251 P. 774 | Wash. | 1927
The plaintiff, as receiver for the Hill Syrup Company, a corporation, brought this action to recover funds which had been on deposit with the defendant bank belonging to the Hill Syrup Company, but withdrawn on checks of the company signed by W.E. Sander, the president and manager thereof, in payment of his personal indebtedness. The cause was tried to the court without a jury and resulted in findings of fact and conclusions of law denying a recovery. From the judgment entered dismissing the action, the plaintiff appeals.
The preliminary facts will be found in the case of Hill SyrupCo. v. Frederick Nelson,
In the case now before us the findings of the trial court were in part as follows:
Check dated January 20, 1921, in the sum of . $7,000.00 Check dated June 20, 1921, in the sum of .... 6,000.00 Check dated December 15, 1919, upon which recovery is sought in the sum of ........... 1,750.00 Check dated March 1, 1919, in the sum of .... 4,000.00were each and all given in payment of notes of W.E. Sander, the proceeds of which notes had at the time of the making thereof been deposited to the credit of the Hill Syrup Company, the transactions being that the said W.E. Sander had lent his personal credit to said company.
An examination of the evidence has led us to the conclusion that the above findings are sustained thereby.
In the case of Hill Syrup Co. v. Frederick Nelson, supra, the action was waged in the name of the corporation, and it was there held that no recovery could be had. In the present case the action is prosecuted by the receiver. The controlling facts in the two cases are very much alike. In the Hill Syrup Co. v.National City Bank,
Much of the appellant's brief in the present case, if we have gathered the thought thereof correctly, is an argument against the holding in the Frederick Nelson case. We have again considered the question, but are not disposed to depart from the holding there made.
[1] The questions in this case are, therefore, whether the receiver, suing on behalf of the stockholders and creditors, has a greater right to maintain an action upon facts which are essentially the same than did the corporation when the action was prosecuted in its own name.
First, as to the stockholders. This is not a case where the corporation had refused to sue and for that reason the stockholders brought the action, but is a *491
case where the corporation had brought an action and failed to recover, and then the receiver seeks to recover for the benefit of the stockholders. It seems plain that the receiver would have no greater rights than would the stockholder suing in his own behalf if the corporation had refused to sue. In Ninneman v.Fox,
"All the authorities agree that a stockholder, as such, cannot maintain an action against a third person, either for a breach of a contract between such third person and the corporation of which he is a stockholder, or for an injury to the corporation or its property. All such wrongs must be redressed by the corporation itself and in the corporate name."
In Huffman v. Ellen Mining Co.,
"We have not overlooked the fact that this is a suit by stockholders of the corporation and not by the corporation itself. But the right of the stockholders to sue in cases of this sort arises from the fact that the corporation itself refuses to sue. The stockholders are but exercising a right which the corporation refuses to exercise, and their rights are no greater than the rights of the corporation. Any reason, therefore, which would estop the corporation from recovery will estop them."
In Marcovich v. O'Brien,
"It follows that appellant, when he filed his petition, was, in a sense, already in court. That is to say, the corporation in which he is a stockholder was in court, and, generally speaking, the stockholders of a corporation, for the purposes of all litigation growing out of the relations between such corporation and a third person, surrender their personal or individual entity to the corporation in which they are stockholders, and when such corporation is properly in court, the stockholders *492 are, under the law, also in court, so far as is necessary for the purpose of adjudicating all matters incident to the issues tendered between such corporation and such other party or parties litigant."
The appellant, as receiver, has no greater right to sue on behalf of the stockholders than the corporation itself in theFrederick Nelson case.
[2] The next question is as to whether the receiver can maintain the action on behalf of creditors, even though the corporation itself failed in the case referred to. It will be admitted that the corporation's property and assets are a trust fund for the benefit of creditors and that, as a general rule, a creditor, whether he be prior or subsequent to the diversion of the corporation property or assets, is protected by that doctrine. It appears that, in the year 1921, the Hill Syrup Company was financially embarrassed. Sander, who had been the president and manager of the company, surrendered his stock and severed his connection therewith. Negotiations took place with reference to the corporation continuing in business. John A. Hemrich, who is the receiver in this case, and his mother advanced twenty thousand dollars and came into the company. Others advanced five thousand dollars. The then creditors, of which the respondent was one, who held claims against the company for more than the sum of one hundred dollars, agreed to take fifty per cent on the dollar for their claims. The claims of less than one hundred dollars were paid. Those agreeing to take fifty per cent of the amount of their claims were paid in three installments, the first installment out of the twenty-five thousand dollars mentioned. For the other two installments, Mr. Hemrich and his mother provided the money. After the reorganization of the company and the reducing of its capital stock to sixty thousand dollars, Mr. Hemrich became the controller and the *493 director thereof. After the decision in the Frederick Nelson case, he was appointed receiver in this case. There are some minor claims in the case other than those of Mr. Hemrich and his mother.
