16 Utah 4 | Utah | 1897
The defendant the Western Hardware Company was a corporation organized under the laws of Utah, with a capital stock of $30,000, divided into 300 shares of $100 each. One hundred and fifty shares of this stock were , held by five stockholders, who were also directors in the corporation, and tire balance of the stock was owned by the corporation, and was not issued. Reed Smoot held GO shares of the stock, and was a director of the corporation. On September 9, 1896, the corporation, being insolvent and unable to pay its debts, by a vote of all its directors and stockholders, including Mr. Smoot, for the purpose of paying its debts, and contemplating a cessation of business, passed, by unanimous vote, a resolution, and caused to be made,' executed, and delivered, an assignment of all its property to defendant Moyle for the benefit of its creditors. The Provo Commercial & Savings Bank, a corporation, was, among others, made' a first preferred creditor for $3,000. There was also a list of sfeveral who were second preferred creditors. The plaintiff and interveners, some of whom were attaching creditors, were in the third and unpreferred list of creditors. The Provo Commercial & Savings Bank had a capital stock of $75,000, divided into 750 shares of a par value of $100. At the time of the making of the assignment by the Western Hardware Company, Reed Smoot was a director and president of the bank, and the owner of 195 shares of its capital stock, and bis wife owned 50 shares of said stock. According to the terms of the assignment, the plaintiff and interveners would receive not over 70 per cent, of their claims from the proceeds of the assigned property, while the preferred creditors, including the bank, would receive full payment of their claims. This action was brought to set aside and declare void the deed
In' the case of Wyeth Hardware & Manuf’g Co. v. James-Spencer-Bateman Co., 15 Utah 111, this court held that a corporation is an artificial person, acting in an individual capacity, and in this state, in the absence of insolvent law's and statutory restrictions, it has the same power to prefer creditors, who are not its officers or agents, by deed of assignment or otherwise, as a private debtor has, so long as its assets have not been taken into possession by a court of equity in a proper proceeding, and that the assets of an insolvent corporation constitute a trust fund, in a sense that they cannot be appropriated for any purpose foreign to its legitimate business, or distributed among its officers or stockholders
“ We think the great weight of authority is in favor of the rule that when an incorporation has become insolvent, and abandoned the objects for which it was created, its directors or managing agents cannot, by deed of assignment, prefer themselves over other creditors, so as to secure an advantage over them by reason of their official positions, and superior knowledge concerning the corporate affairs. In such a crisis its property becomes affected with an equitable lien and trust for the benefit of all the creditors, and equity will not permit those who stand in relation of trustees to them to manage and dispose -of the corporate property for the individual benefit of such trustees, regardless of the rights of the cestuis qm trustmt, not even though they are not trustees, as is contended by the respondents, in the technical sense of that term, because, whatever may be the technical standing of such officers, they hold, in respect to the corporate affairs, a fiduciary relation to the creditors, which is controlled by equitable rules and principles.” In the case of Manufacturing Co. v. Hutchinson, 11 C. C. A. 320, it appears that two companies had practically the same set of officers and stockholders. The Hopper Company, being-insolvent, drew bills on the Sutton Company, which were accepted for accommodation, but without receiving any value therefor, Before the bills matured the Hopper Company gave a mortgage on all its property to the directors of the Sutton Company to secure the bills, and immediately thereafter made an assignment for the benefit of its creditors. The court held the transaction fraudulent in fact, and also held that the case was one in which an insolvent corporation, recognizing its inability to further