Woodman v. Butterfield

101 A. 25, 116 Me. 241, 1917 Me. LEXIS 46
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJune 21, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 101 A. 25 (Woodman v. Butterfield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woodman v. Butterfield, 101 A. 25, 116 Me. 241, 1917 Me. LEXIS 46 (Me. 1917).

Opinion

King, J.

Bill in equity wherein the plaintiff, as trustee in bankruptcy of the National Boat and Engine Company, seeks to recover of the defendant the amount of certain payments, and the value of certain bonds, alleged to have been' obtained by him for his benefit from the corporation while he was a director thereof, and when it was insolvent. The ground for recovery is alleged to be, that the obtaining and acceptance of said payments and bonds by said defendant or for his benefit were in violation of his fiduciary duty as a director of said bankrupt corporation and in fraud of the rights of its creditors and stockholders. The case is before us upon an appeal by the defendant from the decree of the sitting Justice.

No special finding of facts, or summary of the issues involved, was filed with the decree. The record is voluminous. It contains many uncontroverted facts and circumstances which are material to a clear understanding of the particular issues between the parties, and important to be considered in the determination of those issues. We will, therefore, at the outset briefly state some of those unquestioned facts and circumstances.

In 1907 the defendant became connected with the Racine Boat Manufacturing Company, a corporation doing business at Muskegon, Michigan. He was a large stockholder, a director and the secretary of that company. The other directors were Walter J. Reynolds, his wife Rose E. Reynolds, Paul B. McCracken and Frank A. Wilson. Reynolds was its president. The capital stock of the company was ultimately $200,000, substantially all owned by the directors. The defendant, together with Reynolds and McCracken, indorsed notes of the company to a large amount. January 8, 1909 that corporation made and delivered to Butterfield a trust deed or mortgage of its [244]*244property to secure him for his then existing indorsements for the company amounting to $160,000, for such future indorsements as he should make for' it, and for any notes given to him by the company. That trust deed was never recorded, and it was withheld from record for the reason that, if recorded, it would impair the credit of the company; but there was an understanding between the other directors and Butterfield that the trust deed was to be recorded whenever Butterfield should determine that the company ‘ ‘was on its last legs.”

In September, 1910, the National Boat and Engine Company was organized, under the laws of Maine, for the purpose of taking over the property and business of the Racine Company, and of various other companies and concerns carrying on a similar business. The plan of consolidation was for the new corporation to take over all the assets of the constituent companies and concerns at an appraisal to be made, and to assume all the liabilities of each. The difference between the assets and liabilities of each constituent was to be paid to it, or to its stockholders, in the bonds, the preferred stock, and the common stock, of'the new company, in such proportions as the plan of consolidation provided for.

J. Q. Ross, attorney for the Racine Company, Reynolds its president, and H. S. Beardsley, of New York, appear to have been active promoters of the consolidation, and Butterfield was fully informed as to the plans and purposes of the consolidation from the beginning of the negotiations. He says that it was agreed at the outset between Ross, Beardsley, Reynolds and himself that no mention should be made, in carrying out the consolidation, of the unrecorded trust deed which he held of the Racine Company’s property, and that it was further understood between them that after the new corporation had issued its bonds the trust deed was to be exchanged for enough of those bonds, to be held in escrow, to cover all his contingent liability on notes of the Racine Company and all of its direct liability to him. The consolidation was carried out as planned. Reynolds became president, Beardsley treasurer, and Ross secretary of the new corporation, and each was a member of its board of directors. All the assets of the Racine Company were transferred to the new or National Company by conveyances warranting the title thereto, and without mention of the unrecorded trust deed held by Butterfield. At the time of the transfer Butterfield was liable as indorser or guarantor of the [245]*245Racine Company’s paper to the amount of about $100,000, according to his testimony, and that company was also indebted to him for about $24,500 on notes given by it to him.

The National Company authorized an issue of not exceeding $3,000,000 of first mortgage bonds, to bear date October 1st, 1910, and to be secured by a trust mortgage to the Astor Trust Company, of New York City, as trustee, covering all its property real and personal, present and future. The mortgage was executed, and on January 18, 1911 was accepted by the trustee. Some of the bonds were sold and others were used as collateral.

The National Company used the same office as the Racine Company, in Muskegon, Michigan, until December. 1910, or January, 1911, when it changed its general office from Muskegon to Chicago. At a special meeting of the board of directors of the National Company held at the Congress Hotel in Chicago on the 21st day of December, 1910, Butterfield was elected a director of the corporation. He attended the next meeting of the board of directors held at Chicago on March 13, 1911. At that meeting the business affairs and the financial status of the corporation were presented and discussed, and a resolve was passed that when necessary to borrow.money in order to obtain funds to meet bills or accounts payable or to extend the time of payment on notes payable, the officers of the Company might use the bonds of the company as collateral at a rate not to exceed two for one.

At the time of the consolidation Butterfield held two notes of the Racine Company, one for $14,500, dated August 4, 1910, maturing February 4, 1911, with interest paid to its maturity, and the other for $10,000, dated September 6, 1910, maturing December 6, 1910, with interest paid to its maturity. Various payments were made to him and for his benefit on account of those notes prior to April 6,1911. On that day Butterfield received $6750, at par value, of the bonds of the National Company. He admits that he received those bonds in full settlement of the balance then due on his two notes against the company, as then adjusted between him and Reynolds, its president. And on or about the same date, he received $3650, at par value, of the bonds of the National Company.

It has already been mentioned that there was an understanding between Butterfield, Reynolds, Ross and Beardsley, that, after the consolidation was completed, a sufficient amount of the bonds of the [246]*246new company should be exchanged for that unrecorded mortgage which Butterfield held covering the Racine Company’s property. In furtherance of that understanding, and in May, 1911, bonds of the National Company to the amount of $88,000 were placed in the hands of Cross, Vanderwerp, Foote & Ross, as trustees, to secure Butterfield on his indorsements of the notes of the Racine Company, then amounting to about $44,000, and which indebtedness the National Company had assumed.

At a meeting of the board of directors of the National Company held August 25th, 1911, a resolve was passed directing the president to admit in writing, for the company and in its name, its inability to pay its debts and its willingness to be adjudged a bankrupt on that-ground; and the petition in bankruptcy was filed against it August-28, 1911'.

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Bluebook (online)
101 A. 25, 116 Me. 241, 1917 Me. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodman-v-butterfield-me-1917.