170 A. 738 | Md. | 1934
In a distribution by receivers of the Thomas A. Strohm Company, Inc., a dividend was allowed by the audit to the appellee on her claim for money advanced to the corporation in amounts aggregating $4,025. Exceptions by other creditors to that allowance were overruled, and the exceptants have appealed.
The appellee, Mrs. E. Florence Strohm, owns sixty-five shares of the company's stock, while ten shares are held by Louis C. Praeger, its president, and four shares by Thomas A. Strohm, Jr., its secretary and treasurer. There are no other stockholders of the company. The money advanced to it by Mrs. Strohm was used for the purposes of the printing business in which it was engaged. The advancements covered a period of five years preceding the receivership. They were simply entered on the cash book of the corporation, but according to the evidence they were made and accepted as loans. In opposition to their recognition as debts upon a basis of equality with the claims of other creditors, it is urged that the money advanced by the appellee was for the benefit of a corporation of which she was practically the owner. Support for the exceptions is also said to be found in the fact that no reference to any indebtedness to the appellee was made, in reports to two banking institutions, for credit purposes, of the corporation's assets and liabilities. But those *255 reports were made without the appellee's knowledge, and they induced none of the credits extended by the objecting claimants. The only bank debt which now appears to be owing by the company is one for which the appellee is obligated as surety. It has not been presented as a claim in the receivership proceeding.
The printing business conducted by the corporation had been in operation for many years, and the appellee had been actively connected with it prior to the last ten years of its existence. During that period she had been prevented by illness from performing any duties at its place of business, but was consulted about twice a week in regard to its affairs. In compensation for her services, and as "interest" on her stock, no dividends being declared, the appellee received from the company weekly payments of $25, to which amount they had been reduced from $40 and $35 paid at earlier periods. Those payments are said to indicate that the appellee was thus being reimbursed for her advancements. But that theory is not sustainable in view of the evidence, including proof of the fact that the weekly payments were being made long before the appellee made the first of the loans on which her claim is based.
While the amount realized from the assets of the corporation is insufficient for the payment of its creditors in full, the appointment of receivers was not in consequence of any allegation or proof of insolvency. The receivership was procured for the purpose of preserving equality for all creditors as against the effort of one to obtain priority by legal action. The last financial statement of the corporation, made shortly before the receivership, showed assets sufficient to satisfy fully all of its creditors.
A valid loan can be made to a corporation by one who owns the greater part or even all of its capital stock. In the absence of any element of fraud or imposition or of a subordinating equity, such a loan is recoverable to the same extent as if made to the corporation by any other lender. Dollar Cleansers Dyers, Inc.,v. McGregor,
The facts of the cases upon which the appellants specially rely were essentially different from those presented by this record. In Cantor v. Balto. Overall Mfg. Co.,
In this case the lending stockholder participated in no act or representation by which the objecting creditors were prejudiced, or by which, for any other reason, she could be estopped to assert that the corporation is her debtor with respect to the loans in controversy.
Order affirmed, with costs.