167 Mo. App. 38 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1912
This is an action prosecuted by the assignee of a business corporation for the recovery of an unpaid subscription to the capital stock. A similar suit against Charles D. Matthews, another alleged stockholder, was brought in the same court and by stipulation tried with this case. What we shall say in this opinion will apply with equal force to that case. A trial to the court resulted in a judgment for the defendant in each case and appeals were taken by plaintiff.
The directors held periodical meetings at which there was always a full attendance and at which full reports of the business were submitted by Berry and Leighton who were in active charge of the business. The reports for the first two months disclosed that the business was profitable but after that it became unprofitable and steadily lost money. Without going into details, the statement of the business submitted at a meeting of the board of directors héld October 5, 1910, showed that, counting the capital stock paid in as a liability the total liabilities, were $2098.38, and the total assets $1703.40. That is to say the corporation owed creditors $1098.38 and had surplus assets of $605.02, but'-the capital paid'in was impaired in the sum of $394.98. The corporation had not defaulted in the payment of it's debts and was not being pressed by creditors. Hubbell and Matthews were dissatified
“The business of the company was briefly considered, which was found to be on an unprofitable basis and deeply involved. There being no further business to transact the meeting was adjourned . . . for the purpose of reorganizing the company and the transaction of such business as might properly come before the board.”
Hubbell and Matthews desired to retire and it seems that both Berry and Leighton aspired to the sole management and control of the business. Berry was the successful contestant in this race. On October 13 he bought the stock of Hubbell and Matthews at par, paying one-half of the purchase price in cash which he procured from sales of some of his own stock and giving, his notes’ for the remainder, payable in sixty days. He secured the payment of these notes by an assignment to each of his vendors of the stock purchased of him. Berry as manager for the corporation continued the business until December 15, 1910 on which date the corporation made a voluntary assignment to plaintiff for the benefit of creditors. The assets at that time were about thé same as at- the time of Berry’s purchase of the stock of Hubbell and Matthews hut the liabilities had increased about $400. The capital stock was wiped out and the assets at face value about equaled the liabilities to creditors. Owing to the natural shrinkage in the value of the assets incident to winding up a business under such unfavorable conditions, the debts of the corporation cannot be paid in full without recourse on the stockholders for the unpaid half of the capital stock. All of the persons shown by the books to be stockholders at the
Shares of stock in a business corporation are personal property and their owner has the same jus dispoñdendi over them that he has over any other personal property owned by him and in instances where only a part of the stock subscription has been paid and a part has been left unpaid the freedom of sale and transfer is not impaired until a legal call has been made for the payment of the whole or a part of such unpaid subscription. [10 Cyc. 583.]
There is only one restriction on the exercise by a shareholder of his right to sell and transfer shares of stock which have not been fully paid. A shareholder in an insolvent corporation with knowledge actual or implied of such insolvency is not permitted to sell his shares' to a man of straw in order to escape liability on the stock. [Simmons v. Bent, 16 Mo. App. 288.] When a corporation becomes insolvent in the sense in which we shall define that term, it is the duty of the directors to make an assignment for the benefit of creditors. [Huse v. Ames, 104 Mo, l. c. 102; Hutchinson v. Green, 91 Mo. l. c. 374.] And its assets, including unpaid stock subscriptions become impressed with the character of a trust fund for the benefit of creditors. Consequently it is uniformly held that a transfer of stock made under such circumstances for the purpose of evading a plain liability to creditors is a fraud and will be set aside either in a statutory proceeding at law prosecuted by a creditor who had exhausted his remedy against the corporation or in a suit in equity prosecuted by the assignee of the corporation. That unpaid subscriptions of stock not called in by the directors are assignable in a general assignment for the benefit of creditors is a proposition about which there can be no serious dispute but such
We come now to the principal issue in the case. Were.the salés of stock made to Berry in October, 1910, two months before the assignment, legitimáté and lawful sales, made in' good faith, or were' they made for the fraudulent purpose of escaping the shareholders’ liability? The solution of this issue depends on the solution of the question of the intent of the transferrers of the stock and as án intent to defraud generally is incapable of direct proof, since one who attempts to defraud another will seldom hesitate to commit the necessary perjury to sustain the fraud, its' existence may be inferred from facts and circumstánees. 3 Thompson on Corporations, sections 3260, 3261, where further it is said, p. 2348: ‘ ‘ The circumstance that the corporation or the transferree, or bo.th, were at the time notoriously insolvent would, it should seem, be sufficient to warrant* the inference’ of such an intent; and such a circumstance would over-, bear the testimony of a single witness. Oh the other hand, it is obvious that the circumstance that the corporation was ‘a going concern,’ its solvency unsuspected by the public, would tend to overcome thé presumption of fraudulent intent; since in such cases there is, prima facie, an unrestricted right to transfer
If the corporation was insolvent at the time of the transfer' and the transferrers knew it and if the transferee was insolvent and the transferrers knew" it, the inference of a guilty, intent would be the only one such facts would permit. But if anyone of these elements is lacking the others, at most, can be given no greater effect than .that of raising', a debatable issue of fact. Thus if the corporation in fact is insolvent but the transferee is solvent and' may be compelled to discharge the unpaid liability, the transfer should not be held fraudulent since it could not in any way impair the integrity of the trust fund. On the other hand if the transferee be insolvent arid the corporation in fact be solvent and viable, to hold the transfer void could be done only by wholly ignoring the question of intent as well as the right of the owner of property to sell it if he chooses. And further if both the corporation and transferee' in fact are insolvent-but in appearance and reputation belie that- fact and the transferrer is ignorant of the true condition and innocently acts on the presumption that either is solvent, it would be most unjust to hold him guilty of a fraud when no' fraud was intended and he was actuated by the bona fide purpose of selling his property.
These considerations disclose that the burden is on plaintiff who is attacking the transfers on the ground of fraud to show either by direct or circumstantial evidence that at the time' of the transfers both the corporation and the transfereé weré insolvent arid the transferrers had knowledge of these facts. Speaking of the effect to be given'the' insolvency of the transferee the Supreme Court say in Miller v. Insurance
The idea expressed in the last sentence of the quotation is intended to refer to cases where the corporation is insolvent or in a failing condition at the time of the transfer and the stockholder with knowledge' of the fact transfers his stock to an insolvent purchaser and not to a case where a stockholder in a solvent going corporation sells his stock for a valuable consideration to a purchaser who is execution proof.
Turning to the facts of the present case we think the evidence fails to show that the transferrers had knowledge of the insolvency of Berry the transferree. But we shall not discuss that feature of the case and for present purposes shall concede, arguendo, that Berry was insolvent and that the transferrers had knowledge of the fact. With this concession made we still must hold that the evidence, instead of inculpating the transferrers, exonerates them from 1¡he imputation of fraud. They had knowledge of the true condition of the corporation but so far as its creditors were concerned, — and the rights of plaintiff are to be measured by the rights of the creditors, — the corporation neither was insolvent nor was it in a failing condition. It had paid its debts as they matured, was able to continue its business and had assets which at their reasonable value to ,a going concern were sufficient not only to cover its liabilities to' creditors but