Wright v. American Finance & Securities Co.

93 A. 862, 84 N.J. Eq. 415, 1915 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 88
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedApril 8, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 93 A. 862 (Wright v. American Finance & Securities Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wright v. American Finance & Securities Co., 93 A. 862, 84 N.J. Eq. 415, 1915 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 88 (N.J. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

Backes, V. C.

This bill sets forth that the defendant company is insolvent and prays for an Injunction and the appointment of a receiver. A temporary receiver was appointed, and an order to show cause issued, upon the return of which the defendant filed an answer, with .affidavits annexed, denying insolvency, and on the hearing the witnesses on both sides were heard in open court.

The defendant was formed in 1903, chiefly for the purpose of promoting and financing other- corporations. It was organized with an authorized capital of $5,000,000, divided into fifty thousand shares of the par value of $100 each. For the purpose of putting it in funds, the defendant created an issue of one and a quarter million dollars “of bonds, called “Special Contract Bonds,” which it sold or agreed to sell to the Eastern Finance Company, another creature of the promoters of the defendant, at eighty per cent, or for $1,000,000. The whole of the $5,000,000 of capital stock was issued to the Eastern Finance Company, in exchange for holdings of that company in still other companies formed by the same promoters, all of which had but a -fancied, or no, value. The $5,000,000 of capital stock was “water” and was used to promote the sale of the special contract bonds, the purchasers of the latter being-given blocks of the stock as bonus. A subsidiary company of the Eastern Finance Company was to be used to sell the special contract bonds to the public, but upon this method falling through or being abandoned, the defendant itself made the sales which yielded, as it claims, the contract price of the Eastern Finance Company, of $1,000,000 in this manner. As the contract bonds were sold from time to time, eighty per cent, of their face value was credited to the account of the Eastern Finance Company, until the one million dollar figure was reached, and the account was squared. The difference between the eighty per cent, and the amount for which the bonds were sold, was absorbed in organization and operation [417]*417expenses. The Eastern Finance Company still holds twenty-seven thousand, five hundred shares of the defendant, the remaining twenty-two thousand, five hundred shares having been handed over, as occasion required, to the purchasers of the special contract bonds. Hp to this point in the history of the defendant it appears that it was launched upon the financial world with possible assets of not more than $1,000,000 and fixed liabilities of one and a quarter million dollars of bonds, plus $5,000,000 of capital stock.

It would, indeed, make interesting reading, to review the career of the defendant, its exploitations and vicissitudes of fortune, from its inception to the present application, so ingenuously related on the witness-stand by its president, but it would be without profit, and I will therefore confine myself to adverting only vto those operations which have a bearing- upon the present question of insolvency, and these I will discuss mainly, if not entirely, from the case as made by the defendant.

The financial condition of the defendant, as of December 31st, 1914, is shown by its balance-sheet, which was distributed among its stock and bondholders:

General Balance Sheet.
December 31st, 1914.
All figures, both debit and credit, represent face values.
Assets:
First mortgage bonds, par value......... $372,900.00
Preferred stocks, par value.............. 7,SOO.OO
Cash .................................. 3,244.71
Bills and accounts receivable............. 984,152.67
Common stock of subsidiary companies, par value ............................... 6,266,975.00
Furniture and fixtures.................. 948.34
Liabilities:
Accounts payable ...................... $23,214.88
Bond interest accrued................... 187,500.00
Income bonds .......................... 1,250,000.00
^Capital Stock ........................ 500,000.00
* Surplus .............................. 5,675,305.84
$7,636,020.72 $7,636,020.72
[418]*418* Owing to the recent reduction of the par value of our capital stock from $5,000,000 to $500,000, our liabilities are nominally decreased $4,500,000 and our “surplus” is thereby correspondingly increased. Had no change been made in the par value of our shares, our “surplus” would be $1,175,305.84, the relative value of shares being the same in either instance.
I hereby certify that the general balance sheet is correct and that the same agrees with the books of the company.
C. J. SCHLAECHTER,
Philadelphia, January 29th, 19.15.
Treasurer.

It will be noted, as the balance-sheet states, that “All figures, both debit and credit, represent face values,” only. The observation at the bottom of the sheet is amazingly frank in calling attention to how the “surplus” was swelled to an attractive figure. To this reference will be made later on. I will analyze the assets in the light of the testimony before me.

The largest item is “Common stock of subsidiary companies, par value $C>,2(>6,975.” This is made up of the common stock of the following companies:

Guanajuato R. & M. Company............... $2,217,580
Empire Lumber Company.................... 1,091,400-
New Jersey Steel Co........................ 454,980
El Tiro Copper Company.................... 2,500,015
$6,266,975

These companies were all created by the defendant or its promoters. The capital stock is only part of a larger issue of each company, and all “water,” as the defendant admits, and as its president says was issued “to represent prospective profit if it should ever come.” This was said with., reference to one company, but it applies to the others. It might be well to give the modus operandi of the defendant’s promotions and how it came into possession of the enormous amount of stock which it represented to its creditors and the public, as “assets.” A subsidiary company would be formed to engage in a commercial enterprise. The subsidiary company would make a bond-issue running into the millions and far in excess of the cost to it of its property, which would be mortgaged to a trust company to secure the bonds. An issue of capital stock [419]*419would then follow, usually in double the amount of the bonds. The defendant marketed as many of the bonds as it could induce the public to buy, usually at eighty per cent., and gave to each purchaser a block of the capital stock, varying in amount, as the exigency demanded. Whatever of the bonds remained unsold and stock not given away, was treated by the defendant as its property and went to make up the "assets” of the general balance-sheet.

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Related

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
93 A. 862, 84 N.J. Eq. 415, 1915 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-american-finance-securities-co-njch-1915.