216 F. 113 | 7th Cir. | 1914
The claim in suit is a promissory note for $30,000, dated March 17, 1909, made by five individual signers and payable to the decedent, Charles P. Romadka, bearing an indorsement thereon as follows: “For value received, we hereby guarantee the payment of the within note at maturity, and interest thereon at its respective maturity” — signed in the name of the bankrupt corporation, by its president and secretary. Both of the officers so executing the guaranty are individual makers on the face of the note and all the makers are stockholders of the guarantor corporation and owners of all its capital stock. Thus the prima facie import of the contract is an obligation of the joint and several makers of the note for their individual indebtedness, and an undertaking on behalf of the corporation to guarantee payment thereof.
We do not understand the above stated general doctrine to be controverted or questioned in the opinion of the trial court directing allowance of the claim, nor in the argument on behalf of the appellee in support of such allowance, but that the ruling in favor of the claim is predicated on other propositions which are assumed to render that doctrine either inapplicable or inoperative. Those propositions are: First (as stated in substance in the opinion filed), that the evidence proves the transaction out of which the note arose to be in truth and purpose an assumption by the corporation of the indebtedness of the several makers (stockholders), for the benefit and purposes of the corporation, and thus within its powers. Second (as further contended in the argument of counsel), that the evidence establishes the contract on the part of the corporation, treated as one of guaranty: (1) To be made
These facts are settled and conceded: (a) The consideration represented by the note was the personal indebtedness of the stockholders to the payee when it was executed by them as makers, (b) The purported authorization of any undertaking on the part of the corporation thereupon appears “from the records of the stockholders’ meeting,” in substance reciting as follows: That “the president suggested” an issue of “at least $100,000 common stock as collateral security” to- be held by the payee with the note signed by the stockholders, and such “note to be assumed by this company”; that the payee, “C. P. Romad-ka, who was present, preferred their note and indorsement”; and that a resolution was then adopted for the note to be executed by the stockholders “and indorsed by this company by its president and secretary, Mr. C. P. Romadka consenting.” (c) The note in suit was thereupon signed by the makers, so “indorsed” with guaranty of payment and accepted by the payee. The ruling that the corporation “really assumed the personal debt” of the makers, notwithstanding the undoubted import of the written contract otherwise, rests on circumstances which are the subject-matter of recitals contained in the above-mentioned record of the stockholders’ meeting, together with testimony as to financial difficulties of the corporation and antecedent conferences for rehabilitation thereof. In the opinion it is stated that “there is controversy in the testimony” of various witnesses “with respect to the precise consideration prompting the transfer of real estate” by the stockholders to the corporation (hereinafter mentioned), but we believe any differences in their versions respectively to be immaterial, and that the recitals thereof as entered of record at the meeting of stockholders are both sufficient and controlling for all purposes of the present issue. The additional facts so relied upon may be classified and stated as follows:. (1) That the corporation accepted a conveyance from the stockholders of their several equities in certain real estate, in settlement of $64,8.00, as their personal indebtedness to the corporation for overdrawn accounts, and “for the purpose of strengthening the assets of the company,” thereby exhausting all their property, aside from-
Raying aside the last mentioned “suggestion,” offered by the president (one of the makers) at the meeting of stockholders, that the note “be assumed by this company,” we are advised of no testimony in the record which tends to prove even an offer on the part of the corporation to assume the indebtedness of the stockholders to the payee, and the ensuing rejection of that proposal plainly left it inoperative, aside from any question of want of consideration for such an agreement. In reference to the conveyance made by the stockholders to the corporation, the transaction is without force, as we believe, for the following reasons: Not only was it executed nearly a month prior to the making of the note and for the clearly expressed purpose of satisfying the conceded indebtedness of the grantors to the grantee corporation, but the payee of the note was neither a party to the conveyance, nor possessed of any interest in the property conveyed; and the facts cited, that he appears to have advised or assented to the making of such conveyance by the stockholders (his debtors), and that the corporation accepted the grant, can neither create liability in his favor against the corporation for the grantors’ indebtedness to him, nor impute consideration therefor.
We are of opinion, therefore, that the first proposition must be overruled as unsupported by evidence.
We believe, therefore, that the purported guaranty indorsed thereon by its officers was purely an accommodation promise, not within the corporate powers and not binding as a corporate obligation, and that no circumstances are in evidence to estop the corporation “from invoking the defense of ultra vires.”
The order of the District Court is reversed, accordingly, with direction to disallow the appellee’s claim.