78 F. 62 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Oregon | 1896
The Northwestern Coal & Transportation Company was incorporated under the laws of the state of Oregon in the year 1885, with a capital stock of ¡¡>72,000, consisting of 720 shares of flOO each. By the by-laws of the corporation the officers thereof consisted of a board of five directors, a president, a vice president, a treasurer, and a secretary. The by-laws provided also for a general superintendent, whose duties were prescribed. By the by-laws neither the president, vice president, treasurer, nor any of the directors w’ere to receive any compensation for their services, and the salaries of the secretary and superintendent were to be fixed by the stockholders at a regular meeting thereof. At the time of the incorporation of the company the salary of the superintendent was fixed at $200 per month, and so remained until December 5, 1887, when the by-laws were rescinded, and new by-laws were adopted, changing the number of the directors from five to four, vacating the offices of vice president and superintendent, and giving the president, in addition to the duties which he had theretofore exercised, the general charge and supervision of all the business of the companv. From that time until the commencement of the present suit the defendant Samuel Goulter was the president
“Whereupon Mr. Samuel Coulter stated to the board that he had for several years been performing, the duties of a superintendent of the company’s business, and that he deemed-it but just that he be compensated for such services; that the company has paid $200 a month to the former superintendent, but that he would ask that he be allowed only $150 per month.”
Upon this statement two resolutions were adopted, one allowing the president of the company $150 per month as compensation for services as superintendent during the ensuing year, the other allowing him a like sum per month for services during the years 1889, 1890, 1891, 1892. In June, 1892, the defendant Farrell had indorsed a note, for Coulter to the amount of $775, and in September, 1893, had signed jointly with him two notes, one for $6,000 and one for $250. On October 7,1893, at a meeting of the board of directors, at which Samuel Coulter, A. S. Coulter, his son, and W. T. Hume were present, a resolution was unanimously adopted reciting that the company was indebted to Samuel Coulter for services as superintendent for the years 1889, 1890, 1891, 1892, up to October 7, 1893, $8,550, and for moneys advanced to pay wages' of employés, supplies, and powder bills, $1,500, and directing the president and secretary to execute and deliver to said Coulter the notes of the corporation for the total amounts so due him. Under the authority of said resolution promissory, notes were issued in various sums aggregating the amount so authorized. Among said notes was one for $1,000, which was afterwards indorsed to the defendant J. W. Whalley; and one for $400, which was subsequently assigned to the defendant A. J. Knott. The remainder, amounting to about $7,000, were indorsed to the defendant Farrell. On June 26, 1894, at a meeting of the board of directors, then consisting of Samuel Coulter, president, the defendant Farrell, and Wirt Minor, the defendant Farrell offered a resolution that the question of the validity of all of said notes (the same being then unpaid and due) be submitted to Mr. Joseph Simon for his opinion. Such opinion was accordingly obtained and submitted, sustaining the validity of the notes.- Thereupon a resolution was offered that new notes be executed for the amounts due upon said former notes, and that mortgages be made to secure the same. Directors Coulter and Farrell voted in favor of the resolution, and director Minor against it. The new notes, secured by the mortgages upon the company’s property, were executed and delivered pursuant to the resolution. The defendant Knott refused to accept the mortgage which was executed in his favor, and he brought an action against the corporation, and obtained judgment by default for the sum of $400, with interest therein from October 7, 1893, together with costs and attorney’s fees.
