21 S.D. 228 | S.D. | 1907
This action by a judgment creditor of the Williams-Flower Compan}'-, on behalf of himself and others, to set aside a transfer and subsequent mortgage of corporate property and to secure the appointment of a receiver, was instituted after an execution had been issued and returned nulla bona. Whether the chattel mortgage executed and delivered by the transferee, S. A. Flower, to the respondent, First National Bank of Deadwood, is valid as to the creditors of the company, is the ultimate question to be determined on this appeal.
It is shown by the unchallenged findings of fact, upon which ?ill the parties rely, that the Williams-Flower Company was organized as a domestic corporation during the month of October, 1903, and was unsuccessfully engaged in mercantile business in the city of Deadwood from that time until the 23d day of January, 1905,
While the trial court concluded, from the foregoing and other probative facts too numerous to justify recitation, that the transaction so far as it related to the transfer of property was fraudu
Consistent with the doctrine that the assets of an insolvent corporation constitue a trust fund for he equal benefit of all its creditors, without preference for any, certain judgments confessed in favor of persons loaning an insolvent corporation money with which to purchase shares in itself were adjudged void as to creditors in the case of Adams & Westlake Co. v. Deyette, 5 S. D. 418, 59 N. W. 214, 49 Am. St. Rep. 887, where we quote with approval from a Wisconsin case as follows: “The law applicable to the question is well settled. The corporation, being only a fictitious body, can act qnly through agents, called 'directors.’ The directors manage the business for the stockholders. For this purpose they hold and manage the business and corporate property as trustees for the stockholders. (But when insolvency of the corporation happens, then the duty and function of the directors are changed. Then they become trustees for the creditors of the corporation of all the corporate property and rights. They are trustees for all the creditors, and are bound to preserve and administer all the corporate property in the interest, impartially, of all the corporate creditors. Being trustees for all the creditors, they are incapable of making
While the facts serving as a basis for the decision of this court in the case above noticed were not the same as here • presented, the governing principle is identical, and the reason for invoking the rule that an insolvent corporation has no' authority to prefer creditors is not impaired by the fact that the company attempted to transfer its property for the purpose of having S. A. Flower give a preference to the bank by executing the mortgage sought to be set aside. (The trust-fund doctrine, as applied to corporations, emanates from the fact that their creditors are confined to- corporate assets, while natural persons, though insolvent, may and often do. subsequently -acquire property and discharge all their previous obligations. . So- far as the rights and remedies of creditors are concerned, insolvency destroys a corporation, and the necessity for the equal distribution of its assets among such creditors is suggested by public policy and the plainest principles of equity.
As the case of Hardware Company v. Manufacturing Company, 86 Tex. 143, 24 S. W. 16, 22 L. R. A. 802, is similar to. this and conforms to- the prevailing rule, we quote a supporting- authority from the opinion as follows: “Approving the principles announced in Wood v. Dunmer, 3 Mason (U. S.) 311, Fed. Cas. No. 17,944, Sanger v. Upton, 91 U. S. 56, and Curran v. State of Arkansas, 15 How. (U. S.) 312, and quoting with approval from the opinion, it was'held 'that when a corporation for profit * * * becomes insolvent, and ceases to carry on its business or further pursue the purposes of its creation, the corporate property constitutes a trust fund for the equal benefit of the corporate creditors, in proportion to the amounts of their respective claims; and that it cannot then, by pledge or mortgage of the property to some of its creditors as security for antecedent debts, without other consideration, create valid preferences in their behalf over the other creditors, or over an assignment -thereafter made for the benefit of creditors.’ ” In the case of Appleton v. Turnbull, 84 Me. 72, 24 Atl. 592, the court said: “It is too firmly established in the present day tO' be questioned that the capital stock of a corporation is a trust fund for the payment of
Judge Thompson speaks of the fallacy of upholding an insolvent corporation in the preference of creditors as follows: “It allows it to- hand over its property to certain favored creditors, and then go out of existence and leave the rest of its creditors utterly remediless. The writer wishes to weigh his words carefully, 'and not to speak disrespectfully of the judicial courts; but he feels that he does not characterize this doctrine in the language which it deserves unless he calls it an infamous doctrine, which is not supported by any underlying principle of justice. It gives added weight to the calamity which the public suffers through the fact of nearly every form of industry passing into the hands of limited liability corporations.”- 5 Thompson on Corporations, 5122. Chancellor Kent, in 2, Com. 307, says: “The rule of the common law has in fact become obsolete. It has never been applied to insolvent or dissolved moneyed corporations in England. The sound doctrine now is, as shown by statutes and judicial decisions, that the capital and debts of banking and other moneyed corporations constitute a trust fund and pledge for the payment of creditors and stockholders, and a court of equity will lay hold of the fund, and see that it be duly collected and applied.” The following cases are directly in point: Sanger v. Upton, 91 U. S. 56; Biddle Purchasing Co, v. Steel Wire & Nail Co., 16 Wash. 681, 48 Pac. 407; Sawyer v. Hoag, 17 Wall. (U. S.) 610.
The case is therefore remanded, with the direction that the judgment appealed from be modified in conformity- with the views herein expressed; and, as thus modified, such judgment is affirmed, with costs in favor of appellant.
Regarding the sale to S. A. Flower and the execution of the mortgage to the bank as constituting a preference by the Williams-Flower Company of one of its creditors, I would hold it was permitted by the statutes of this state to- give such preference, were I not precluded from doing so by the former decision o'f this court, wherein it was expressly declared (Kellam, J., dissenting) that, ‘“when insolvency occurs, a corporation has no authority to prefer creditors.” Adams & Westlake Co. v. Deyette, 8 S. D. 119, 59 N. W. 214.
For these reasons I concur in the conclusion that the judgment appealed from should be modified.