285 Mass. 294 | Mass. | 1934
This action is brought to recover $5,500, the amount of a check signed by the plaintiff’s treasurer, payable to the order of the defendant and received in payment of an individual indebtedness of the treasurer, with knowledge on the defendant’s part that the check was drawn against corporate funds. The case was referred to
The auditor found that the check was given in settlement of a suit in equity brought by this defendant against this plaintiff and its treasurer, one Samuel Rottenberg, to reach and apply funds which Gould alleged the Dome Realty Co. owed its treasurer and the interests which Gould alleged the treasurer held, and apply the same upon indebtedness of such treasurer to Gould. The directors of the corporation had all the powers of the corporation, except as otherwise provided by the by-laws. The auditor further found that at the time the check for $5,500 was delivered mutual releases were executed between the present plaintiff, its treasurer, Gould and others in the presence of the plaintiff’s treasurer and his wife, who, with their son Bernard, were the holders of all the stock of the corporation, namely six hundred fifty shares. At the time the check was given the corporation was a going concern engaged in building and operating certain apartment houses. There was no evidence that the Dome Realty Co. at the time of said settlement was insolvent or owed any considerable amounts of money except upon notes secured by mortgage, and certain other sums aggregating $5,932.13, which were paid within a short time of the settlement; all of these debts appear to have been incurred in the usual course of business. In addition to the facts found by the auditor, it was agreed by the parties that Hall-Gregg Incorporated brought a suit against the present plaintiff to recover for merchandise sold and delivered, and that judgment was entered in favor of the plaintiff therein on September 26, 1930, in the sum of $2,400.96 damages and costs, which has not been satisfied in whole or in part. It is also agreed that the plaintiff gave three mortgages upon real estate; that all these mortgages
The auditor found that the defendant in accepting the check in question acted in good faith, unless as matter of law his acceptance and collection of the check, with knowledge that it was drawn and paid out of corporate funds, were conclusive, of themselves, in establishing that the receipt by him of the check was in fraud of the plaintiff; that the defendant did not know whether or not the corporation was indebted to Rottenberg; that although on February 6, 1929, no money was actually due Rottenberg by the corporation for loans, yet, between February 24, 1929, and July 1, 1929, he deposited from his own money $12,000 to the credit of the corporation, none of which sums had been repaid by July 1, 1929, and that these transactions were carried on without objection from anyone and were in accordance with Rottenberg's custom to use the corporation as a medium or straw through which he transacted business; that the transactions were not authorized by any vote of the directors or stockholders so far as appears from the records, but that upon the evidence it did not appear that he intended to defraud the corporation, its stockholders, directors or creditors.
The final conclusions of the auditor are as follows: The payment of $5,500 to the defendant Gould on February 6, 1929, was made in settlement of a private debt of Samuel Rottenberg, that it was paid by a check signed by the corporation by Samuel Rottenberg, its treasurer, and drawn upon bank deposits belonging to said corporation; that these facts were known to said Gould and to all the stockholders and officers of the corporation who all assented to the payment for said purpose; that no vote of the corporation authorized such payment; that at the time of the said payment the corporation was not indebted to Rottenberg; that at that time Gould did not know whether or not the corporation was so indebted to Rottenberg; that all the parties to the former suit acted in good faith in making said settlement; that there was no evidence that any indebted
The case is before this court solely upon the report of the auditor and an agreed statement of facts. The auditor’s report is prima facie evidence upon such matters as are embraced in the order. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 221, § 56. The auditor upon the facts found by him found for the defendant. The trial judge at the conclusion of the hearing on the auditor’s report found for the defendant. “Where facts enough appear on the face of the auditor’s report to warrant more than one inference, it is open to the court or jury to draw a different one from that of the auditor.” Fisher v. Doe, 204 Mass. 34, 41. It was said in the recent case of Ballou v. Fitzpatrick, 283 Mass. 336, at page 339: “The general finding of the trial judge rendered upon an auditor’s report as the sole evidence imports the drawing of all rational inferences and the finding of all subsidiary facts tending to support that conclusion of which the case is susceptible.”
It appears from the writ, dated May 3, 1932, that the action was brought in the name of the plaintiff corporation by Harvey P. L. Partridge who was duly appointed receiver on February 5, 1932; The plaintiff seeks to recover from the defendant, a former creditor of the plaintiff’s treasurer, $5,500 paid the creditor from the corporate funds, by a check drawn by the treasurer about three years before the receivership and when the corporation was solvent and a going concern, in compromise and settlement of a suit in equity brought by the creditor against the corporation and its treasurer to reach and apply the interest of the treasurer in the corporation in satisfaction of his debt of $20,000 to the creditor; the payment was part of a transaction which included the dismissal of the bill and the giving of mutual releases between the corporation, its treasurer and his
Although the payment discharged the individual debt of the plaintiff’s treasurer, it also released the corporation from claims in which it was an interested party. The findings of the auditor show that the defendant in consideration of the payment: to him released all his claims against the plaintiff’s treasurer, his wife, who owned a majority of its stock and who the defendant contended was a straw for her husband, and against the plaintiff as equitable trustee for its treasurer in which capacity in its answer it admitted that it owed its treasurer $200.
In the absence of a report of the evidence the question for this court to decide upon the facts found by the auditor and the reasonable inferences to be drawn therefrom is whether the general finding for the defendant was warranted. If the payment was a fraud upon the corporation the plaintiff is entitled to recover. The findings show that the payment not only discharged the plaintiff’s treasurer from liability in the equity suit, but released and discharged the -corporation which also was a party defendant in that suit. It is plain that, upon the facts found, the payment was not a fraud upon the corporation. Where, as here, all the stockholders arid officers, with full knowledge of the facts, assented to the transaction, the corporation cannot complain that it was fraudulent. Arnold v. Searing, 73 N. J. Eq. 262. Pocantico Waterworks Co. v. Low, 20 Misc. (N. Y.) 484.
The plaintiff and all its stockholders, having assented to
It appears from the agreed statement of facts that Hall-Gregg Incorporated was a creditor of the plaintiff and brought an action against the plaintiff and from the account annexed to the declaration in that case it appears that after the payment by the plaintiff to the defendant in the present case, the plaintiff paid this creditor $1,064.01 on account of merchandise sold and delivered. So far as appears from the record it was the only creditor of the plaintiff, except the holders of real estate mortgages. There is nothing in the record to show that this or any other creditor was injuriously affected by the payment to the defendant in view of the subsequent payment of $12,000 to the plaintiff by its treasurer. The cases of Davis v. Old Colony Railroad, 131 Mass. 258, Murray v. C. N. Nelson Lumber Co. 143 Mass. 250, Commercial Brewing Co. v. McCormick, 225 Mass. 504, Boston Box Co. Inc. v. Shapiro, 249 Mass. 373, and the other cases cited by the plaintiff, are distinguishable in their facts from the case at bar.
Upon the findings of the auditor it is plain for the reasons hereinbefore stated that the trial judge rightly found for the defendant.
Exceptions overruled.