184 Mo. 446 | Mo. | 1904
This is a bill in equity asking for the- appointment. of a receiver for the defendant company, for a removal of the defendants as directors of the company, for an injunction to restrain the defendants from disposing of or interfering with the property, and to have a transfer of the property by the defendant company to the defendant George L. Heidbreder as trustee for himself, and the other defendants set aside.
The case made in this: The defendant company has a capital stock of eighty thousand dollars, divided into eight hundred shares of the value of one hundred dollars each, fully paid up. The stockholders are:
John H. Heidbreder, the plaintiff, 150 shares.
George L. Heidbreder, one of the defendants, 200 shares.
Charles W. Heidbreder one of the defendants, 150 shares.
Julia A. Heidbreder, one of the defendants, 50 shares.
Anna M. Heidbreder, one of the defendants, 50 shares. . •
Lena L. Kunkel, one of the defendants, 50 shares.
Katie L. Heidbreder, one. of the defendants, 50 shares.
Theodore W. Mertens, one of the defendants, 50 shares.
C. F. Hoffman, one of the defendants, 50 shares.
Total............................800 shares.
I.
The pivotal question in this case is, as to the validity of the transfer of the property to the defendants, in satisfaction of what the company owed them and upon payment by them of all the debts' of the company.
Whatever may be the law in other jurisdictions, the rule is well settled in this State that stockholders or directors of a corporation 'can lawfully lend money to the company,' and the company can lawfully prefer them, by transferring enough property of the company to fairly and reasonably secure or pay them what the company owes them. [Foster v. Mullanphy Planing Mill Co., 92 Mo. 79; Foster v. Belcher Sugar Refining Co., 118 Mo. 238; Alberger v. Bank, 123 Mo. l. c. 322; Schufeldt v. Smith, 131 Mo. 280; Hall v. Goodnight, 138 Mo. l. c. 582; Butler v. Mining Co., 139 Mo. 467; Swentzel v. Inv. Co., 168 Mo. 272.]
The indebtedness of the company to the defendants, all of whom- were stockholders, and all, except Katie L. Heidbreder and C. F. Hoffman, were directors, was bona fide, for money actually loaned by them to the company, in the regular course of business. The transfer of the property to them in satisfaction of their debts and in consideration that they would pay all the Other debts of the company, was openly, fairly and honestly done, and was authorized by every stockholder and director, except the plaintiff. The amount of prop
The validity of the transfer and the bpna tides of the transaction must be judged in the lights as they appeared to the parties at the date of the transfer, and as the defendants took the risk of the depreciation and loss if the winter turned out to be a cold one and therefore the natural supply of ice was so great as to make the
In addition to this, at the time of the. transfer, the company had no money and no credit. Its plant was in such bad shape that it could not be operated. The defendants had put up nearly thirty-five thousand dollars to enable the company to continue business. The plaintiff and Charles W. Heidbreder had put up practically nothing. The situation was that the company had to have ten or fifteen thousand dollars to put that plant in repair and to get into shape to do business the next summer. The stockholders had a meeting and the plaintiff and Charles were given an opportunity of loaning the company the money so required. They owned three-eighths of the stock and were asked to contribute fifteen thousand dollars. The defendants owned five-eighths of the stock and had loaned the company about thirty-five thousand dollars. The plaintiff refused to lend the company any money at that time or to take any risks. The stockholders then (on November 17th) resolved that the property be sold and that, if a purchaser was not found by the 10th of December, the property be turned over to the defendants in payment of their' claims, they to pay all the debts of the company, which was' done.' The defendants then 'went to work repairing the property and spent nearly twenty thousand dollars in’ doing so. Under such circumstances the sale was bona fide, open and honest, and the amount of property transferred was not in excess of the debts.
The learned trial judge found the facts to be substantially as here stated, but set aside the transfer because he did not believe that directors of a corporation can lawfully sell the corporate property to themselves,
The judgment of the circuit court is therefore reversed, and the cause remanded with directions to it to set aside all its orders and decrees in the case and to dismiss the bill at the cost of the plaintiff.