Wheeler v. Smith

30 F.2d 59, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 2339
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 14, 1929
Docket5560
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 30 F.2d 59 (Wheeler v. Smith) 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
Wheeler v. Smith, 30 F.2d 59, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 2339 (9th Cir. 1929).

Opinion

NORCROSS, District Judge.

In the matter of Telegram Publishing Company, bankrupt, the District Court for the District of Oregon approved with certain modifications an order made by the referee in respect to three certain claims presented for allowance. The ease comes to this court on appeal from the order of modification and approval.

The appellant, J. E. Wheeler, filed a claim for a balance due in the amount of $101,907.-71. Ralph H. Schneeloek and the Ralph H. Schneeloek Company filed their joint claim for $45,085 for moneys advanced, and Ralph H. Schneeloek filed an additional claim for $50,000, with accrued interest, as the holder of the bankrupt’s promissory note in that amount.

The Schneeloek claim upon the note was allowed by the referee for the principal thereof, and this allowance -was approved, with the addition of accrued interest to the date of the adjudication of bankruptcy in the amount of $8,059.70. The other Schneeloek claim was approved less an amount of $35,- *60 500, which was an item duplicated in. both the Wheeler .and Sehneeloek claims. The referee found as a fact that this item of $35,500 was advanced by the Sehneeloek Company to J. E. Wheeler personally, .who in turn advanced it to the bankrupt. The ruling of the referee in this respect was also approved.

In regard to the Wheeler claim, the referee ruled that there should be deducted therefrom the principal of the $50,000 note allowed in the Sehneeloek claim, because that note had been made by the bankrupt for the benefit of Wheeler personally, and for which he at the time made, or was supposed to have made, his note to the Telegram Publishing Company for a like amount; that there should be also deducted the said item of $35,-500 for the reason that, at the time advances were made by Wheeler to the bankrupt, he was the SQle owner of all the stock of the corporation; that it was conducted exclusively for his benefit and purposes; that, in effect, Such advances amounted to contributions to the capital of the enterprise, and it would be inequitable under such circumstances to permit such a claim to compete with claims of general creditors. The referee made an additional deduction, not questioned upon this appeal, and approved the Wheeler claim for the amount of $13,245.85. Upon review, the court below charged against the Wheeler claim a further offset of $8,059.70, the amount of interest allowed on the Sehneeloek claim, and, as so modified, approved the claim in the sum of $5,186.15.

It is contended by the appellant that it was error to deduct from the Wheeler claim the said item of $35,500. The precise question of the disallowance of the claim of a person owning all of the stock of a bankrupt corporation, does not appear to have been heretofore determined. It is contended that as the corporation is a separate, legal entity, such claimant is entitled to the same consideration as any other creditor. While a few courts have held that a corporation should not be regarded as a separate entity where all of the stock is held by one person, the weight of authority is to the contrary. 14 C. J. 52.

In the recent case of Majestic Co. v. Orpheum Circuit, 21 F.(2d) 720-724, the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit, citing many authorities, said: “The corporation will be regarded as a legal entity as a general rule, and the courts acting cautiously and only when the circumstances justify it, will ignore the fiction of corporate entity, where it is used as a blind or instrumentality to defeat public convenience, justify wrong, or perpetrate a fraud, and will regard the corporation as an association of persons.”

The stock of the Telegram Publishing Company was purchased in 1914 by the claimant J. E. Wheeler and his brother, L. R. Wheeler. In November, 1926, J. E. Wheeler acquired his brother’s interest. The corporation proceeded to operate without a board of directors, and J. E. Wheeler was the sole directing head of the corporation. He was interested in a number of other enterprises, some or all of which also appeared to be in financial straits. The Sehneeloek and Sehneeloek Company claims grew out of an effort upon the part of Sehneeloek to finance all of the various Wheeler enterprises. As a part of the general scheme of finance, J. E. Wheeler purchased his brother’s interest in the stock of the Telegram Publishing Company. Prior to such purchase, J. E. Wheeler had advanced to the company $252,296.48, and had withdrawn $187,836.48. Subsequent to his purchase of his brother’s'stoek, he is credited with advances in the amount of $80,-994.84, and withdrawals in the sum of $42,-547.23. The referee approved, except for a deduction of $3,161.86, not here in question, the Wheeler account for that portion accruing prior to his acquiring the total capital stock of the company, and disallowed that portion growing out of subsequent transactions.

It appears to have been the practice of J. E. Wheeler to withdraw or use funds of any of his various enterprises to aid others. For example, there is an item of $3,000 in the Sehneeloek claim for a check issued to the Telegram Publishing Company which Wheeler indorsed and delivered to the McCormick Lumber Company. This item appears to have been charged by the referee against the Wheeler claim. It is not considered that the Telegram Publishing Company was injured by this practice of Mr. Wheeler. If any conclusion could be drawn therefrom, it would appear to be that the Telegram Company received more aid than it in turn extended. The referee specifically found that the transactions of Mr. Wheeler, here involved, “are free from any charge of fraud upon the rights of third parties involved.” ,

Unless it can be said that the mere fact that Wheeler had acquired all the stock of the bankrupt corporation disentitles him to recover for loans or advances made to the company after such event, there is no justification for the deduction from his claim of the item of $35,500. It is conceded that no authority has been found for so holding. The particular money in question was furnished *61 in the first instance hy Schneelock for the particular purposes of the company. So far as he was concerned, it was a loan, and when the Schneelock claims were filed it was claimed as a loan direct to the company. Wheeler claimed, and the referee so found, that in fact it was a loan to him, and that he in turn loaned it to the company. The fact nevertheless is that the company required and received the money. The book entry of the Telegram Company refers to the money "as coming from Schneelock on account of J. E. Wheeler.” If the loan or advancement had been direct by Schneelock, there is no question but the latter would have been allowed it in Ms claim. The mere fact that the money was advanced to the company indirectly through Wheeler does not seem to us to' afford good reason for deducting it from both claims. It is not easy to see upon what theory this loan or advancement should be regarded as a capital investment upon the part of Wheeler. We do not understand that any other theory is urged other than that conclusion should follow from the premise that Wheeler had become the sole stockholder and was managing the business as his own. There might possibly be some basis for this view, if, upon the acquiring of all the stock of a company, the sole stockholder inaugurated some radical change in tho manner of conducting the business. There appears to have been, none in this ease.

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Bluebook (online)
30 F.2d 59, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 2339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wheeler-v-smith-ca9-1929.