153 F. 787 | M.D. Penn. | 1907
At the sale by the trustee of the real ■estate of the bankrupt corporation the property was purchased by George R. McLean, as attorney for bondholders, for $40,000, who, after paying $1,650 in cash to recover the costs, was permitted, in conformity with the state practice in cases of judicial sales, to receipt for the balance of his bid in bonds of the company, secured by a first mortgage on the property, the lien of which was divested by the sale. A return of sale to this effect having been made by the trustee, exceptions were taken by the Bear Creek Ice Company and the Albert Lewis Lumber Company, judgment creditors, which were dismissed by the referee and the sale confirmed, the proceeds as the result being appropriated pro rata to the payment of the bonds, and it is the propriety of this disposition that is now in question. The exceptants claim that the bonds are invalid, not having been issued for value, but having been given to the parties, by whom they are now held for money advanced with which to buy up the capital stock of the company, and to a small extent also to secure the business and property of certain other ■companies, altogether inadequate to meet the requirements of the law.
The facts' are not in dispute, and are in substance as follows: The Wyoming Valley Ice Company was incorporated by act of assembly of April 15, 1869 (P. L. 1870, p. 1415), with a capital stock of $25,000, divided into 1,000 shares of $25 each, and an authorized capital of ten times that amount. And on February 12, 1901, Albert Lewis, being the owner of 690 of such shares, gave an option in writing to Dr. IT. N. Young to sell him the same at $75 a share; Dr. Young undertaking to buy the shares of other stockholders at the same figure. It was at the same time further agreed by Mr. Lewis, acting on behalf of the. Bear Creek Ice Company and the Albert Lewis Lumber Company, both of which he controlled, that these companies would abstain from engaging in The wholesale or retail ice business in the Wyoming Valley as tiiey had been doing theretofore, or from selling to other parties there, T)r. Young on his, part undertaking that the Wyoming Valley Ico Ce i i ; ay which was thus turned over to him and to which the Bear Creer Ice Company had previously been furnishing ice, should Lire from the aid company, for a period of ten years, 12,000 tons of ice annually at certain mices; a contract to this effect being subsequently executed with those companies.
'The purpose of Dr. Young was to consolidate and control the ice business in .he section designated, and, following upon the option obtained from Mr. Lewis, he secured anoilier from Isaac Stauffer and Daniel G. Callahan, doing business as the Cocono Ice Company, by which they were to sell him the property of that company for $50,000 — that is to say, $1,000 in cash and $45,000 in stock of the Wyoming Valley Ice Company, part of an increase of it to $225,000, which was contemplated — Stauffer and Callahan at the same time agreeing that they .we.tilfl not, directly or indirectly, engage or become interested in the ice
Armed with these several options and agreements, Dr. Young then proceedéd to enlist other .parties in the enterprise, securing from them an advance of $90,000, of which $75,000 was.to be used to pay Mr. Lewis and the other holders of the existing stock of the Wyoming Valley Ice Company — 1,000 shares at the agreed price of $75 a share; and the balance, $15,000, was to pay the $5,000 cash.to .Stauffer and Callahan, and to take care of the $10,000 of obligations of the Summit Lake Ice Company. This money was advanced by the parties who went into the arrangement, upon the understanding that, when the reorganization of the company was effected and the proposed increase of stock had been authorized, they should receive bonds' of the company to the amount which they had severally contributed, and a certain per cent, of the increase stock as a bonus.