The complainant’s testator, John S. Doe, of San Francisco, Cal., became the owner of 559 of the shares of the stock of said corporation on or about July 5, 1888, and owned the same until the timé of
Upon 1he issues made in the suit, the cause was referred to the examiner of this court to take testimony, and, as a special master, to make and report findings of fact, but not conclusions of law. Exceptions are now. made to the findings of fact on behalf of all the parties, and the questions for present determination are; First, which of the exceptions shall be allowed, if any. to the findings of fact? and, second, what are the proper conclusions of law to be deduced from the facts in the case? In determining whether the notes and mortgages in favor of ihe defendants Farrell, Whalley, and Knott are the valid obligations of the company, the first question to be considered is -whether or not the company was justly indebted to the defendant Coulter on account of the salary and the disbursements which were the consideration of Its notes to him. It is evident that the change in the by-laws, made in December, 1887, whereby the office-of general superintendent was abolished, and the number of the officers of the corporation was reduced, was for the purpose of curtailing the expenses of the corporation, and that it was intended that thereafter ihe duties of ihe general superintendent should he discharged partly by the president, but chiefly by certain subordinate; employes. The duties of the general superintendent, as defined by the original by-laws, bad been —
“To take charge of all the property belonging to the company, to control mid direct all labor and interests pertaining- to the operation of the company, and, subject to the orders of the board of directors, to make monthly returns to the board of directors of all persons hired or employed at the mine, and of their wages, and a statement of all expenditures accompanying- the same, with the necessary vouchers, duplicates of which he shall keep, and to report the general condition of business in his charge.”
The duties of the president, as prescribed by the new by-laws, were as follows:
“The president shall preside at meetings of the directors and stockholders. He shall act as inspector of all elections of directors, and certify who are elected directors. He shall sign all deeds and contracts on behalf of the company, and all cert ideates of stock of the company. He shall have general charge and supervision over all the business of the company.”
According to his own testimony, it does not appear that from and after the time of the adoption of the new by-laws the president performed the duties which had before been imposed upon the general superintendent, or that he rendered services to the corporation materially different from those which he had rendered before. He was at no time a superintendent of Ihe active; operations at the mine. The charge of ihe mine was minis ted to a local superintendent.
“A resolution, passed by tbe corporation after the services were rendered, that such director be paid a certain sum for services rendered as chairman of a committee, was without consideration, and imposed no obligation on the corporation that could be enforced by action.”
Of similar import is Kilpatrick v. Bridge Co., 49 Pa. St. 118. In Railroad Co. v. Ketchum, 27 Conn. 170, it was held that a director oí a corporation is not entitled to compensation for services rendered to the corporation, unless the services were most unquestionably beyond the range of Ms official duties. In Mather v. Mower Co., 118 N. Y. 629, 23 N. E. 993, it was held that, where a stockholder of a corporation becomes an officer thereof, and assumes the duties of the office, and performs them without any agreement or provision for compensation, the presumption, in view of his relation and interest, may properly arise that he intends to perform the services gratuitously. The court said:
“It is well settled that a director of a corporation is not entitled to compensation for services performed by him, as such, without the aid of a pre-existing provision expressly giving the right to it. They are the trustees for the stockholders, and as such have the management of the corporate affairs. And to permit them to assert claims for services performed, and then support them by resolution, would enable the directors to unduly appropriate the fruits of corporate enterprise. It would clearly be contrary to sound policy.”
To the same effect is the case of Road Co. v. Branegan, 40 Ind. 361. In Wilbur v. Lynde, 49 Cal. 290, it was held that a promissory note made by a corporation, payable to its acting trustees, is void. In Smith v. Association, 78 Cal. 289, 20 Pac. 677, it was held that a note made by a corporation to its president is invalid unless authorized or ratified by the board of directors, and that the payee of such a note was disqualified to vote upon such a resolution. The same doctrine is held in Jones v. Morrison, 31 Minn. 140, 16 N. W. 854; Railway Co. v. Tetera, 68 Ill. 144; Wood v. Manufacturing Co., 23 Or. 20, 23 Pac. 848; and in numerous other cases which might be cited.
So far, therefore, as the notes which were made to Coulter on October 7,1893,3‘epresented a payment to him of salary for services rendered during the years 1889, 1890, 1891, and 1892, they were without consideration, and could not have been enforced in the hands of Coulter against the company. The question, then, arises, in what attitude do the present holders of the notes stand? It being shown that the notes had their inception in fraud, so far as the back salary was concerned, the presumption arising from the possession of the notes in the hands of the indorsees that the holders did in good faith pay value therefor is overcome, unless it appear affirmatively from all the evidence, whether produced upon the one side or the other, that they are in fact innocent purchasers for value. King v. Doane, 139 U. S. 166, 11 Sup. Ct. 465. The special master has found, and his findings in this respect will be confirmed by the court, that the defendants Farrell, Whalley, and Knott took their respective notes before the same were due. The notes so indorsed to Farrell stand upon
“Our conclusion, therefore, is that the transfer, before maturity, of negotiable paper, as security for an antecedent debt merely, without other circumstances, if the paper be so indorsed that the holder becomes a party to the instrument, although the transfer is without express agreement by the creditor for indulgence, is not an improper use of such paper, and is as much in the usual course of commercial business as its transfer in payment of such debt. In either ease, the bona fide holder is unaffected by equities or defenses between prior parties, of which he had no notice.”
