146 Minn. 66 | Minn. | 1920
The Fergus Falls Woolen Mills Company, being unable to pay its debts as they became due, on December 23, 1913, conveyed all its property to Elmer E. Adams, A. G. Anderson and J. F. Jordan in trust for the benefit of its creditors. Mr. Adams was president of the First National Bank of Fergus Falls. Mr. Anderson was cashier of the Scandia State Bank of that city and a stockholder of the company, and Mr. Jordan was the credit man of Wyman-Partridge and Company, one of the largest creditors of the company. The trustees converted the merchandise received from the company into money, satisfied and discharged all the liabilities of the company, andjn June, 1914, turned the manufacturing plant back to the company free from debt, and also turned back to the company something over $6,000 in cash, some raw material and a considerable quantity of uncollected accounts. In 1918, plaintiff, as a stockholder of the company, brought this action on behalf of the company to recover profits which he alleged that the trustees had made out of dealings with the trust property, and also to recover back the compensation received, by the trustees for their services. He made the company, its officers and the trustees, defendants. The company and its officers interposed an answer setting forth that plaintiff had made a demand on the board of directors to bring the action; that after due consideration the board of directors had decided that the company had. no cause of action against the trustees and had refused to bring the action; that the hoard of directors had ratified and approved all the acts and doings of the trustees, and that none of the trustees had been guilty of any wrongful acts. Each of the trustees interposed a separate answer, putting in issue all charges of wrongdoing. The evidence is voluminous. The court made findings of fact to the effect that plaintiff’s charges were unfounded and directed judgment for defendants. Plaintiff appealed from an order denying a new trial.
Plaintiff relies on the long established and universally recognized rule that an assignee or trustee is not permitted to derive a personal
Defendants do not question the rule, but claim that the facts do not bring the present case within the principle enforced by'the rule. As the findings are in favor of the defendants we must take the view of the evidence most favorable to them.
After the assignment, the trustees handled the affairs of the company ■ much as if they had simply become its business managers and seem to have accorded to the board of directors the right to pass upon and approve or disapprove any action proposed to be taken, and the court finds that they agreed with the board not to dispose of any property of the company without the consent of the board. Whenever a question of importance arose they submitted it to the board for decision, and seem to have taken such decision as controlling .and to have carried it into effect as if the board had fifll authority to determine the matter.
The profits in controversy consist of three items received 'by trustee Adams: (1) The sum of $804 realized by him from his dealings with Robert Hannah; (2) the sum of $1,672.76 realized by him from his dealings with W. B. Windsor; and (3) the sum of $5,944.87 realized by him from his dealings with H. K. Grinager.
The court found: “That said trustees have in all things' performed the duties of their trust in a careful, faithful and efficient manner, and that the amount charged by them for their services is reasonable. That defendant Adams has not made any secret profits at the expense of the cestui que trust, and that the corporation, through its stockholders and officers, has had full knowledge and notice of all actions of said trustees, and has approved, ratified and confirmed all of said actions and doings.”
The liabilities of the company at the time of the execution of the trust deed were above $113,000, and the assets were sufficient to pay all
H. K. Grinager was engaged in business in Fergus Falls as a jobber and manufacturer of woolen goods. Defendant Adams induced Grin-ager to make an offer for this unsold merchandise by agreeing to furnish the money to malee the purchase and to join with him in handling the goods for one-half the profits. After making this arrangement Adams mailed to the president of the company the following letter:
“May 26, 1914.
“To the Board of Directors of the Fergus Falls Woolen Mills Company:
“A proposition is before your body from Mr. H. K. Grinager to purchase the goods now on hand and to lease the mill. In view of the fact that Mr. Grinager is relying on me to assist him in financing the transaction, if it is made, I desire to take no part or influence you in any way as to whether you should accept or decline the offer.
“As there might possibly be a profit to me in case I help him finance the matter, I desire to be relieved from all responsibility as a trustee in determining whether his offer shall be accepted.”
He also notified the secretary of the company to the same effect verbally.
