delivered the opinion of the Court.
In this creditors’ rights suit, we consider whether a fraudulent conveyance has been made by an insolvent corporation.
In March of 1976, appellant Bank of Commerce, the plaintiff below, filed a bill in equity against appellees Rosemary and Thyme, Inc., Edmund C. Ruffin, Nabil D. Kassir and Khalid A. Kassir seeking relief under Code § 55-80. 1 Plaintiff, a creditor of Rosemary and Thyme, Inc., alleged that the corporate defendant, acting through the individual defendants, its directors, made a payment to another creditor-bank, the Peoples Bank of Virginia Beach, with intent to hinder, delay and defraud defendant’s creditors. The defendants demurred on the grounds that (1) the plaintiff had a “full, adequate and complete remedy at law for money damages” and (2) the payment to Peoples Bank “was not, in law, a fraudulent conveyance.”
The trial court overruled the demurrer as to ground one and sustained it as to ground two, dismissing the suit in a September 1976 decree from which we granted plaintiff an appeal. Defendants assigned cross-error to the action of the chancellor in overruling the demurrer on ground one, but in the view we take of the case, it is necessary to discuss only the correctness of the trial court’s action in sustaining the demurrer.
The plaintiff’s bill of complaint states the following case, the effect of the demurrer being to admit as true all material facts which are well-pleaded. From November of 1973 to August of 1974, the defendant corporation, engaged in the retail sale of women’s clothing, became indebted to the plaintiff for $1,805.05. Judgment in that amount was obtained on some unspecified date and remains unsatisfied.
On April 17, 1975, “and prior thereto,” defendant corporation “was unable to pay its trade indebtedness to creditors and was insolvent”. In March of that year, the said defendant “was indebted” to Peoples Bank in the amount of $7,215.17 “by virtue of a promissory note” on which the individual defendants, “officers, directors and the controlling stockholders” of the defendant corporation, “were endorsers or co-makers”. On March 15, 1975, the corporate defendant “used $7,215.17 of its assets for the purpose of applying it to the indebtedness to the Peoples Bank” thereby releasing, it is alleged, the individual, defendants from liability in that amount.
The plaintiff further asserted that the payment to Peoples Bank “had the effect of preferring [the individual defendants] with respect to their secondary liability on said promissory note and was accomplished in order to hinder, delay and defraud creditors of [the corporate defendant] including this Plaintiff.”
In its prayer for relief, plaintiff asked,
inter alia,
that the defendants be required to “restore” all funds which were paid to satisfy the Peoples Bank indebtedness; that defendants be forced to account for all sums received from debtors of the corporate defendant and for the application of such funds; that a receiver be appointed for the corporate defendant; that the claims and priorities of all creditors of the defendant corporation be established; and that a money judgment be entered against the individual
Upon consideration of the pleadings the chancellor, in sustaining the demurrer, determined “that the facts as alleged do not show an unlawful preference.”
The demurrer, of course, tests the legal sufficiency of the bill of complaint. The question presented is whether this payment of a promissory note, upon which the controlling officers, directors and stockholders were secondarily liable as endorsers, which note evidenced a debt of the insolvent corporation incurred before insolvency, was an invalid preference which constituted a fraudulent conveyance as to the corporation’s unsecured creditors.
Preliminarily, settled principles should be reviewed. In Virginia, not all preferential transfers are invalid. At common law and under Code § 55-80,
supra,
an insolvent debtor may generally make a valid transfer of a portion or the whole of his assets to a bona fide creditor on account of an existing indebtedness, if that is the sole purpose of the debtor and the transfer is for full value.
Surratt
v.
Eskridge,
In order to set aside a preference, the plaintiff must not only prove that the debtor intended to delay, hinder or defraud his other creditors, he must also show that the preferred creditor had notice of such intent.
Hutcheson
v.
Savings Bank,
Against this background, we examine the arguments of the respective parties. Plaintiff relies on
Darden
v.
George G. Lee Co.,
This court held the transfer to Darden amounted to a fraudulent conveyance. We noted that the transferor’s intent was to delay and hinder the creditor Lee Company from satisfying its claim and because Darden, the preferred creditor, was in complete control of the financial affairs of the debtor corporation, he was chargeable with that intent. We said:
“The weight of authority seems to be that the directors of an insolvent corporation, who are also creditors of the corporation, have no right to grant themselves a preference or an advantage over other creditors in the payment of their claims. This rule is based upon simple justice. [Citations omittedl”204 Va. at 112 ,129 S.E.2d at 900 .
The plaintiff thus contends that the effect of the payment of the note in this case, in which the corporate officers were in control of the corporation, was exactly the same as if the corporation had made the payment directly to the officers. Plaintiff argues that in view of the insolvency of the defendant corporation, the individual defendants would ultimately be called upon individually to pay the note as endorsers. Therefore, the plaintiff urges, it is immaterial how the funds were transferred from the corporation to pay the note because the result is the same, ¡.e., the defendant corporate officers have been released from their individual obligation to pay the indebtedness of the sinking corporation, and thus have created a preference for themselves.
The defendants contend, however, that the preference was valid and primarily rely on
Planters Bank
v.
