, September 23, 1930, on petition of the receivers, the court ordered Mr. Brown to show cause why he should not be adjudged guilty of contempt of court in not paying the money to the receivers, as previously ordered by the court. Thereupon the Madison Investment Corporation intervened and petitioned the court to adjudge the fund to be held in trust by Mr. Brown under an equitable lien for payment to it, and that it he so ordered paid. Mr. Brown, in answer to the order to show cause, set forth in substance what we have before stated, and admitted all claims set up in the petition of the *412 Madison Corporation. Defendant Brown prosecutes an appeal from a decree ordering Mm to pay the fund, now amounting to $40,608.36, to the receivers of the Necessities Corporation within a specified time or stand adjudged guilty of contempt. The Madison Investment Corporation prosecutes an appeal from the denial of its claim to the fund. The appeals have been consolidated and present the issues of whether the Necessities Corporation segregated the fund and placed it in the hands of Mr. Brown, as trustee, to pay on the corporate obligation to the Madison Corporation, or whether the fund is subject to an equitable lien,in behalf of intervener.

It is contended by appellants that the agreement between Mr. Brown and the Necessities Corporation, to the effect that proceeds from sale of the ice cream plant would be applied in payment of the Madison Investment Corporation loan was established by the evidence, and the trial judge was in error in Ms finding to the contrary. Upon this issue all other questions hinge. No corporate action appears in the minutes of directors’ meetings.

Until Mr. Brown learned of the proceeding for appointment of the receivers, the fund was on deposit in a New York bank to the credit of the Necessities Corporation and its withdrawal check. Upon learning of the proceeding for appointment of the receivers, Mr. Brown, from New York, telephoned the assistant treasurer of the Necessities Corporation to countersign two checks and mail them to him at the New York bank, stating that he wanted to pay the Madison Corporation. Mr. Brown filled out the checks to his own order and drew the money here involved. Up to that time there had been no segre *413 gation of the funds for trust purposes, nor any recognition of such purpose, but rather the contrary.

It would seem that ordinary business acumen should have prompted some more permanent memorial of corporate action than mere memory of individuals. The burden of establishing facts impressing the fund with a trust was upon the claimants of such a result. Such a trust, in opposition to the otherwise clear right of the receivers, is not to be lightly inferred.

Mr. Brown had been liberal in pledging his personal liability in behalf of the corporation by indorsement of its paper and mortgaging his property for the same purpose, and he continued to do so over remonstrances of some of his business associates. Efforts by Mr. Brown to have the Madison Corporation discount the obligation of the Necessities Corporation before maturity, and his declaration that he had the money from sale of the Borden stock with which to make payment, did not establish a trust. The fund was on deposit as money of the corporation, and Mr. Brown could not constitute it a trust fund and make the Madison Corporation the beneficiary by any statements he might make. It required action by the board of directors of the Necessities Corporation to accomplish allocation and severance of this fund and its segregation as a then present devotion thereof to the payment of the obligation of the corporation to the Madison Corporation.

We are satisfied that at directors’ meetings it was talked that, from the proceeds of the sale of the ice cream plant, the mortgage on the plant, taxes, pressing obligations, and the Madison loan could and should be paid, and that Mr. Brown, who dominated the board, should take the Borden stock and *414 pay all such, obligations. But this was no more than ordinary corporate finance management, for such was the purpose in selling the ice cream plant.

The following quotations of testimony are from intervener’s abstract. The secretary of the Necessities Corporation testified that:

“I had a memorandum of this (obligation to be paid out of the money from the Borden stock) along with the other resolutions and I spoke to Mr. Brown about incorporating that in the minutes. I said it would be a good thing to have it there as part of the transaction. He told me, however, to forget about that. That he preferred not to have it in the minutes, so I let it go.”

Harry Z. Brown, a director, testified:

“It was agreed that David Brown was to keep the proceeds of the sale (Borden) in his possession. He was to set aside a certain portion of the stock to take care of the Madison loan.

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284 N.W.2d 496 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 1979)

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Bluebook (online)
247 N.W. 707, 262 Mich. 409, 1933 Mich. LEXIS 888, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vogt-v-general-necessities-corp-mich-1933.