46 P. 421 | Or. | 1896
Opinion by
This is a suit by' C. W. Craig and others to set aside a bill of sale executed by and a judgment rendered against the California Vineyard Company, a corporation, to enjoin the sale of its property under an execution issued upon said judgment, and for the appointment of a receiver. The material facts are that about July i, 1891, the defendant JamesWolfsohn,underthe name of the California Vineyard Company, opened a liquor store at Portland, but, having no means wherewith to carry on the business, the defendant the Merchants’ National Bank, of which the defendant Julius Loewenberg was president, advanced money there
On March 12, 1894, while being hard pressed by its creditors, and unable to secure any further advances from the bank, the corporation instituted a branch house at Tacoma, Wash., and ordered from eastern dealers and shipped from its Portland store to the branch house goods of the value of $14,503.00. On February 22, 1894, the corporation paid $320.00 interest on the $12,000.00 note to June 12 of that year, and on May 24, $120.00 interest on the $8,000.00 note, making $1,106.65 paid out of the assets of the corporation to the bank on account of Wolfsohn’s private debt, and on the date last mentioned paid
The court granted a temporary injunction, restraining the sheriff from selling said goods, and appointed a receiver, who took possession of the attached property, and also of the stock of goods which had been shipped to Portland from Tacoma, and, by order of the court, sold
Wolfsohn, on January 1, 1893, prepared a trial balance, showing that the assets of the corporation exceeded its liabilities by $14,000.00, but furnished to the commercial agencies of Bradstreet, Pickens, Fulton & Co., and R. G. Dun & Co., what purported to be copies thereof, in which the excess was falsely represented to be $50,000.00. From January 1 to June 1, 1893, the California Vineyard Company purchased goods of the value of $10,339.96, while for the same period in 1894 the purchases amounted to $19,-975.83, nearly all which were made during the months of March, April, and May. About March 29, 1894, Charles M. Morgan, representing Bradstreet’s Commercial Agency, called upon Loewenberg, informing him that the
The bank collected from the corporation $1,106.65 as interest on Wolfsohn’s private debts, and to this extent, at least, its other creditors were injured. It is true, the bank, prior to the incorporation of the company, loaned Wolfsohn $20,000.00, which presumably went into his business, and helped to swell the assets he transferred to the company when it was incorporated; but the agents of the bank knew of the incorporation, and thereafter loaned to it $30,000.00, thereby recognizing its legal existence. If the bank, knowing Wolfsohn intended to incorporate a company and to transfer to it the assets of his business, made no objections thereto, such acquiescence ought to be construed as an admission of its ratification of the
The plaintiffs in this suit do not invoke the doctrine of an equitable trust attaching to the property of the corporation by reason of its insolvency, but maintain that in consequence of the fraud practiced by Wolfsohn and Loewenberg the bill of sale and transfer of the stock of goods at Tacoma are fraudulent as to them. The bill of sale an<I attachment were, in our judgment, parts of one scheme to absorb all the assets of the California Vineyard Company, and, the attachment being fraudulent, it follows that the bill of sale, which was a part of the same transaction, was equally so, and there was no error in
The plaintiffs in this suit also seek to recover from the Merchants’ National Bank and Julius Loewenberg all moneys fraudulently obtained by them from the company. And, it appearing that the bank collected from the company $1,106.65 on account of Wolfsohn’s debt, and Loewenberg having obtained from the same source and for a similar purpose $113.50, and goods of the value of $250.00, amounting to $363.50, judgments will be rendered against each in favor of the plaintiffs for these respective amounts, which when collected will be applied, after the application of the proceeds of the sale of said goods, so far as necessary to the satisfaction of the judgments awarded the plaintiffs in their respective actions, upon the discharge of which any money so collected from the bank and Loewenberg will be returned to each in proportion to the amount so paid, and as thus modified the decree is affirmed.
Modified.