Applying the rule to this case, it is apparent that Farrell was a purchaser of the notes for value, that he received the same in the due course of business, and that he is a bona fide holder unless he had actual or constructive notice of the defenses that the corporation might have made thereto. It is not contended that he had actual notice of any fraud or infirmity in the inception of the notes, but it is urged that the fact alone that the notes were made by a corporation, and were made payable to its president, and were used by the president in securing his individual debt, imports such notice to him of the circumstances under which they were issued as to deprive him of the character of a bona fide purchaser. In many of the states it is held that the purchaser of a promissory note who takes the same with a knowledge of the existence of such facts as ought to have put an ordinarily prudent man upon inquiry, is chargeable with the notice of all the facts that such an inquiry would disclose. In the courts where that doctrine is applied, it is held that the fact alone that a corporation note is made payable to one of its officers, and is appropriated by him to his individual use, is sufficient to put the purchaser upon inquiry. New York Iron Mine v. First Nat. Bank of Negaunee, 39 Mich. 644; Cheever v. Railroad Co., 72 Hun, 380, 25 N. Y. Supp. 449; Bank v. Wagner (Ky.) 20 S. W. 535; Davis v. Investment Co. (Va.) 15 S. E. 547; Cattle Co. v. Foster (N. M.) 41 Pac. 522; Wilson v. Railway Co. (N. Y.) 24 N. E. 384. But in the federal courts it is the well-settled rule that the purchaser of a promissory note is not deprived of his character of purchaser in good faith by proof that he took the note with knowledge of such circumstances as ought to put an ordinarily prudent man upon inquiry to ascertain the facts. The proof must go further, and show that he had at the time of the transfer knowledge of facts that would impeach the title as between the antecedent parties to the note, or knowledge of such facts that his abstention from further inquiry will be tantamount to a willful closing .of the
’There are numerous exceptions to the statement of the account between the complainant and the defendant Coulter, as found by the special master. The special master arrived at his conclusions in the face of extra ordinary difficulties, in view of the uncertainty of the testimony and the negligent manner in which the accounts of the corporation had been kept and preserved ai Portland. It is impossible for the court to decide with any certainty that there were errors in the account as found by him. All the findings of fact, therefore, involved in the account; will be confirmed. It appears from the books of the corporation that among its assets is a claim against the Bucoda Goal Company, a co-partnership, for $21,541.73. It was contended by the complainant that the evidence shows Samuel Coulter to have been a member of the co-partnership, and that, therefore, he is chargeable in the account, with the debt which that company owes the corporation. The defendant Coulter denies that he was a member of that co-partnership, and the special master
“Mr. Doe thinks we should best economize as much as possible. Therefore you can pay ofE Mr. Newby, as there is but little to do until the 1st, and to keep the mine running we shall have to run as close to the wind as possible.”
