Wood v. Royal Bank of Canada

100 P.2d 397, 3 Wash. 2d 308
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 28, 1940
DocketNo. 27577.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 100 P.2d 397 (Wood v. Royal Bank of Canada) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wood v. Royal Bank of Canada, 100 P.2d 397, 3 Wash. 2d 308 (Wash. 1940).

Opinion

Geraghty, J.

The controversy in this case grows out of the transfer, in September, 1930, by Frederick J. *309 Wood, now deceased, of certain shares of the capital stock of the E. K. Wood Lumber Company and the Redwood Highlands Company, Limited, to his children, Warren B. Wood and Marian Wood Sefrit, alleged to have been made with a fraudulent intent to delay and hinder his creditors.

Frederick J. Wood, a resident of Bellingham, was a large operator in timber and mill properties. He was president of the E. K. Wood Lumber Company, a California corporation, and owned, as his separate property, 1,561,725 shares of its capital stock, of the par value of one dollar a share. His wife, Anna Bale Wood, owned, as her separate property, 805,612 shares of that stock, and the spouses held, as community property, 883,575 shares. He also owned, as his separate property, 1,067% shares of the capital stock of the Redwood Highlands Company, Limited, worth one hundred dollars a share, its par value. The E. K. Wood Lumber Company was a prosperous concern and paid monthly dividends of one-sixteenth of one per cent on the par value of the stock.

Wood, with Edward G. English, another lumberman with large interests, had organized a British Columbia corporation known as Wood & English, Limited. Half of this company’s stock was the community property of English and wife, Alice K. English, and the other half the community property of Wood and wife. This company, in 1924, issued its seven per cent bonds, in the aggregate amount of one million dollars, secured by a mortgage upon the company’s tangible assets, the Yorkshire & Canadian Trust, Limited, being named as trustee for the bondholders in the mortgage deed of trust. The bonds were also signed by Wood and English and by their wives as co-makers. At the time of the questioned transfer in September, 1930, bonds of this *310 issue, amounting, in round figures, to $704,000, were outstanding.

F. J. Wood and E. G. English were also obligated to the Royal Bank of Canada and to other banks, on account of other debts of Wood & English, to the amount of eight hundred thousand dollars. Seven hundred and fifty thousand shares of the E. K. Wood stock owned by Wood and wife as community property had been pledged to secure these bank debts. E. G. English had also pledged a considerable number of shares of stock in companies in which he was interested to secure the same bank debts.

The financial requirements of Wood & English had made a heavy drain upon the resources of F. J. Wood and E. G. English. The corporation sustained heavy losses during the years 1927 to 1930, inclusive, aggregating more than $750,000. In the Federal income tax return made by F. J. Wood for the year 1930, he stated that the company was insolvent and that its stock held by himself and wife had been written off as a total loss, in the sum of $817,559.98. It is further stated in the return that, aside from the bond issue and $150,000 of collateral gold notes issued by the company and unpaid, and other contingent liabilities, the company’s liabilities exceeded its current assets by over $1,265,000; and that the shareholders had offered its property for the amount of its debts, exclusive of the debts owing to themselves, but had found no purchaser.

May 11, 1930, Anna Bale Wood died testate. With the exception of a few minor bequests, the whole of her estate was left to Warren B. Wood and Marian Wood Sefrit, only children of herself and Mr. Wood. The husband was named in the will as executor and qualified as such. The property of the estate was appraised at $565,740.16; of this amount, $483,367.20 represented the value of the shares of E. K. Wood Lumber Com *311 pany stock owned by the deceased as her separate property, appraised at sixty cents a share. The remainder of her estate was appraised at $82,372.96. With the exception of personal effects of small value, this amount represented her half interest in the community property, which included 133,575 unpledged shares of the E. K. Wood Lumber Company stock; the remainder of that stock owned by the community, 750,-000 shares, had been pledged, as we have seen, to various banks to secure indebtedness of Wood & English.

In addition to its liability on the outstanding obligations of Wood & English, for which claims were filed against the estate, claims were also filed by the executors of the estate of E. G. English and by Alice K. English, individually, for the contingent liability of the Wood estate for any sums they might be required to pay in excess of their just share of the Wood & English obligations. F. J. Wood and his community estate were liable for all this indebtedness, but the separate estate of Mrs. Wood was liable only on the seven per cent bond issue. The shares of the E. K. Wood Lumber Company stock pledged as security for the bank indebtedness were not given any value by the appraisers as an asset of the Anna Bale Wood estate, in view of the fact that the debts for which the stock was pledged might exhaust the security. The value of the stock of Wood & English was appraised as nil.

Edward G. English died February 23, 1930, leaving a will in which his wife, Alice K. English, and Norman English and two others were named as executors. All of his estate was community property, the whole being appraised at $1,842,661.27, without taking into account outstanding indebtedness. It appears, however, from notations in the inventory that stocks appraised at approximately one million dollars had been pledged to *312 secure either the indebtedness of Wood & English or the indebtedness of E. G. English.

It is recited in the inventory that one-half, of the common and preferred stock of Wood & English owned by E. G. English, appraised at $37,500, had been pledged to Yorkshire & Canadian Trust, Limited, to secure the bond issue. There is also included in the inventory an item for money loaned to Wood & English, amounting to $301,640.70 and appraised at $200,000.

Claims against the English estate amounted to $1,-746,729.92. At least $1,500,000 of these claims represented the corporate obligations of Wood & English, for which E. G. English and F. J. Wood were liable. Since several of the items listed and appraised in the inventory of the English estate as being of considerable value were, in fact, of little or no value, it would seem, on the face of the record, that his indebtedness, without taking into account his right to contribution from his co-obligors, F. J. Wood and wife, exceeded the value of his property; for instance, the Wood & English stock and that company’s indebtedness to the estate are appraised as of the value of $237,500. We have seen that F. J. Wood, in his income tax return for the year 1930, wrote off as a complete loss his stock in the company. Mr. Powell, one of the attorneys for the English estate, who had examined its files, testified that, in the Federal estate tax return made by the estate, its claim against Wood & English was listed as of no value, as was the estate’s interest in that company’s stock.

In September, 1930, F. J. Wood summoned his son, Warren B., to Bellingham. The son was then vice-president of the E. K. Wood Lumber Company and lived in Los Angeles.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Busey v. Wells Fargo Bank NA
W.D. Washington, 2019

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
100 P.2d 397, 3 Wash. 2d 308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-v-royal-bank-of-canada-wash-1940.