10 Colo. App. 421 | Colo. Ct. App. | 1897
delivered the- opinion of the court.
In 1895 the Paul Wilson Dry Goods Company was a corporation doing a mercantile business in the city of Pueblo. On the 27th day of February, of that year, this corporation executed a chattel mortgage of all its stock in trade and fixtures to the American National Bank of Pueblo, and Sweetzer, Pembroke & Co., a copartnership, and assigned to the same parties all its book accounts. The mortgage and assignment were made to secure an indebtedness to those parties, aggregating 125,563.31, exclusive of interest. The mortgage, by its terms, authorized the mortgagees to take immediate possession of the stock of goods and fixtures, and sell the same at public or private sale for the purpose of satisfying the indebtedness, rendering and paying the overplus, if any, to the dry goods company. The mortgagees thereupon took possession of the mortgaged property, and caused it to be in
The property described in the mortgage was sold for $21,000. The nominal value of the book accounts seems to have been something in excess of $14,000. Concerning their real value, what of them were collectible, and what not, and what became of them, the record affords no information. It
. The sale of the property took place sometime after the complaint was filed, and an attack is made upon it in the replication. In this respect the replication is a departure, and states a cause of action which, if sustained by proof, would entitle the plaintiffs to relief of a nature altogether different from any that could be adjudged to them in the action as it was brought. If by unfair or improper methods the property was sacrificed, the plaintiffs, as creditors, would have just ground of complaint, and in a proper proceeding for the purpose, the defendants might be compelled to account for its actual value. But the object of this suit is the cancellation of the mortgage and assignment, and the question of their validity cannot be affected by anything which took place after their execution. However, so far as this record throws any light on the subject, the sale seems to have been conducted in accordance with the requirements of the mortgage; nothing unfair in its management was made to appear; and there was no evidence from which we would be authorized to infer that the method pursued was not the one calculated to bring the best price at the least expense.
How a transfer, as security, of property of a value much greater than the amount of the debt might affect the transaction as against other creditors, we do not find it necessary now to inquire, because we have before us no data to enable us to judge whether in this case the value of the property transferred was greater than the amount of the debt. The mortgaged goods brought $21,000, some thousands of dollars less than the principal; and whether the book accounts paid, or would have, paid, the residue, or left a surplus after paying the residue, we have no means of forming an opinion.
But there is a wide interval between the doctrine that the corporate debts must be paid before distribution to the stockholders, and the doctrine that the insolvent corporation holds its property in trust for the equal benefit of all its creditors ; and there is no logical relation between the one and the other. The right of an insolvent individual to turn over his property to such of his creditors as he may desire to prefer, is not questioned; and the principal reason assigned why an insolvent corporation may not do the same, is that the individual
But aside from all this, the weight of authority is that, in the absence of legislative prohibition, a corporation, even though it be insolvent, has the same power to make a distinction between creditors, and give preferences to some over others, that a natural person has. Dana v. Bank of the U. S., 5 W. & S. 223; Wilkinson v. Bauerle, 41 N. J. Eq. 635; Catlin v. Bank, 6 Conn. 233; Hospes v. Manfg. Co., 48 Minn. 174; Morawetz on Corporations, § 802; Beach on Private Corporations, § 358.
That an insolvent corporation must devote its property to the payment of its debts, and that it is not incorrect to call its assets a trust fund to be so applied, we readily concede; but the question raised here is not touched by the concession. If the assets are all applied in payment of some particular debts, to the exclusion of others, they are devoted to the purpose for which the corporation holds them. They are used, as far as they will'go, in payment of its debts ; but if any valid or substantial reason has been advanced for holding that a corporation, any more than a natural person, is bound to make a proportionate distribution of the fund among
■We think that the law governing cases like this has heen practically settled in this state. In Breene v. Bank, 11 Colo. 97, it was held that the assets of an insolvent corporation do not constitute a trust fund for ratable distribution among all its creditors. It is true that the preference in that case was obtained by the levy of an attachment; and plaintiff’s counsel seeks to draw a distinction between a preference secured by legal proceedings, and one voluntarily given by the debtor, conceding that in the former case the preference would be legal and valid. We are not quite able to understand the logic of the distinction. If the assets are a trust fund, to ratable shares in which all the creditors are entitled, then it is not allowable to one creditor, no matter what means he may employ for the purpose, to secure more than his share, and thus encroach upon the rights of the others; but if the assets are not a trust fund for the benefit of all creditors alike, then, in the absence of fraud, a preference which one may acquire will be upheld whether it is accorded to him voluntarily, or he secures it by legal process. No such distinction is made in tire decisions upon which counsel relies. In Shoe Co. v. Thompson, supra, a creditor sought to secure a preference by an attachment of the insolvent’s property. The court said: “ After the trust attaches, neither the corporation nor the trustees can, by any act of theirs, affect the rights of the creditors; and we think that it necessarily follows that no creditor can, by any act of diligence on Ms part, accomplish that which neither the corporation nor the trustees could do by agreement with Mm.” There are expressions to the same effect in State v. Brochman, supra ; and we are unable to find that any court, whose views on the main question are in harmony with those of counsel, has hesitated, when necessary, to follow this trust fund theory to the extreme logical results. There being, neither on principle nor authority, any difference between the effect of a preference acquired in one way, and the effect of a preference acquired in another, provided the
A corporation organized for purposes of trade has the inherent power, in carrying on its business, to use its credit and contract indebtedness. Although the objects for which it is formed must be expressed in the instrument of incorporation, and although it may not engage in enterprises foreign to the purposes for which it was created, or otherwise transcend its legal powers, yet when in the course of its business it contracts an indebtedness, it assumes an obligation, its duties concerning which are governed, not by the provisions of its charter, but-by laws which are applicable alike to corporations and natural persons. In the matter of the conduct of its business, its charter limits and defines its powers, and it must act within those powers; but the liability of both corporations and individuals, on account of indebtedness incurred by them, is regulated by general law. In inquiring how, in a given case, a corporation, solvent or insolvent, may satisfy the demands of its creditors, an investigation of its charter will afford no assistance. We must fall back upon laws to which all persons, natural and artificial, are subject. In respect to an indebtedness, a corporation may not do what an individual may not do; and, on the other hand, whatever an individual may do, a corporation may do. There is no restriction upon the liberty of a natural person, so long as he retains dominion over his property, to pay one creditor in preference to another ; and as the liability of a corporation for its debts is measured by no rule different from that applicable to liabilities of natural persons, a preference in good faith by the corporation cannot be impeached.
The judgment will be affirmed.
Affirmed.