184 Pa. 1 | Pa. | 1898
Opinion by
The Pennsylvania Plate Glass Company in August, 1890, was chartered under the general corporation act of 1874, for the manufacture of glass near Irwin, Westmoreland County. The capital stock was $1,000,000. It owned in fee a tract of land of about twenty-eight acres on which it erected an extensive manufactory, costing about $850,000, wherein it commenced operations, and continued them until March 19, 1894, when these plaintiffs, for themselves and other stockholders and creditors, filed a bill for a decree of insolvency and the appointment of a receiver. The principal averments of the bill were: 1, that the corporation was insolvent; 2, that the interests of stockholders and creditors were in peril from seizure and sale and the sacrifice of the property on executions, which would result in expensive litigation. The prayer Avas, that a receiver be appointed to take into his possession all the property and assets of the corporation and administer them under the direction of the court, in such manner as would best promote the interests of all the creditors and stockholders. The facts averred in the bill were admitted by the corporation. Thereupon, the court appointed Joseph W. Stoner receiver; he duly qualified, gave bond, and took into his actual possession all the personal property, real estate, accounts and dioses in action of the corporation. Before his appointment the company had executed and delivered to its treasurer, W. L. Kann, in consideration of money advanced and to be immediately advanced, a judgment bill in sum of $10,000, on Avhich judgment was entered, execution issued, a levy made upon most of the personal property of the company, and the same sold by the sheriff. The whole sum realized on this execution was appropriated to preferred Avage liens, paying about 37 per cent thereof. Afterwards, another sum realized on other personalty Avas appropriated to the same class of claims, paying an additional 13 per cent of them. On May 2, 1894, W. L. Kann, director and treasurer, to whom the $10,000 judgment note Avas given, filed a bill in equity against the company, averring: 1, that at different dates before the insolvency he had advanced money to the company to the amount of $42,500, for which money the company, antecedent to the advancements, had contracted to deliver to him judgment notes ; 2, that the company,
At the audit, after deducting all preferred claims and costs of receivership, there remained for creditors a balance of $21,508.28. This sum was awarded as follows : To Kann, balance, <$7,707.30 remaining of his first judgment, entered March 16,1894, before the appointment of a receiver; on the second judgment, entered April 7, .1894, after the appointment of a receiver, $7,694.21. To Clark & Terhune, judgment entered April 21,1894, by leave of court, after appointment of receiver, $367.98, and the balance,' $6,439.74, was set apart for Kann’s cautionary judgment. There was laid before the auditor a mechanic’s lien of S. K. Smytlie & Co. of $2,147, for the erection of a gas producer, a separate structure from the main building. This was disallowed, because no notice of intention to file the lien had been given the owner, as required by the act of assembly, and because the lien should have been filed against the separate building, and
Two principal questions were raised before the auditor, both by judgment and general creditors. 1. They protested against distribution to the first Kann judgment, actually entered before the appointment of the receiver, because it was given in favor of the treasurer and a director of the corporation, at a time when the obligor and obligee in the judgment note had full knowledge of the corporation’s insolvency; thus a preference was created in the officer’s favor to the prejudice of creditors who were without such knowledge. 2. It was maintained by the general or unsecured creditors, that if the judgments were not invalid by reason of the relation of the parties to them then, all judgments entered after the appointment of a receiver must come in pro rata on the fund, for the reason, that as soon as the corporate property, personal and real, passed from the dominion of the corporation to that of the receiver it was in custodia legis, and no longer subject to lien by attachment or judgment at the instance of a creditor. As before noticed, the auditor in effect,
After hearing the exceptions, the learned judge of the court below held, that as long as a corporation held possession of its property, that is, before the appointment of a receiver, it might prefer creditors the same as an individual, with this distinction, that if the preferred creditor was an officer, tlie burden was on him to show that the preference was in all respects fair and conscionable, and that it was not collusive, for the mere purpose of preference, but under the circumstances was just. The knowledge of the corporate officer that his debt is in peril ami the power to some extent to prefer himself, raises the presumption, that he has taken advantage of his special knowledge and special power, to the prejudice of other creditors whose debts are equally meritorious. In so deciding, we think there was no error. As is said in Ashhurst’s Appeal, 60 Pa. 290, it does not follow that a preference is void, merely because given by an insolvent corporation to an officer; it is only voidable ; but such proceedings “are carefully watched, and their fairness must be shown.” As to the first judgment note given to Kann, and entered of record on March 16, 1894, three days before the appointment of the receiver, the circumstances attending the giving of this note, whereby a preference was created, were these : the company was sorely in need of money about the beginning of the year 1894; immediately prior to January 12, of that year, Kann advanced to it $3,500; on January 12, he advanced $2,500; three days afterwards, $5,000; January 16, $6,000. All these advances were made upon the promise, that the company would deliver therefor to Kann its notes with power of attorney to confess judgment. On January 15, 1894, the executive committee authorized the execution and delivery to him of one judgment note in the sum of $10,000. The board of directors afterwards approved and ratified the action of the committee ; the note was executed and delivered to Kann, who retained it in his possession until March 16, following, when he entered it of record. It is not disputed that Kann actually advanced the money, nor that it was used for the benefit of the company; he charged no commission or brokerage; the money was applied to payment of wages, then largely in arrears, and to freights, either of which if not paid would have resulted in a closing of the
