Wood v. Todd

251 F. 530, 163 C.C.A. 524, 1918 U.S. App. LEXIS 1727
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJune 14, 1918
DocketNo. 2342
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 251 F. 530 (Wood v. Todd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wood v. Todd, 251 F. 530, 163 C.C.A. 524, 1918 U.S. App. LEXIS 1727 (3d Cir. 1918).

Opinion

WOOLLEY, Circuit Judge.

The difficulties in this case arose out of the business relations of the three concerns here present by their receivers, which were complicated by cross property interests and liabilities and by the informality with which each did business with the others. A statement of these relations and of the conduct of the parties, somewhat in detail (but without regard so far as possible to matters settled by the decree and not raised on appeal), is necessary before the questions involved can be presented and understood.

For two generations or more there have been many partnerships bearing the firm name of R. D. Wood & C'o. They comprised in each [532]*532instance members of the Wood family and changed in their personnel only as partners died or withdrew and others were admitted. In the succession of one firm by another, it frequently happened that one firm of R. D. Wood & Co. would be actively doing business when at the same time other firms of R. D. Wood & Co., differently composed, were in process of liquidation. All the firms were engaged in substantially the same business, which, while embracing varied enterprises, had to do mainly with the purchase and sale of iron and steel products, «more particularly iron pipes, lamp posts, hydrants, and related foundry castings. Of the different partnerships we are concerned perhaps with only three. The first is that of December 31, 1887, composed of Richard Wood, George Wood, Walter Wood, and gtuart Wood, under an agreement, which, as the evidence shows, was the last articles of co-partnership formally entered into by writing. Richard withdrew from the firm in 1894, whereupon another partnership followed composed of George, Walter and Stuart. This partnership was dissolved in 1911 by the withdrawal of George, leaving Walter and Stuart to compose the firm of R. D. Wood & Co., whose receiver is the complainant in this action.

The members of the Wood family, comprising at different times the different firms of R. D. Wood & Co., controlled by stock ownership, either individually or as partners, Florence Iron Works and Camden Iron Works, corporations engaged in the manufacture of iron and steel products of the kind in which the firms dealt. The principal business of all firms of R. D. Wood & Co. in recent years was that of acting as financial, purchasing and selling agents for these two manufacturing corporations under an arrangement contractual in character but not reduced to writing, which, with respect to Florence had existed for thirty years. The firms, howsoever composed, bought the raw material and sold the finished product for Florence— in fact, transacted all its business save that of manufacturing — and received in return a sum equal to the firm’s expenses incurred in conducting the business of Florence and one-half of its profits, being liable for one-half of its losses. The same arrangement maintained with respect to Camden, with the exception that there was no division of profits and losses.

This relation of agency between the firm composed of Walter and 'Stuart Wood and the two corporations, existed on March 2, 1914, when Stuart died. The cross property interests and liabilities of the firm, of the partners, and of the two corporations at that time, appear ■as follows:

Of the 1,250 shares of the capital stock of Florence, Walter owned 785, Stuart 314 and the firm 151. Of the 8,000 shares of the preferred stock of Camden, Walter owned 3,180, Stuart 1,848 and the firm 2,531; and of the 7,000 shares of its common stock, Walter owned 1,915, Stuart 1,256 and the firm 2,346, besides certain rights evidenced by scrip certificates. Of the issue of $750,000 bonds of Camden, the firm owned $660,000, besides its serial notes to an amount of $96,-000. Camden was also indebted to the firm in the sum of about $170,-000. Florence owed the firm about $21,000, and Camden owed Flor[533]*533ence about $200,000. Florence owed Walter about $500,000, and Stuart about $100,000. Camden owed Stuart about $70,000, and Walter about $3,000. The firm owed Walter about $409,000, and Stuart about $750,000. Walter’s interest in the partnership was ^Vas and Stuart’s interest 2Ver».

It thus appears that the two corporations and the firm were not only closely related by property interests, but they were almost inextricably tied together by liabilities. It had long been the custom for one to loan money to the others as necessity required and as the ability of any one permitted, always at the will and direction of members of the firm, who were also officers, directors and the principal stockholders oí the two corporations. There was a constant flow of cash between the three and a running debit and credit cash account with almost daily entries was maintained. Both corporations of late years had been losing money, thereby involving not themselves alone but also the firm of R. D. Wood & Co., their financial agent.

In carrying out the business of financing and managing the two corporations, the firm had largely extended its credit. Its obligations, aggregating a very large sum, bad been sold through note brokers and were in the hands of many banks.

At the time of the death of Stuart, Walter was in Europe seeking business with which to span the period of depression in the steel industry at home. He hastily returned and found the affairs of the firm and of the two companies in a critical condition. The most pressing need was money with which to meet the firm’s maturing obligations. The finances of each concern were quite insufficient to meet its own obligations, and the assets of each, being in the main illiquid, could not readily be used to help the others. But Florence, owing to its practice of manufacturing in one season for sale in another, had accumulated about one-half million dollars worth of finished products, which Walter promptly set about to sell at a sacrifice and convert into cash. Being the managing head of Florence as well as the surviving partner of the firm, he directed Florence to purchase with the moneys thus coming in the outstanding notes of the firm as they matured, thereby easing the firm but causing Florence to become the holder of the firm’s notes in a considerable sum. He adjusted the balance between Camden and Florence and proceeded with the business of the firm with the object, as he maintains, of liquidating it, but with the effect of prosecuting the business as before the death of Stuart by making new contracts for the purchase and sale of materials for Camden and Florence and by creating firm obligations other than renewals of obligations which existed before Stuart’s death.

Walter’s efforts to meet the financial difficulties of the firm and to keep Camden and Florence going did not meet the approval or enlist concurrence of the executors of Stuart. Indeed, his efforts met their positive opposition, resulting in a controversy, both official and personal. of which much was made at the hearing, but which, we think, has little to do with the decision of the case. The result of it all was that the firm and the two corporations were thrown into receiverships and the controversy between Walter and the executors of Stuart sur[534]*534vived to the receivers of the three concerns, who in this action ask a determination of their rights and liabilities growing out of Walter’s conduct of the business after Stuart’s death.

On the appointment of the receiver for Florence there came into his possession notes of R. D. Wood & Co.

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Related

Wood v. Wood
167 A. 600 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1933)
Todd v. Lippincott
258 F. 205 (Third Circuit, 1919)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
251 F. 530, 163 C.C.A. 524, 1918 U.S. App. LEXIS 1727, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-v-todd-ca3-1918.