Mr. Grinager made an offer for the goods of 40 per centum of the invoice price and coupled with it a proposition to lease the plant with an option to purchase it, which offer was presented to the board of directors. The directors called a meeting of the stockholders and submitted the proposition to them. The stockholders opposed the giving of an option to purchase the plant and considered the offer for the goods too low, and recommended, perhaps informally, that new bids be obtained for the goods alone. While the records of the various directors’ and stockholders’ meetings seem to have been received in evidence as exhibits, these exhibits are not returned here and we are left to find out
Defendant Adams furnished Grinager the money to purchase the goods. He and Grinager took possession of them, rented the mill for a few months and completed the manufacture of the partially manufactured articles, opened and conducted two stores, purchased other goods from wholesalers to stock these stores, and after operating their business for about a year closed it out. They were to share equally in the profits and losses. Out of all their transactions they realized a profit of $5,944.87 each. Their evidence is to the effect that these profits were realized from the goods which they manufactured or purchased from wholesalers, and that they made no profit from the goods obtained from the company, and there is no evidence, at least no direct evidence, t6 the contrary. The court found that they paid full value for the goods obtained from the company and the evidence fully sustains this finding. Among other things, the secretary of the company, who ‘was one of the active members of the syndicate which presented the opposing bids, testified that they did not raise Grinager’s final bid,
The legal title to the goods was in the trustees and they passed it to Grinager. Thus in a legal sense the sale was made by the trustees, but to all intents and purposes it was made by the company through its board of directors. After Mr. Adams had informed the board that Mr. Grinager was relying on him for funds, and that he might make a profit in case- of a sale to Mr. Grinager, and for that reason desired to 'influence them in no way and to be relieved from all responsibility as a trustee in determining the matter, the directors authorized the sale. The trustees made the. sale not of their own volition, but to carry into effect the decision of the directors.
“A cestui que trust cannot allege that to be a breach of trust which has been done under his own sanction, whether by previous consent or subsequent ratification. Either concurrence in the act or acquiescence without original concurrence will relieve the trustee from responsibility to the beneficiary.” Turner v. Fryberger, 99 Minn. 236, 107 N. W. 1133, 109 N. W. 229.
Insofar as the corporation is concerned, and plaintiff has no greater rights than the corporation, the sale in question was within the rule announced in the Turner case and valid, even if profits had been realized from these goods, which is neither found as a fact nor established by the record. See also Garceau v. McNamara, 125 Minn. 130, 145 N. W. 809; Mareck v. Minneapolis Trust Co. 74 Minn. 538, 77 N. W. 428; White v. Iselin, 26 Minn. 487, 5 N. W. 359; Ungrich v. Ungrich, 141 App. Div. 485, 126 N. Y. Supp. 419, affirmed without opinion in 207 N. Y. 662; Warren v. Pazolt, 203 Mass. 328, 89 N. E. 381.
As a large part of plaintiff’s brief and argument is based on an apparent misconception of the rights and duties created by an assignment for the benefit of creditors, it may be well to refer to some of them briefly. Plaintiff seems to assume that the company was the beneficiary of the trust rather than the creditors, and one of his principal complaints against the trustees is that they refused to use the trust funds for the purpose of compounding with the creditors or of buying up the claims of creditors for the benefit of the company.
An assignment for the benefit of creditors is an absolute appropri
“The sole purpose of the assignment must be to immediately appropriate the debtor’s property to the payment of his debts. The reservation of any benefit or advantage to the debtor, before his debts shall be fully paid, will avoid the assignment.” Bennett v. Ellison, 23 Minn. 242.
A provision in the deed of assignment authorizing the assignee to compromise with the creditors renders the assignment void. McConnell v. Sherwood, 84 N. Y. 522, 38 Am. Rep. 537; Hudson v. Maze, 4 Ill. 578; Keevil v. Donaldson, 20 Kan. 165; Gazzam v. Poyntz, 4 Ala. 374, 37 Am. Dec. 745. In Bennett v. Ellison, 23 Minn. 242, the deed of assignment contained no provision authorizing the assignee to compromise with creditors, but the jury found as a fact that the assignor made the assignment with the intention of compromising with them, and this court, speaking through Chief Justice Gilfillan, said:
“The intent to effect a compromise by-means of the assignment includes the intent to delay the execution of the trust expressed in it, at least so long as might be necessary for the assignor to ascertain if the creditors would compromise. This was 'an intent to delay'beyond the delay which might be necessarily incident to the 'execution of the trust to sell the property and pay the proceeds to the creditors, and was, therefore, fraudulent. The intent was also thereby to secure a benefit to the assignor, to-wit, a discharge from 'his debts without full payment, and without even the application of .all his property upon those debts. For these reasons the assignment was, as between the assignor and his creditors, void.”