Accordingly Newby was dismissed on the 6th of December, and on the following day C. W. Coulter was employed in his stead. The Bucoda Coal Company had no other business than to purchase coal of the Northwestern Coal & Transportation Company, and to retail it at Portland. At the time it sold out to S. Coulter & Sons, it had done but little business. Samuel Coulter was at that time in the complete control of the Northwestern Coal & Transportation Company. He and his son A. S. Coulter were the directors of that company, and the other director, Mr. Hume, confesses that he was but a figurehead. C. W. Coulter, the other son, was-the bookkeeper. It appears also that from the time of the transfer of the business to S. Coulter & Sons on January 14, 1890, and up to April, 1891, C. W. Coulter was the active manager of the Bucoda Coal Company. Samuel Coulter and C. W. Coulter both testify that the real purchaser and owner of the business of the Bucoda Coal Company from and after January 14, 1890, was A. S. Coulter, and that he was the company. The price of the coal sold to the Bucoda Coal Company prior to January 14, 1890, was $2 per ton. Shortly after that date it was reduced to $1.75 per ton. That company retailed it at Portland at an average of $4 per ton. It clearly appears that it could have paid the corporation the whole of the purchase money for the coal, but refused to do so, and was not compelled to do so by Samuel Coulter. The company is now hopelessly insolvent. It makes, little difference, so far as the rights of the parties to this suit are concerned, whether or not Samuel Coulter was a co-partner in the Bucoda Coal Company. He sustained such relation to that company that his conduct in permitting its debt to his corporation to increase as it did, and in continuing to sell the output of the mine to that company in the face of the fact that it was not paying for the same, but was running up a rapidly increasing debt therefor, amounts to the grossest negligence, and is sufficient in law to charge him with the whole amount which the corporation has thereby lost. In the account between the complainant and the defendant Samuel Coulter, the latter will be charged with the amount of all the said sums so decreed to be paid to the defendants Whalley, Knott, and
It appears that at a meeting of the directors held on June 13,1894, the attorney of the complainant in this case was authorized to ascertain the amount of a certain note of the corporation in favor of Thomas Ismay for $3,608.80, which had been executed on the 29th day of October, 1892, and was secured by a mortgage on certain property of the corporation, and to purchase and take an assignment of said note and mortgage, and to hold therefor a claim against the corporation, as if the money had been originally advanced by the complainant in the place of said Ismay. The note and mortgage were so purchased in pursuance of said resolution, and it is found by the special master that there is due and owing to the complainant thereon the sum of $-. It is contended on behalf of the defendants that this transaction was only a loan of funds from the complainant to the corporation, and that the complainant is an unsecured creditor to that amount. I do not so find the equities. It was plainly the intention of the resolution to substitute the complainant for Ismay as a lienholder against the corporation. And, if there had been no such resolution, the complainant would nevertheless be entitled to enforce the lien against the corporation, from the fact that he is the assignee thereof. This lien is the first in order of priority of the liens created by the corporation.
It is contended that the mortgage of the defendant J. W. Whalley is invalid, for the reason that at the time when it was executed the corporation was insolvent, to his knowledge, and that to permit it under those circumstances to prefer one creditor to others would be to disregard the well-established rule of equity that the property of an insolvent corporation is a trust fund to be held for the equal benefit of all its creditors. There are decisions that uphold this view of the rule, but it is not so held in the federal courts. In Fogg v. Blair, 133 U. S. 534, 10 Sup. Ct. 338, Mr. Justice Field, in referring to the general doctrine that the property of a corporation is a trust fund for the payment of its debts, said:
“That doctrine only means that the property must first he appropriated to the payment of the debts of the company before any portion of it can be distributed to the stockholders. It does not mean that the property is so affected by the indebtedness of the company that it cannot be sold, transferred, or mortgaged to bona fide purchasers for a valuable consideration, except subject to the liability of being appropriated to pay that indebtedness. Such a doctrine has no existence.” '
In Adams v. Milling Co., 35 Fed. 433, it was said:
“It may be conceded that a corporation, though insolvent, has the power to prefer creditors.”
The same was beld in Lippincott v. Carriage Co., 25 Fed. 586. In Hollins v. Iron Co., 150 U. S. 371, 14 Sup. Ct. 127, tbe court said:
“A party may deal with a corporation in respect to its property in the same manner as with an individual owner, and with no greater danger of being held to have received into his possession property burdened with a trust or lien. The officers of a corporation act in a fiduciary capacity in respect to its property in their hands, and may be called to an account for fraud, or sometimes even mere mismanagement in respect thereto; but, as between itself and its creditors, the corporation is simply a debtor, and does not hold its property in trust, or subject to a lien in their favor, in any other sense than does an individual debtor.”
