68 P. 753 | Or. | 1902
delivered the opinion.
The evidence discloses that the mill property, including the planing mill, water rights, etc., denoted by the first item in the schedule, valued at $21,000, was incumbered at the time by a mortgage to the school fund for $5,000, which Wheeler was to pay. He subsequently reduced it to $2,000, but, being unable to pay the balance, it was foreclosed, and the property was bought in by the state for $800. The timber land, turned in at a valuation of $3,500, was incumbered, as we have seen, with a debt of $400. This was subsequently sold for $900, and the state paid out of the proceeds. The logs were incumbered with $2,000, which Wheeler agreed to pay, and which he says he subsequently paid. The item of interest in lumber and accounts of U. W. L. M. Association, it subsequently transpired, amounted to an estimated valuation of $1,200, instead of $3,200, and it is not apparent what was finally realized from it; so that we find a shrinkage in four of the principal items of property transferred to the company of $27,000; nor is it clearly shown what was realized from the other items. Of the $11,100 in stock, notes, and accounts, he has realized, according to his own statement, stock in the McKenzie Lumber Co., (not in money) $600, stock in Eugene Lumber Co., $979; on notes and accounts in Albany probably $3,000. Besides this, he had notes and accounts at Springfield, estimated at from $1,500 to $2,500, but what was realized thereon is not apparent. If they be valued at $2,000, probably an excessive estimation, his individual assets would be reduced to $6,579, showing that his entire assets were less than his indebtedness, and probably much less than the estimates here made. We have not the means of ascertaining what amount was realized from some of the items, as there is no testimony in the record to show it. But it is quite probable that Wheeler was insolvent at the time of the incorporation of the company.
It is a matter of grave doubt whether O. A. and T. C. ever paid anything on their stock. The evidence shows, in effect, that A. Wheeler was the owner, or at least the holder, of the certificate from the state to the section of school land turned into the company, and whatever title it acquired thereto was by assignment from him. Indeed Wheeler says his sons had no interest in the property prior to the organization of the company, and yet one half of the section is devoted at a fancy figure to the payment of the major portion of O. A.’s 18 shares, and one fourth to T. C. ’s 9 shares, of the capital stock. So that it is but a reasonable and altogether natural deduction to conclude that A. Wheeler was the sole beneficiary of the operations of the concern. Its property was his property, and his debts, by a skillful circumlocution of bookkeeping, and a liberal use and transformation of negotiable paper, were made its debts ad libitum. The company had long ceased to be an operative concern, or even an entity, except in name, and Wheeler controlled it absolutely for his own benefit. It is under these conditions that lumber, nominally the company’s, was exchanged with Hunter for the property in dispute, and deeded to O. A. as trustee for the company. This, it is related, was done as a matter of convenience. Eleven months later the sons purchased, and Wheeler, acting in behalf of the company, sold, the property to them, and the alleged payment is made in the manner as.above indicated; Wheeler, in effect, charging his own account and crediting the same with the supposed consideration.