An-'agreement between the assignor and assignee to purchase the claims, of creditors at a discount for the benefit of either or both is in violation of the duty which both owe to the creditors and void, and it has been held that the courts will not aid either one to recover from the other gains made in such transactions, as doing so would give effect to the illegal contract. Haswell v. Blake (Tex. Civ. App.) 90
The assignment creates a trust for the benefit of the creditors. The creditors are the beneficiaries, the cestuis que trustent. The deed which creates the trust confers, defines and limits the powers and duties of the assignee, and gives the creditors as beneficiaries a vested interest in the property and its proceeds, which cannot be changed or impaired by the act of either assignor or assignee or by the joint act of both. Mackellar v. Pillsbury, 48 Minn. 396, 51 N. W. 222; In re Bird, 39 Minn. 520, 40 N. W. 827; In re Fuller, 42 Minn. 22, 43 N. W. 486; National Surety Co. v. Hurley, 130 Minn. 392, 153 N. W. 740, L.R.A. 1918F, 440; Chapin v. Thompson, 89 N. Y. 270; Monteith v. Hogg, 17 Ore. 270, 20 Pac. 327.
The assignee must execute the trust according to its terms. • He must convert the property into money and pay the lawful claims of the creditors to the full extent that the amount realized from the property will permit. His first duty is to the creditors and he is not allowed to do anything for the benefit of the assignor which will be detrimental to the interests of the creditors. They are entitled to payment in full, if the property be sufficient to pay in full, and any agreement, having a tendency to create a temptation for the assignee to make unfavorable-representations to the creditors concerning the state of the assets for the purpose of influencing them to compromise or discount their claims, is contrary to public policy ¡and unenforceable. McDonald v. Haughton, 70 N. C. 393; Matter of Coffin, 10 Daly, 27; Commonwealth v. Scoville, 101 S. W. 1188, 31 Ky. Law, 257.
The assignment was made December 23,1913. At the annual meeting of the stockholders held January 15, 1914, the matter of making a compromise with the creditors was considered and the stockholders by motion :
“Becommended to the directors that a proposition of settlement be made to the creditors on a basis of ninety cents on the dollar, payable as follows : $50,000 cash on Feb. 1, 1914, and the balance on notes due*75 Nov. 15, 1914, without interest, provided this is the best terms 'Obtainable."
Nothing was accomplished in the way of a compromise as the directors were without funds to mate the initial payment.
At a meeting of the board of directors held on the morning of February 27, 1914, W. B. Windsor, a stockholder of the company, offered to furnish the money and buy up the claims against the company, or such of them as could be obtained at a satisfactory discount, if allowed forty per cent of the discount so obtained. The board concluded to accept his offer, whereupon Mr. Windsor stated that it would require more money than he could raise personally and requested them to hold the matter in abeyance and adjourn the meeting until evening to give him an opportunity to see if he could arrange for the necessary money. They did so. After the adjournment Windsor went to defendant Adams, and their negotiations resulted in ‘an arrangement by which Adams, aided by Robert Hannah, agreed to provide the necessary funds, and by which the three were to share equally in the amount which Mr. Windsor would receive under his arrangement with the board of directors. At the adjourned meeting of the board in the evening, Mr. Windsor presented his proposition in writing in the following form:
“February 27, 1914.
“To the Board of Directors of the Fergus Falls Woolen Mills Co.,
“Gentlemen:
“In accordance with the informal discussion which I had with you this morning in regard to making a settlement of the claims against the Fergus Falls Woolen Mills Company, I desire to make you this definite proposition:
“I will advance the necessary funds to purchase all the adjusted claims against the Woolen Mills Company, where they can be purchased at a sufficient discount to be of interest for the company, provided that the company will pay forty per cent of- the amount saved for the company, and six per cent interest after the first day of April, 1914, on the funds which I have advanced.
“In ease your board desires to accept this proposition I wish to have*76 them pass a resolution authorizing me, as their representative, to make this settlement.
“Respectfully yours,
“W. B. Windsor.”