It appears in this action that, at the time the twenty thousand dollars was advanced, Mr. Hemrich investigated the company's affairs, as he naturally would before investing that amount of money, and knew at that time that Sander had been diverting the company's funds to his individual use. It is plain that he did not rely, when he became a stockholder or creditor, upon any right as a part of the assets of the company to recover from the bank the amount of checks which it had paid and the proceeds of which went to Sander's individual obligations. It is only those creditors who can fairly be said to have relied upon, or whom the law presumes to have relied upon, a particular asset of the corporation in whose favor equity will impress a trust. InAdamant Manufacturing Co. v. Wallace,
"But there is another phase of this case which will compel the affirmance of the judgment, although it was not the ground upon which the court below acted. While the doctrine of trust fund is accepted in its broadest sense, it is well settled that a trust will not be impressed upon the stock of the corporation in the hands of the stockholders for the benefit of creditors who dealt with the corporation with knowledge of the fact that the stock had been paid for in property the value of which was less than the face value of the stock. As was well said in First NationalBank v. Gustin, etc., Mining Co.,
"`The whole doctrine that the capital stock of corporations is a trust fund for the payment of creditors rests upon the equitable consideration that the distribution of the capital among stockholders without making adequate provision for the payment of debts, or the issue of fictitiously paid up stock, is a fraud upon *494 creditors who contract with the corporation in reliance upon its capital remaining intact, or in reliance upon the professed capital having been in fact paid up in full. But when the reason for the rule does not exist the rule itself ceases to apply . . . It is only those creditors who can fairly allege that they have relied, or whom the law presumes to have relied, upon the amount of capital stock of the company, who have a right to make such inquiry, or in whose favor equity will impress a trust upon the subscription to the stock, and set aside a fictitious arrangement for its payment.'
"In cases where parties have actual notice of the conditions existing in the corporation, it must be conceded that as to them no fraud, actual or constructive, has been committed by the shareholders and the corporation in receiving property at fictitious values in exchange for the stock of the corporation."
In Davies v. Ball,
"There is another matter of defense which may be available to all of these respondents. They should be permitted to show, if they can, that the creditors in whose behalf this action was brought, or any of them, dealt with the corporation with knowledge of the fact that the stock was issued for property of less value than the par value of the stock. Any such creditor will be estopped to participate in the trust fund created by an enforcement of the liability of the stockholders."
It is difficult to see how any of the present creditors, either in fact or by presumption of law, can be said to have relied upon, as an asset of the company when they extended credit, any liability that the respondent may have incurred when it honored checks drawn by Sander upon the corporation's funds to pay his individual debts. All of the creditors which existed at the time of the reorganization have been paid. After the reorganization, the corporation became a solvent going concern under an entirely different management. Its capital stock was reduced and the then creditors had *495 agreed, with the exception of those having claims of less than one hundred dollars, to take fifty cents on the dollar. The respondent was one of these creditors in a large amount.
[3] One other question remains and that is, whether the depositary bank violated the instructions of the company in paying the checks in issue. There was on file with the bank a resolution of the board of trustees of the company, as follows:
"It was moved by Mr. V.W. Sander and seconded by Mr. F.T. Kenyon, that the president, Mr. W.E. Sander, or the secretary, Mr. V.W. Sander, be authorized to sign checks on behalf of the Company."
This resolution authorizes Sander, the president, "to sign checks on behalf of the company". The checks paid by the bank were so signed. The resolution does not purport to give any instruction as to the disposition of the proceeds of the checks. In this respect, the case differs from that of Rensselaer ValveCo. v. National Bank of Commerce,
The judgment will be affirmed.
TOLMAN, C.J., MITCHELL, FULLERTON, ASKREN, PARKER, BRIDGES, and MACKINTOSH, JJ., concur. *496