As to the judgment entered after the receivership by leave of court and the judgment of this appellant entered in the Circuit Court afterwards, we think the court below rightly held that they were not liens on the corporate real estate, and were entitled to no preference in distribution. This was a private manufacturing corporation, owing no special duty to the public, and the latter had no direct interest in the continuance of its operations. Creditors and stockholders alone had a direct special interest in the property. The facts which would move a court of equity to place, a railroad or other common carrier corporation in the hands of a receiver might not avail to prompt the same decree as against a manufacturing corporation. In the first case, the court must consider the interests of the public, as well as those of creditors and stockholders. Any act on the part of the corporate officers which would interrupt or suspend the regular continued operations of the corporation in its public capacity, whereby serious inconvenience and loss would result to the public, might be sufficient to move the court to appoint a receiver. And this, even where no complaint is made by stockholders or creditors, for its franchises and privileges were
Gluck and Becker on Receivers of Corporations, sec. 40 thus state the situation of the property when the receiver takes possession : “ The property of a corporation placed in the possession of a receiver is regarded as being in custodia legis. When a sale is decreed by the court to be made in a proper case of such property, it is not a question whether the receiver has title, but whether the court has- power to pass the title of the corporation whose estate is placed in the hands of a receiver. Sales so made, whether before final judgment or decretal orders or thereafter, are judicial in their nature, and binding on the corporation as fully as its own act. The title to the property sold passes, not because the ministerial officer has title, but because the law casts upon him when acting under its authority the power to make a sale which will bind the corporation. No assignment is therefore necessary to entitle the court appointing a receiver to pass title through a sale made by him under its
This leaves to be considered only the question raised by setting aside the balance of the fund to await the final event of a suit in equity by Kann against the company to compel specific performance of a contract. It will be noticed in our statement of facts heretofore made that on May 29,1894, the court ordered to be entered what is termed a cautionary judgment, in favor of Kann, for $32,500, as of the date of March 16, 1894, three days before the appointment of the receiver. Whether the judgment should stand with all the advantage of a lien, as of that date, was to be determined on final hearing in the equity suit, which at the date of the audit had not taken place. This ties up for the time being $14,501.93 of the fund. We see no reason why the question raised by the bill in equity should not have been finally disposed of by the court below, for taking every averment to be true, there is no conclusion, legal or equitable, which warrants a preference to this judgment as a lien on the fund. What does the bill which forms the foundation of the judgment aver? 1. That Kann, director and treasurer of the company,
Joseph W. Stoner, the secretary of the company made answer to the bill, admitting all the material averments to be true. No creditor was made a party defendant. Stoner, the receiver, was not, as such, made a party, although named in it is as secretary of the company. On this bill and answer, the court made the order for the cautionary judgment. If there were any issue of fact raised by this proceeding it Avould probably be best to await a decree before passing on the light of plaintiff. But the party defendant to the bill admits the facts. Therefore, there is no reason why the legal and equitable rights of the plaintiff in the cautionary judgment should not as a mere legal conclusion, be passed upon now.
As before noticed in a railroad receivership, the court will make orders creating equitable liens as to debts antedating the receivership, which they will not make as to receiverships of private corporations. The public is interested in the uninter
But there is no public interest to be subserved by giving a preference lien to creditors who have advanced money to keep on its feet an embarrassed manufacturing corporation. Assume the absolute necessity of such advances, wherein does Kami’s equity rise higher than that of any other creditor ? It is argued that part of the money was applied to wages in arrear; if they had not been paid, a strike would have resulted; if freights had not been paid, the railroads would have refused to carry and the plant would have been closed. But the same result would have followed if the company had refused payment for its raw material, sand, lime and fuel. Equity was not bound, as in the case of a railroad company, to treat it as a “ going concern.” As a private business corporation it was a “ stopping concern ” whenever it failed to pay its debts to its employees, its freights to the railroads, or its notes in bank. Nor does the fact that the advances were made on a promise by the board, of which Kann was a member, to give judgment notes as collateral, raise an equity in his favor superior to that of other creditors. This appellant, the Exchange Bank, had a written promise of the
What we have said disposes of all the assignments of error preferred by this appellant. It is therefore ordered that so much of the decree of the court below as awards to judgment No. 545, May term, 1894, of William L. Kann, #7,007.35, as a lien creditor, and refuses to recognize as liens claims of Terhune & Clark, S. R. Smythe & Co., the Exchange Bank of Wheeling, judgment of William L. Kann, No. 556, May term, 1894, be affirmed; and further so much of said decree as sets apart $14,501.93 of the fund to await event of decree in bill of equity, William L. Kann v. The Pennsylvania Plate Gas Co., be reversed and set aside. It is further ordered that the court below proceed to distribute the said $14,501.93 pro rata to the claims of unsecured creditors. Costs to be paid by appellee, William L. Kann.