274 F. 24 | 6th Cir. | 1921
The case has been fully heard on the merits, and we are naturally disposed to exercise the authority, if we have any, to treat this review as under section 24b; there being no statutory limitation of time within which the petition to revise must be presented, although our amended rule 34 (261 Fed. v, 171 C. C. A. v) contains a limitation of 20 days from the time the order sought to be reviewed was entered, and this 20-day period has long since elapsed. But, were we to assume (we do not so decide) that we have such authority, it seems dear that its exercise could not help petitioner.
The bankrupt was incorporated under the laws of Delaware. Its principal place of business was at Ann Arbor, Midi., where it had
Appellant contends that the contemplated creditors’ committee was duly elected and continued to act until the petition in bankruptcy was filed, except that one of the members resigned and was replaced by another; that all of the corporate directors duly resigned, and that their offices were filled by the respective members of the creditors’ committee, thereby creating the only duly elected and qualified board of'directors. Appellant meanwhile obtainéd a judgment against the bankrupt for several thousand dollars, and on and before September 1, 1920, levied upon the property of the bankrupt and advertised the same for sale on September 18, 1920. On September 11, 1920, five members of the original board of directors assembled at Detroit, Mich., and passed a resolution authorizing the. president to file on behalf of the corporation a petition in voluntary bankruptcy, whereupon the president caused such voluntary petition to .be filed. Appellant’s proposed execution sale was accordingly enjoined. Appellant contends that in the situation stated the directors who passed the bankruptcy resolution were not the lawful directors, and so were without authority to act; also that the board of directors, even if lawfully constituted, had no authority either by charter or by-law to authorize the filing of petition for adjudication of bankruptcy, without affirmative vote of the holders of a majority of the stock, which vote was not had'; that such directors had no authority to take the action in question at Detroit, but, if at all, only at the bankrupt’s office at Ann Arbor; and that the resolution authorizing the bankruptcy proceedings was thus, without authority, and the District Court without jurisdiction to adjudicate.
The issues presented by the motion to set aside the adjudication of bankruptcy were referred -to the referee in bankruptcy as special master, who, on testimony taken, found specifically that the original board of directors, as constituted previous to the formation of the creditors’ committee, continued to hold meetings after such appoint
The referee concluded as ultimate facts that the original board of directors continued as the only board of directors of the bankrupt up to the time the petition in bankruptcy was filed; that the conditions under which the directors’ resignations were made were not met; that the resignations were never accepted; that there was no attempt to elect a new board of directors; chat the creditors’ committee did not consider themselves, and the referee did not find as a fact that they constituted, the board of directors of the corporation; that the creditors’ committee in permitting appellant to obtain a preference ’ under its execution was not properly functioning; and that the original board of directors, as the only de facto and de jure board, was in the exercise of its legal authority in calling the Detroit meeting, at which the resolution was passed. The referee therefore concluded, as matter of law, that the motion to set aside the adjudication was not sustainable. The District Judge overruled the exceptions to the referee’s findings of fact and conclusions of law, and formally affirmed the same.
“The property and business of this corporation shall be managed by its board of directors, seven in number, * * * ” and (14) “in addition to the powers and authorities of these by-laws expressly conferred upon them, the board may exercise all such powers of the corporation and do all such lawful . acts and things as are not by statute or by the certificate of incorporation or by these by-laws directed or required to be exercised or done by the stockholders.”
The articles of incorporation expressly empower the board of directors to “authorize and cause to be executed mortgages and liens upon the real and personal property” of the corporation. The requirement of stockholders’ authorization, contained in both the statute and the articles of incorporation, is confined to the selling, leasing or exchanging of “all its property and assets, including its good will and corporate franchises.” Under the authorty of the De Camp Case, there clearly is no limitation upon the power of the directors to authorize bankruptcy proceedings.
“We will examine Us contention, although we think it is one which the creditor has no standing to moke in the case of a, voluntary petition.”
Upon the authority of these cases, we think it not open to appellant to raise the question of the regularity of the convening of the meeting of a lawfully constituted board of directors at which the bankruptcy proceedings were authorized. It thus seems plain that appellant can gain nothing by a hearing upon this record as if under section 24b.
We content ourselves with dismissing the appeal from the order denying the motion to vacate.
Solvency of an alleged bankrupt is not open as a defense to a voluntary adjudication. Hanover Nat. Bank v. Moyses, 186 U. S. 181, 191, 22 Sup. Ct. 857, 46 L. Ed. 1113.
255 U. S. —, 41 Sup. Ct. 524, 65 L. Ed. —.
The record here does not affirmatively show a notice or call for the meeting, except that the resolution recites that a special meeting was hud “pursuant to waiver of notice attached”' — the waiver, however, not appearing in the record.
The petition for adjudication in the instant case is not in the record, but appellant presents no contention that it faile.d to state the jurisdictional facts required by the statute.
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