The so-called reorganization of the company was then proceeded with. The original $25,000 of' capital stock was assigned and turned over .by Mr. Lewis ,and the other holders of it to .the parties whom Dr. Young designated; and on March 15, 1901, the old directors having -resigned,. new directors and officers were chosen, Dr. Young being one of them and the-others being taken from those who were associated with him. Immediately following this the new board met —only four, however, of the six being present, with Dr. Young among them — and a resolution was passed that the agreements and options which he held with Lewis, Stauffer, and Cramer, and the conjpanies which they severally represented, should be purchased of-Ailm oy the Wyoming Valley tIce Company for $90,000 of the bcnrds of the company and $200,000 of its capital stock, when the. stockholders should have authorized the issuing of the bonds and the increase of the capital; a meeting of the stockholders for that purpose being called for the next day. The agreement of Dr. Young with the Bear Creek Ice Company and the- Albert Lewis Lumber Company to take a certain quantity of ice yearly was also accepted, and the officers of the company were directed to execute a contract to this effect with them, which was done .the same day. On March 16th the stockholders took action on the.proposed issue of"bonds and increase of stock, further notice being waived, and the whole 1,000 of existing shares were voted in favor of it. This was followed on April 1st, by a meeting of the directors, at which by formal action it was resolved that, in consideration of the options- and agreements held by Dr. Young and the property and' business thereby acquired and controlled which he undertook to sell,’ the company should issue to him in payment thereof $200,000 of' the capital stock (the increase voted), and make and issue coupon bond¿
In determining just what Dr. Young contributed to the company in return for the stock and bonds turned over to him, the property of the company itself has, of course, to be left out of the consideration. That already belonged to the company together with the good will and business, and could neither be optioned away by Mr. Lewis, if he had undertaken to do so, as he did not, nor sold back again to the company by the assignment of the agreement with him. The $75,000, therefore, which represents its value drops out of the case. Nor is it saved by the suggestion that the original $25,000 oí stock was embraced in the agreement with Mr. Lewis, and that by the assignment of that agreement it was transferred to the company, which thus became the beneficial owner. This agreement only covered in reality Mr. Lewis’ 090 shares. But that is not material. The point is that the 1,000 shares of stock acquired of him and the others in the transaction were paid for out of the money contributed by the parties associated with Dr. Young, by whom it was advanced with the distinct understanding that it was to be so used; and it was distributed to them in order that the reorganization of the company on March 15th might be effected. The option with Mr. Lewis, having been exercised in this way, had no further purpose, and on March 27th when Dr. Young assigned over the agreement to the company of which it formed a part, there was nothing left to this feature of it. This is not to deny that the company could buy and hold or retire its own stock if that was what was actually intended. But far from this the capital stock was increased, not to $200,000, but to $225,000, which left the original $25,000 unaffected in the hands of the parties to whom the certificates had been severally assigned, and by whom, so far as appears, it is still held and claimed. It will hardly be contended, in the face of this, that the company paid in bonds and stock for stock that it did not, and that there was no pretense that it should acquire, whatever its power to ’do so. It may also be further observed that, even if this were not so and the original $25,000 of stock could be made to stand as a part of the con
The consideration to the company, therefore, for the $90,000 of bonds and the $200,000 of stock which were voted to Dr. Young by himself and his fellow directors, comes down to the property secured by the agreements with the Bocono and the Summit Lake Ice Companies, amounting all told to $27,500, incumbered with $10,000 of debts of the latter; and the advantages to result by the removal of competition with these and the Bear Creek Ice Company which was, of course, altogether prospective and problematical. As was to .be expected, the bargain, as so made, being made with themselves, was a wholly one-sided one; the obligations of the company being voted without regard to anything but the most extravagant estimate of benefits to come. All who were interested at the time having assented, it may be that the validity of the transaction is not open to question by the company or succeeding stockholders. But the exceptants are creditors, which is quite another matter, and are not to be disposed of by the suggestion that they became such after the reorganization of the company, and so are affected by its condition as they found it; of which more presently. Neither is it of any moment that the parties who .hold the bonds advanced their money on the strength of getting them. They understood, as we have seen, how this was to be brought about; $75,-•000 of the money put in Dr. Young’s hands being to buy the stock of Mr. Lewis and the others, which they got; $5,000 going to Stauffer and Callahan on the agreement made with them; and $10,000 being required to pay off the indebtedness of the Summit Lake Ice Company. All this was in the direct interest of Dr. Young and themselves, and not of the company, and affords them nothing to rely upon.
It is difficult to see upon this showing how the bonds in controversy, as against the exceptants, can be regarded as valid obligations of the company. By the act of assembly cited above, by which it was incorporated, the company was given power to borrow money not exceeding in amount one-half of the capital stock at the time the loan was made, and to secure the same by a bond and mortgage on its real and personal property, as well as its corporate rights and franchises. This was a restricted privilege, and, unless enlarged, by subsequent legislation, its terms must be observed; the power being only exercisable in accordance with the conditions upon which it was given. No doubt there was an attempt to comply in the present instance by an increase of the capital to $225,000 which thus apparently justified the $90,000 bond issue which was voted on the strength of it. But the charter authority given to bond the property and franchises of the company in this way is for money borrowed, and nothing else, and by no liberality of construction can the transaction with Dr. Young be made to assume that character. Nor was there indeed any pretense of doing so; the bonds and stock being voted to him in return for the agreements which he was to turn over. That this was in any respect a legitimate exercise of the power given by the charter will hardly be argued. It
But this, after all, is not material; the case turning on that which is much more serious. It is provided by article 16, § 7, of the state Constitution that:
“No corporation shall issue stock or bonds, except for money, labor done, or money or property actually received; and all fictitious increase of stock or indebtedness shall he void.”
