38 Mo. App. 229 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1889
delivered the opinion of the court.
The circuit court sustained a general demurrer to the plaintiff ’ s bill, and, upon its refusal to plead further, the court dismissed the cause and-entered a Anal judgment on the demurrer for the defendants. Prom this judgment, the plaintiff has prosecuted this appeal.
On the twenty-ninth day of January, 1889, the plaintiff instituted this action against Bertha Kampe, Albert Kampe, J. Toensfeldt, Horace Bateson, and the Standard Hosiery Mill Company. The plaintiff’s cause
The proper solution of the question presented by this record involves the determination by us of two questions: First. Can the directors of an insolvent corporation, after it has been ascertained by them that the corporation is so hopelessly embarrassed as to prevent a further continuation of business, prefer one of their number as a creditor of the concern, to the exclusion of ..other creditors ; and, if so, can this be done by the vote of the director for whose benefit the corporate action is taken ? Second. Can an ordinary creditor of an insolvent corporation maintain a suit in equity to restrain the unlawful and wrongful diversion of the corporate assets without having first reduced his demand to judgment %
I. It is the conceded law in this state, as in many other jurisdictions, that a private corporation, like an individual, may pay one creditor in preference to another, and.that its stockholders and directors may loan it money and that their debts will be recognized and enforced by the court; and it has also been held that the stockholders or directors of an embarrassed corporation may come to its rescue, and that for money loaned under such circumstances, the assets of the
The averments in the plaintiff’s petition present another objection to the mortgages, which we think is sufficient to invalidate them. The resolution by which the mortgages were authorized was passed by the votes of Bertha Kampe and J. Toensfeldt. The resolution authorized the execution of two mortgages, and it could only be adopted by the vote of one or the other of the two interested parties. Ward v. Davidson, 89 Mo. 454.
II. The general rule is, that, before a creditor can maintain a bill in equity to set aside a fraudulent sale of his debtor’s property, he must first go into a court of law and reduce his demand to a judgment. The reason of the rule is, that in such cases a court of equity can only interfere with the general and inherent right of the debtor to dispose of his property at the instigation of bona fide creditors; and that it cannot be asserted with certainty that any one is an actual and subsisting creditor, until a judgment has been obtained on his claim. The defendants invoke this rule in support of the action of the trial court. If this is to be regarded as an ordinary proceeding in equity to set aside a fraudulent sale or disposition of the property of the defendant corporation, then the action of the court must be sustained, ' for the reason that the hosiery milling company is a resident corporation, and no reason is shown why the plaintiff could not obtain a judgment on its notes. The mere fact that the suit would be useless would not change the rule. If the corporation was entirely without assets, as the plaintiff alleges, it would
The primary object of the bill is the enforcement of a trust, and the protection of trust property, and such matters have always been held to be the subjects of exclusive equity jurisdiction. Although the plaintiff, in its petition, seeks to have the mortgaged property applied to the payment of its debt, to the exclusion of all other creditors, yet the averments in the petition make the property a trust fund, and it would necessarily result from this, that plaintiff’s action must be regarded for the benefit of all creditors who may come in before judgment and establish their claims. In this respect, this case is distinguishable from an ordinary action to set aside a fraudulent conveyance of property, where the primary, and only, object is the satisfaction of the plaintiff’s demand, to the exclusion of other creditors; in such a case, the court is not dealing with trust property, and it will not inquire into the status of the property sought to be reached, or, in any way, interfere with its possession, or" absolute enjoyment, except at the suit of a judgment creditor. But we can see no reason for the enforcement of this rule in cases like the one under consideration, where the principal purpose presents, within itself, the subject of equitable cognizance. This doctrine is recognized by the supreme court
Mr. Morawetz, in his admirable treatise on the law governing private corporations, section 797, says: “Creditors of a corporation are entitled to the usual equitable remedies for the protection of their rights. They are therefore entitled to an injunction to restrain any threatened waste or diversion of the corporate assets, which would result in the destruction of their security, and thereby cause them irreparable loss. If "the managing agents, who are in charge of the company’s assets, are the persons threatening the wrong, a receiver may be appointed to take the company’s property out of their hands.” The author intended this doctrine to apply only to insolvent corporations, as shown by section 799, which is as follows: “A creditor cannot interfere with the agents of a corporation; and he is not interested in the disposition made of the surplus funds of the company, or in the management of its affairs, so long as the company is not insolvent, or in danger of being rendered insolvent, by waste of its assets. * * * A creditor, who has not established his claim by a judgment against the company, cannot enjoin any dealing with the company’s assets, or obtain the appointment of a receiver, unless it be clear, not only that the threatened dealing would impair his equitable rights, but also that he would suffer irreparable injury if left to pursue his ordinary remedy.” In the case of Conro et al. v. Gray et al., 4 How. Pr. 166, the defendant, Gray, was the president of the Port Henry Iron Company. He assigned the property of the corporation to his co-defendants, in payment of his individual debts. The plaintiffs, as creditors of the corporation, brought the action to vacate the assignment, without first reducing their demand to judgment. The court, in passing on the case, said: “Horace Gray, as president of the Port Henry Iron Company, was a trustee of the creditors of
It is quite clear, from these authorities, that an ordinary contract creditor' of an insolvent corporation can maintain a suit in equity to compel the proper distribution of the corporate assets; and if it should be made to appear that there was danger of the property being wasted, or improperly disposed of, then the plaintiff would be entitled to a restraining order, by giving the necessary bond; and, if necessary, to have a receiver appointed, to take possession and dispose of the property under the orders of the court.
Our conclusion is that the plaintiff’s petition stated a cause of action against the defendants, and their demurrer was, therefore, improperly sustained. The judgment of the circuit court will be reversed, and the cause remanded.