• It appears- from the evidence thát the defendant Farrell has received from.the corporation other security for his debt, and it is contended that he must first exhaust that security before receiving payment of his claim out of the general assets of the corporation. It has been held by some courts that a creditor having a lien or collateral security cannot participate in the general assets of the corporation until he has first exhausted such security, but the decided weight of authority is against the proposition. In Lewis v. U. S., 92 U. S. 618, it was said:
“It is a settled principle of equity that a creditor holding collaterals is not bound to apply them before enforcing his direct remedies ag-ainst the debtor.”
The same was held in Bank v. Armstrong, 8 C. C. A. 155, 59 Fed. 372; Tod v. Land Co., 57 Fed. 47; New York Security & Trust Co. v. Lombard Inv. Co., 73 Fed. 537; Kellogg v. Miller, 22 Or. 406, 30 Pac. 229. The defendant. Farrell, therefore, is not compelled to first exhaust his security, and thereafter present to this court his claim for a balance payable out of the proceeds of the company’s property. But if.it should appear that, after the payment to him of such amount or dividend as he may receive out of the assets which shall be finally distributed under the decree in this cause, the value of the security which he holds is then more than sufficient to pay the balance due him, the corporation will undoubtedly have the right to redeem said property from the lien, and the unpaid creditors herein can avail themselves of the fund thereby realized.
It is contended that neither the amount due the estate of John S. Doe; deceased, nor the amount due the complainant herein, is entitled to rank with the claim of the defendant Farrell, for the reason that it does not appear affirmatively that the liability of John S. Doe for the par-value of his stock in the corporation has ever been-paid/ No evidence was offered diréctly upon this question, but it appears from the corporation records that the mining property of the corporation was taken by it in payment of 50 per centum of the liability of/stockholders upon the subscribed stock, and that there
The complainant’s counsel asks for an allowance of attorney’s fees for conducting this suit on behalf of creditors, invoking the rule that where, by the diligence of one creditor, a fund has been discovered of which other creditors, without expense to themselves, reap the ben-chit, equity will impose upon the latter the burden of paying costs be fore they shall be entitled to sitare the fund. This, however, is not a case in which the rule is applicable. The complainant and his testator’s estate have by far the largest claims against the corporation, and, instead of uncovering a fund, and making it available for the payment of the debts of other creditors, they have brought this suit against the other creditors, denying their right, and have compelled them to defenddhe same.
The attention of the court is directed to certain receiver’s certif-ícales which have been issued by the receiver appointed in this case under the authority of an order of the circuit court of the United Stales for the District of Washington, in a suit ancillary to this, which was undiluted in that jurisdiction. Since those certificates have been issued under the authority of that court, the matter of ordering their final payment and of determining what sums are due thereon, together with the compensation of the receiver, will be relegated to that court. The question has arisen whether such receiver’s certificates are entitled to payment out of the assets of the corporation in preference to the mortgage liens. The corporation in this case is a private corporation, and ihe reasons which have led the courts to hold that in the operation of a railroad company in the hands of a receiver ihe expenses of mainiaining the property and preserving it pending the suit shall be a charge, not only upon the earnings, but upon the corpus, in preference to existing liens, do not apply. The defendants Whalley and Knott have not consented to the issuance of the receiver’s certificates. In the absence of such consent, the liens of those defendants will not be postponed to the liens created by the receiver’s certificates, or by the receivership. Farmers’ Loan & Trust Co. v. Grape Creek Coal Co., 50 Fed. 481; Hanna v. Trust Co., 16 C. C. A. 586, 70 Fed. 2; Fidelity Insurance, Trust & Safe-Deposit Co. v. Roanoke Iron Co., 68 Fed. 623. But the complainant lias consented to the issuance of the receiver’s certificates, and has thereby postponed his lien to the indebtedness so created. The decree of distribution of the properly will therefore be as follows:
Out of the proceeds of the sale of the property will first be paid the costs of sale and the costs of this suit. Second, there will be paid, on account of receiver’s certificates, a sum not to exceed the amount due upon the Ismay note and mortgage, now held by the complainant.