White v. Staehly

7 Conn. Super. Ct. 71, 7 Conn. Supp. 71, 1939 Conn. Super. LEXIS 32
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedFebruary 23, 1939
DocketFile 55219
StatusPublished

This text of 7 Conn. Super. Ct. 71 (White v. Staehly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
White v. Staehly, 7 Conn. Super. Ct. 71, 7 Conn. Supp. 71, 1939 Conn. Super. LEXIS 32 (Colo. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

SIMPSON, J.

Prior to June 9, 1936, the defendant, Emil Staehly, was in the business of bottling beverages and the sale thereof. He was doing business under the trade name of Staehly Bottling Works, with his place of business in West Haven. He bottled and sold beer and other beverages, the beer at that time being purchased from different breweries. Prior to that stated date, he bought from a receiver in bankruptcy of the Rex Brewing Company, the land and the buildings of that company and all the equipment and personal property then in the building. The purchase price was $20,000. He made the purchase for the purpose of manufacturing beer for his bottling business.

On June 9, 1936, he caused a certificate of incorporation to be filed with the secretary of state in the name of The Staehly Brewing Company, with authorised capital stock of $100,000. He, his wife, Rose Staehly, and a brother, Alfred Staehly, were named as incorporators. The certificate was executed on June 16, 1936, and filed with the secretary of state on June 17, 1936. *72 So far as appeared no subscription to the capital stock was evet made, but on June 16, 1937, there were issued to Emil Staehly, the defendant, 994 shares of the par value of $100, five shares to Rose Staehly, and one share to Alfred Staehly, and all were issued as fully paid and nonassessable. Thereafter the defend' ant, Emil Staehly, conveyed and transferred to the Staehly Brewing Company the land and buildings and equipment he had acquired from the Rex Brewing Company in full payment of all of the stock.

The by-laws were adopted on June 16, 1936, and from that date to December 5, 1936, so far as it appears, no meeting of the directors or stockholders was held. A meeting of December 5, 1936, was held for the purpose as hereinafter stated.

The by-laws provided that “A majority of the outstanding stock, exclusive of treasury stock, shall be necessary to constitute a quorum at meetings of the stockholders”, and that a maority of the stock represented at any meeting “shall decide any question brought before such meeting.”

The defendant caused himself to be elected director, president and general manager, and his wife, Rose Staehly, director and secretary, and his brother, Alfred Staehly, director and vice president. The affairs of the company were wholly within his hands. If there ever was a one-man corporation this was one, and besides was organized, as the defendant stated, to manufacture beer for the Staehly Bottling Works, which was himself.

At the very outset the company was without working capital. It did not have anything with which to pay the incorporation fees and expenses connected therewith, nor the Federal tax on beer, which had to be paid as the beer was manufactured and barreled, nor with which to meet payrolls.

The defendant began to advance money to the corporation to enable it to effect the incorporating and pay for the liquor permit, revenue stamps, payroll and expenses generally. The defendant was credited on the books of the company for the advancements so made, and on December 5, 1936, there was so credited to him a sum in excess of $23,000.

After the company began to manufacture beer he caused beer to be delivered to his bottling works. At the beginning these deliveries were carried on the books of the company as sales, but in the fall of 1936, by journal entry he caused these *73 “sales” to be changed to “transfers.” This change was made for the purpose of avoiding if possible the payment of the revenue tax on “sales.” The “sales” or “transfers” were charged on the books of the company at $10 per barrel, which was always less than the cost of manufacture.

Sometime in the fall of 1936, the accountant who audited the books monthly, noticed that the “advancements” were getting to be heavy, and he suggested to the defendant that he ought to take a mortgage for his security. On December 5, 1936, the defendant and his wife and brother Alfred Staehly, joined in a waiver of notice of a special combined meeting of the stockholders and directors of the company. At the time the defendant was the owner of record of 930 shares of the company, he having on July 15, 1936, caused 45 shares of his original holding to be transferred to his wife, and 19 shares to his brother. There were present at the meeting all three of the directors and stockholders, and the defendant acted as the chairman. Mr. Staehly, the defendant, stated at the meeting “that from time to time he had advanced money for the purpose of conducting and carrying on the business of the Staehly Brewing Company, which amounted to $23,000, and that he wished to be secured for these advances.”

It was therefore voted, the defendant participating, “that in order to protect and secure the loans made by the said Emil Staehly to the incorporation, the proper officers.... are hereby authorised and instructed to execute a mortgage note and deed' m the name of the corporation upon all the real and personal property of the corporation for the purpose of securing the sum of $23,000”, and further the vice president, Alfred Staehly, was authorised and empowered to execute and sign the note and mortgage in question in the name of the company, which were to be attested by the secretary, and the seal of the-corporation attached to said mortgage deed and note, and the same delivered to Emil Staehly, the defendant.

Thereupon Alfred Staehly, as vice president, did execute and deliver to Emil Staehly, the defendant, the mortgage, attested by Rose Staehly as secretary, Exhibit A, attached to the complaint. The mortgage covered all the land, buildings and' personal property of whatever nature, not including accounts receivable.

On December 5, 1936, the company owed unsecured creditors, other than Emil Staehly, between six -and seven thousand' *74 dollars, and owed to Emil Staehly, as appeared by the books, .a sum in excess of $23,000. It had current assets, including cash in the bank, which was nominal, of approximately $20,000, including accounts receivable of approximately $7,000, which were of uncertain actual value. The company had from its inception lost money in its operation; the amount of net loss •on November 30, 1936, was $1,710.08.

While considering the land and buildings and equipment it was solvent as that term is generally defined, it could not have met its obligation without selling its plant and equipment. It was clearly, therefore, in failing circumstances.

The defendant testified that he took the mortgage for his own “protection.” The only parties against whom he could ■seek protection were the unsecured creditors. If the mortgage was not in actual fraud of the unsecured creditors, it certainly tended to delay and hinder them in collecting their claims.-

While the advances to the corporation were called advances .and were carried on the books of the company to the credit of the defendant, a fair inference from the circumstances is that the defendant “advanced” the money for his own benefit as working capital.

It may also be noted the corporation could not do any official act except upon the decision of a majority of the stock.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 Conn. Super. Ct. 71, 7 Conn. Supp. 71, 1939 Conn. Super. LEXIS 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-staehly-connsuperct-1939.