Whittle,
The trial court’s decision that the transfer was illegal was reversed on appeal. Citing a number of decisions from other states, this court said:
“It is not only settled that the directors may make preferences between creditors, but such preferences may be made in their own favor when they themselves are creditors of the corporation. Of course in such cases they must act with the utmost good faith, and the transactions to be upheld must be free from the taint of fraud or suspicion.”78 Va. at 740 .
The plaintiff argues, nevertheless, that the decision here is governed by
Darden
and that this case can be distinguished from
Planters Bank
for the same reason the latter case was held inapposite in
Darden.
In
Darden,
we said that when the transfer of the accounts receivable was made to the preferred creditor-director, he was in “complete control” of the affairs of the corporate debtor, a circumstance which did not exist in
Planters Bank. Darden
v.
George G. Lee Co., supra,
This court has dealt with the rule followed in Virginia permitting a director who is also a creditor of the corporation he serves to make a good faith and nonfraudulent preference to himself in two different factual settings. In Planters Bank, the preference held valid was made by the corporation to a third-party creditor holding the note which carried the personal endorsement of the officers or directors of the corporate debtor. But in Darden the preference held invalid was made to the officer-director who was himself a creditor of the corporation and who was in complete control of the affairs of the corporate debtor. The facts and circumstances here are more akin to the former situation than the latter.
Embodied within the concept of fraudulent conveyances is the fact that all preferential transfers necessarily “hinder and delay” other creditors in their efforts to collect their claims.
See
Comment,
Preferences To Directors of Insolvent Corporations,
21 Wash. & Lee L. Rev. 353, 355 (1964). But, as we have said, that fact alone is not sufficient reason under the statute to set aside an assignment as it applies to a purchaser for a valuable consideration; it is sufficient, however, “if the assignee . . . had notice of the fact that the assignment was made with ‘intent to hinder.’ ”
Darden
v.
George G. Lee Co., supra,
This focus on the scienter of the preferred creditor is consistent with the reasoning employed in other jurisdictions which have sustained the validity of a preference by an insolvent corporation when a director or officer is endorser, guarantor or surety for the debt. Although the views of the courts and textwriters on this broad question have been divergent, compare 15A W. Fletcher, Cyclopedia of The Law of Private Corporations § 7476 (rev. perm. ed. 1967) and 2 G. Glenn, Fraudulent Conveyances and Preferences § 386 (rev. ed. 1940) with 19 Am. Jur.2d Corporations § 1577 (1965) and P. Vartanian, The Law of Corporations in Virginia § 141(3) (1929), we think, under the facts of this case, that this preference to Peoples Bank should not be declared invalid.
The case of
Rockford Wholesale Grocery Co.
v.
Standard Grocery
&
Meat
Company,
In affirming the action of the' trial court sustaining a demurrer, the Illinois Supreme Court said:
“Mere insolvency does not dissolve the corporation or ordinarily abridge the statutory or common law power of the directors. It does, however, prohibit them from giving a creditor director a preference. In such case, he, as an individual, alone received the benefit. The law will not allow him, in such case, to take advantage of his official position, as it would not be equitable to the other creditors. That equitable principle should not apply to a bona fide creditor where a debt is created and guaranteed by the director during solvency. Such guaranty, at least at such time, does not render such debt fraudulent. No law has been violated, and no reason exists why such a debt should be tainted with even the suspicion of illegality. His relation as a creditor is created by his contract with the corporation, and not with the guarantors. He is just as clearly, by law, a creditor with such guaranty as without it. His rights as such creditor remain, to the end, unimpaired, during solvency and through insolvency.
“The directors fin this case] were not the creditors of the corporation and were not primarily standing in that relation to it. The creditor loaned this money to the corporation in good faith, while solvent and a going concern, and the money so obtained was used for its benefit. On no principle of law or reason can such creditor be deprived of its right to a preference merely because the directors guaranteed the debt. The act of obtaining such guaranty on the part of the creditor, or of giving it on the part of the directors, was neither illegal nor improper. It is not uncommon for the directors to be compelled to lend their personal credit, by way of surety or guaranty, in order to secure means to carry on the business. If this is done during solvency, for the benefit of the corporation, neither the right of such creditor so loaning on such guaranty, nor the power of the directors, is in any way affected or abridged as to a preference of such a debt.”175 Ill. at 92-94 ,51 N.E. 642 , 643.
For these reasons, we think the bill of complaint in this suit is insufficient in law to support a claim to set aside the transfer. Consequently, the decree of the trial court sustaining the demurrer and dismissing the bill will be
Affirmed.
Notes
Insofar as pertinent here, the statute provided:
“Every gift, conveyance, assignment or transfer of, or charge upon, any estate, real or personal, . . . with intent to delay, hinder or defraud creditors, purchasers or other persons of or from what they are or may be lawfully entitled to shall, as to such creditors, purchasers or other persons,... be void. This section shall not affect the title of a purchaser for valuable consideration, unless it appear that he had notice of the fraudulent intent of his immediate grantor or of the fraud rendering void the title of such grantor.”
Other courts sharply divide on the question whether this rule should apply to business corporations. See 15A W. Fletcher, Cyclopedia of the Law of Private Corporations §§ 7421-7422 (rev. perm. ed. 1967).
Code § 6.1-78 prohibits a bank or trust company from giving a preference to any depositor or creditor by pledging assets, except under certain circumstances.
