Wheeling Dollar Savings & Trust Co. v. Hoffman

35 S.E.2d 84, 127 W. Va. 777, 1945 W. Va. LEXIS 43
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 26, 1945
Docket9652
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 35 S.E.2d 84 (Wheeling Dollar Savings & Trust Co. v. Hoffman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wheeling Dollar Savings & Trust Co. v. Hoffman, 35 S.E.2d 84, 127 W. Va. 777, 1945 W. Va. LEXIS 43 (W. Va. 1945).

Opinion

*779 Hose, Judge:

L. F. Haller, as receiver of Homeseekers Fire Insurance Company, instituted this suit in the Circuit Court of Ohio County against O. H. Gall as receiver of Wheeling Savings & Loan Association to have the sum of $115,-073.25 of the insurance company, alleged to have been placed in the Loan Association illegally by its secretary-treasurer, declared a trust fund in favor of the plaintiff, or, if not a trust fund, to constitute a debt due the plaintiff, and for general relief. The defendant answered alleging that the money in question was paid to and accepted by the Loan Association in purchase of in-stalment stock of the Association. During the progress of the suit Wheeling Dollar Savings & Trust Company succeeded Haller as receiver of the Insurance Company and John H. Hoffman became the successor of Gall as receiver of the Loan Association.

On the issues made evidence was taken at the bar of the court and the cause submitted for decision. The chancellor found for the plaintiff in the amount of $105,519.27 as a debt owed by the defendant to the plaintiff and entered a decretal judgment therefor, to be paid by the defendant pro rata from assets in his hands available for application on such debts. This appeal followed.

While neither fraud nor “unclean” hands was pleaded, the defendant strongly relies on these defenses here, as he may do. Such defense requires no pleading. Whenever and if it is made to appear to the court that by reason of fraudulent or other unconscionable conduct, the plaintiff has lost his right to invoke a court of equity, the court will, on the motion of a party, or its own motion, wash its hands of the whole. State v. Altizer Coal Land Company, 98 W. Va. 563, 128 S. E. 286. “The unconscionable character of a transaction between the parties need' not be pleaded or set up as a defense. Whenever it is disclosed the court will of its. own motion apply the maxim. It does not matter at what state of the proofs or in what order a lack of clean hands is discovered. A party cannot waive application of the clean hands rule *780 at the instance of the court, nor does such application depend on the wish of counsel. * * 30 C. J. S., Equity, section 97.. Nor is a court of equity compelled to act as umpire in a controversy growing out of transactions in which both parties are equally guilty of fraudulent or otherwise unconscionable conduct in connection with the matter of litigation, but will leave them where they have placed themselves. George v. Curtis, 45 W. Va. 1, 30 S. E. 69; Rock, Admr., v. Mathews, 35 W. Va. 531, 14 S. E. 137; Brown v. Wylie, 2 W. Va. 502. These basic rules of equity were not devised, and are not applied, for the benefit of either litigant, but exist for the purpose of maintaining the dignity and integrity of the court acting only to administer equity. When not equity, but inequity, is shown to be the basis of a suit, the litigation has no place in a court of equity, and when both parties are equally besmirched the whole procedure will be dismissed without further decree and without regard to the desire of the parties.

Throughout the taking of evidence the question of fraud seems to have been constantly obtruded into the case. Much evidence in the record is otherwise wholly irrelevant. In the end, the chancellor decided to entertain the cause, and did adjudicate on its merits. In view of the basic character of this question we direct to it our first inquiry.

The Homeseekers Fire Insurance Company and the Wheeling Savings & Loan Association are closely interlocked in history, in officers, in management and in operation. The latter company was organized in 1919. In 1922 another corporation, the Real Estate Finance Company, was organized, with identical officers, directors and management. In 1924 the same group organized the Homeseekers Fire Insurance Company, also with the same directors, officers and manager. The latter company had an authorized capital of $200,000, of which one-half was issued at a premium of $25,000. Of this subscription $21,500 was by the Real Estate Finance Company with money borrowed from the Loan Association. *781 This paid-in capital of $125,000 was left in the Loan Association, and is the beginning of the account in controversy. This account has always been carried on the books of the Insurance Company as a cash account, while on the books of the Loan Association it has always been shown as a payment for instalment stock in that corporation. These books were set up and always supervised and controlled by one Reass, who, through the life of the corporations was the executive manager of each, first as secretary-treasurer until a few months before the receiverships, when he became executive vice president, with his son as secretary-treasurer.

The receiver for the Loan Association was appointed by the Commissioner of Banking in 1936, and the Circuit Court of Ohio County appointed receivers for the Insurance Company and the Real Estate Finance Company at about the same time. This suit was instituted July 28, 1936. The final decree was entered March 18, 1944.

The account in question, from its beginning, has been subject to debits and withdrawals, much as an ordinary bank account. By 1929 the balance to the credit of the Insurance Company was reduced to a nominal amount, at which time additional stock of that corporation was sold, realizing $78,750, which was again left with the Loan Association in this account. Of this stock $51,125 was purchased by the Real Estate Finance Company with money borrowed from the Loan Association without security except the stock purchased. By 1931 this balance was again practically exhausted, since which time it has been built up to $115,073.25, the amount sued for.

The controlling directors and officers of the three corporations have always been identical. The offices of the three corporations were maintained in a building owned by the Loan Association, which occupied the first floor, with the offices of the other two corporations on the second floor. Some employees worked for more than one of the corporations, and a common fidelity bond covered certain of the employees of all three.

The chief clerk of the Loan Association testifies that *782 “the biggest mortgages we had were the Real Estate Finance Company and we had to keep that institution open”. When the receiver of the Loan Association closed the books, the Real Estate Finance Company was indebted to the Loan Association in the amount of $149,-711.45, and owned approximately 53% of the stock in the Insurance Company. This indebtedness may be assumed to be at least largely uncollectible, since the representative of the receiver of the Loan Association testifies that if the plaintiff’s claim is paid nothing will remain to be paid to stockholders or other creditors of the Association.

At a meeting of the directors of the Insurance Company on January 5, 1935, the secretary reported “that the public continually had the three companies confused as one organization” and that he “felt obliged to resign”.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 S.E.2d 84, 127 W. Va. 777, 1945 W. Va. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wheeling-dollar-savings-trust-co-v-hoffman-wva-1945.