The board of directors adopted a resolution in which, after reciting that for want of funds they had been unable to carry into effect the recommendation made by the stockholders at the annual meeting, or to malee any proposition of settlement to the creditors, and that they had submitted Mr. Windsor’s proposition to the holders of a majority of the stock of the company and that these stockholders had unanimously recommended its acceptance, they resolved:
“That the proposition of W.B. Windsor made in writing under date of February 27, 1914, wherein and whereby said W. B. Windsor agrees to advance all necessary funds to purchase such adjusted claims of the Fergus Falls Woolen Mills Company as can be purchased at a sufficient discount to be of interest for the company, and for furnishing the necessary funds and financing the purchasing of such claims and for all services and expenses in connection therewith • the said W. B. Windsor is to receive forty per cent of the actual amount saved for the company in purchasing such claims, and the said W. B. Windsor to be entitled to interest on the amounts actually paid for any and all claims- from and after April 1, 1914, at the rate of six per cent per annum, and said forty per cent of amount saved to ‘be in full for advancing all necessary funds and in full compensation for all expenses and services in connection with said proposition, be and is hereby accepted, and •
“Resolved further that in order to carry out said proposition the said W. B. Windsor be and is hereby appointed representative of the Fergus Falls Woolen Mills Company for that purpose and authorized to account in that behalf.”
Under this agreement Mr. Windsor purchased claims against the company amounting to the sum of $96,358.48 for which he paid the sum of $83,612.62. Mr. Adams procured the money to make these purchases and borrowed the most of it from banks in St.' Paul and Minneapolis, with which he had business connections. By direction of the directors Mr. Windsor was paid the amount which he had expended and
It will be observed that the money paid by Windsor to defendant Adams did not come from either the trust funds or the trust property, but from the compensation paid Windsor by the company under and pursuant to the written contract., This contract was made by the company for its own benefit, and there is no claim that the company did not receive the full benefit to which is- was entitled under the contract. The company knew, before it closed the contract, that Windsor had arranged to procure from others the funds necessary to- enable him to perform it, but did not know by whom or on what terms such funds were to be furnished, and did not concern itself about those matters. From whom
Robert Hannah, a broker of Fergus Falls, purchased claims against the company of the face value of $7,406.32 before the company made its contract with W. B. Windsor. Hannah made these purchases on his own account, and insisted upon and collected the full 'amount of the claims. The evidence concerning the connection of defendant Adams with these transactions is meagre, and consists only of the statement of Adams that he furnished Hannah the money used in buying the claims, and that after the claims had been paid he received the sum of $804 from Hannah as his share of the profit for having furnished the money to buy them, and that the creditors had no knowledge of these facts. There is nothing further to show the arrangement between him and Hannah, or how or when it was made. It is clear that the transaction involved no use of trust funds and no purchase of trust property.
The company had made no composition agreement with its creditors, and could not require them to discount their claims as a condition of receiving payment. An agreement with individual creditors to accept less than the amount due would have 'been void for lack of consideration. 1 Dunnell, Minn. Dig. §§ 1506, 1507. The trust property was sufficient to pay 'all claims in full, and both the company and the trustees owed the creditors the duty to pay them in full. Of course the creditors could sell 'and transfer their claims for whatever price they saw fit. But they were the beneficiaries of the- trust, and if the trustees, without their full knowledge and consent, were'interested in the purchase of their claims and derived a profit therefrom other than proper interest on money advanced, they could require the trustees to account to them for all such profits. Conceding that Adams received profits forbidden
Defendants Anderson and Jordan had no part in the transactions of defendant Adams hereinbefore set forth and the court finds, on ample evidence, that they had no knowledge of his dealings with Robert .Hannah and W: B. Windsor. Consequently there is no theory on which they could be charged with liability therefor on this record. But of course these findings are binding only on those who are parties to the action and not on the creditors.
At the time of closing the trust, the trustees presented the question of their fees to the board of directors. Adams and Anderson asked for the sum of $1,750 each and Jordan asked for the sum of $1,500. The directors approved and allowed these claims and they were subsequently paid out of the funds in the hands of trustees. , The trial court found that these amounts were just and reasonable, and that the trustees were fairly and honestly entitled to them, and we find no reason for disagreeing with the conclusion of that court.
The order appealed from is affirmed.