The same prohibition appears in the general corporation act of 1874-(Act April 29, 1874, § 17; P. F. 81), where the right to borrow money upon bond and mortgage is also restricted (section 13) to one-half the amount of the capital stock paid in, a provision which is retained in the amendment of May 21, 1889 (P. F. 257). By act of February 9, 1901 (13. F. 3), however, the capital stock or indebtedness of any corporation, one or both, may be increased with the consent of a majority in value of the stockholders to such an amount in the aggregate as shall be deemed necessary'to carry on or enlarge its business and corporate purposes. This is said to have broken down the dividing wall between capital stock and corporate indebtedness previously existing. Commonwealth v. Railroad, 25 Pa. Co. Ct. Rep. 274; Id., 207 Pa. 154, 56 Atl. 409. And, as it is made in terms to apply to a corporation created by special as well as by general law, the present company would seem to be within its purview, and the bonds and stock in controversy to be valid without regard to whether the conditions prescribed by the charter were complied with, if otherwise authorized.
But the provisions of the Constitution which have been quoted, and the statute passed to enforce them, are not so easily disposed of. Their evident purpose was to prevent the creation of corporate securities which were not representative of actual value, an altogether too prevalent if not growing evil. The prohibition is comprehensive and emphatic, and, having been regarded as of sufficient importance to be made a part of the fundamental law, such a construction should be given to it as will make it effective, and no evasion is to be countenanced. But, if the transaction which is here in question will pass muster, the law might as well be abrogated. The fact is fhat, disguise it as we may, in no just sense were the bonds and stock which were voted to Dr. Young issued for money or property, as is so required. Not that the agreements turned over by him and the property and business thereby secured were devoid of all value. Rarely, indeed, is this the case. But the present actual value of that which they represented was comparatively so slight- — there being but $27,500 of visible property for $90,000 of bonds, to say nothing of the $200,000 of stock — and the prospective value, upon which alone the transaction could be justified, was so speculative, not to say fanciful, that the obligations given in return must be regarded as colorable, and so fictitious, within the meaning of the Constitution, and therefore void. The case differs only in degree from Commonwealth v. Reading Traction Co., 204 Pa. 151, 53 Atl. 755, where the court did not hesitate to so characterize the corporate securities there involved, on the authority of which the decision here may well be made to rest. See, also,
The bonds of the company being void by the Constitution, the right ot the excepting creditors to question them cannot be doubted. Not. of course, in the hands of innocent purchasers for value. Commonwealth v. Reading Traction Co., 204 Pa. 151, 53 Atl. 755. But that is not the situation here; both bonds and stock, so far as is shown, being held by the parties who participated in their issue. Nor, as already intimated, can it be said that the exceptants came in after the bonded indebtedness of the company had been contracted, and so are not in a position to question it, being affected by conditions as so established, if that is material. The judgment of the Bear Creek Ice Company, if not that of the Albert Rewis Rumber Company, is for ice which was delivered in accordance with the agreement made by Dr. Young and adopted by the company to take a certain yearly, quantity; the agreement with the company being executed March 15, 1901, the day the bond issue was voted by the directors, but before it had been finally authorized by the stockholders.' The obligation, therefore, which is the basis of the indebtedness to the excepting creditors, anticipates the bonds, and is not to be postponed to them upon any supposed idea of their priority. But, aside from this, having regard to the conditions which obtain here, the rights of creditors are-superior whether existing or subsequent. The bonds are mere promises to pay, and in the hands of the present holders are no more at best than voluntary obligations which cannot be enforced as against the claims of those to whom the company is actually indebted. The gift of a note or bond by the maker is not executed except by payment. Kern’s Estate, 171 Pa. 55, 33"Atl. 129. And, as to all over and above the value contributed for them, the bonds of the company were a gift here. To the extent of such value, this may not be the case; and, having regard to this, and treating them not as bonds, but as representing advances made to the company by the holders — - if that can be said of them — it may be that, upon general distribution, they would have the right to come in pro rata with other creditors. But, as bonds secured by a mortgage lien upon the property of the company, they are made void by the Constitution, and, being sought to be used in that capacity to satisfy the bid of the purchaser at the trustee’s sale, they cannot be recognized; and, unless otherwise com
The referee is reversed, the exceptions to the return of sale are sustained, and the sale set aside and the property directed to be resold unless the purchaser shall pay to the trustee within 10 days the sum of $88,350 remaining unpaid upon his bid. Act April 20, 1.816, § 2 (P. R 411); Bedell’s Appeal, 87 Pa. 510; Fry v. Specht (Pa.) 1 Atl. 441.