272 F. 643 | 1st Cir. | 1921
Keith v. Kilmer (No. 1406) 261 Fed. 733, 9 A. L. R. 1287, was an appeal by the trustee in bankruptcy of the National Piano Company, a Maine corporation, from an order of the District Court reversing the referee, and allowing the claim of Kilmer, trustee for his wife Alice, for $31,800. Kilmer’s claim was-based on the breach of an alleged written contract, dated February 3, 1913, between him and the corporation, for the purchase at par of 318 shares of the bankrupt’s preferred stock, in installments of 3 shares a month, beginning on July 1, 1916. The corporation was adjudicated a bankrupt in June, 1916. In the opinion it was said:
“For present purposes we assume, without deciding, that the court below was correct in finding the contract was sufficiently authorized or ratified, or both, by the directors and stockholders, although in passing it may be noted that a minority of the stockholders appear to have had no knowledge of the*645 transaction, and therefore, i£ unanimous assent was requisite (Von Armin v Amor. Tube Works, 188 Mass. 515, 518, 74 N. E. 680), the corporation might not he bound; that question we pass. In like fashion, we assume that the court below was right in finding that at the time of the transaction the corporation was solvent, and the contract not tainted by fraud in fact — an intent to cheat creditors, existing or prospective.
‘T.ut it is entirely clear that the transaction out of which the alleged contract grew was entered into, not for the benefit of the corporation itself", but for the benefit of certain stockholders. In brief, junior and minority stockholders desired to buy out the senior and majority stockholders; and, having jio money with which to buy, the parties agreed, not for the benefit ot the corporal ion, but for the benefit of the trading stockholders, to have the corporation, in form at any rate, agree to boy and pay for a large part of the stock intended thus to pass ultimately from the seniors to the juniors, thus giving them control of the corporation and its offices, with Hie emoluments thereof. The corporation was, so to speak, made an accommodation purchaser for the benefit of certain vending and purchasing stockholders. Over !>o2,00t> was thus paid by the bankrupt to, or for the benefit of, its trading stockholders, before bankruptcy — Hie natural result of such unbusiness-like and unlawful methods — overtook the concern. Kilmer now seeks to prove a similar claim for $31,800 more. The question presented, then, is whether, by executory contract between a Maine corporation and or.e of Us stockholders, such stockholder may be transmuted from a stockholder into a creditor, and as such be permitted to share in the assets, pari passu with merchandise and other ordinary creditors, proving claims in bankruptcy. No authority is cited which on analysis sustains this proposition.”
Careful re-examina item of the record, leaves us satisfied with the adequacy and accuracy of this brief and succinct statement of a long and complicated case.
After reviewing the authorities, the conclusion was that the decree of the District Court be reversed and the case remanded, with directions to enter an order disallowing the claim, with costs to the appellant. So far as then appeared in the record before' this court, the only contention of the claimant was of a right to share equally with ordinary creditors in an ordinary bankrupt estate, inadequate to pay ordinary creditors in full. There was nothing to indicate the extraordinary situation of the corporation’s becoming solvent by process of administration in bankruptcy. The question before us concerned Kil-mer’s right to prove a claim against a bankrupt estate, not his right to object to other claims against that estate, or to compel the trustee in' bankruptcy to institute proceedings for the recovery of additional assets for the benefit of the corporation or for any of ’its stockholders, sharing therein pro rata or pursuant to any contract binding inter sese. The decision, therefore, covered everything of apparent, practical or legal significance.
A petition for rehearing was denied by this court. 261 Fed. 741, 9 A. L. R. 1287. A petition for certiorari was denied by the Supreme Court. Kilmer v. Keith, 252 U. S. 578, 40 Sup. Ct. 344, 64 L. Ed. 725. The claimant then moved to amend the mandate, suggesting (hat it was broader than the opinions, and that the proper form was to remand for further proceedings not inconsistent with the opinions; also- that he had certain possible rights, arising by estoppel or otherwise, against the corporation or some of its stockholders, that ought not to be barred or prejudiced by a broad decree capable of being argued as making
Thereupon in the District Court an order was made allowing the claim “reserving to merchandise and ordinary creditors their rights to secure payment in full of their claims in distribution in priority to Kilmer’s claim.” From, this order both parties appealed, setting up numerous assignments of error, with most of which we find it unnecessary to deal. 1
The trustee in bankruptcy contends:
“That the court erred in ruling that the alleged Kilmér contract was valid and binding between the parties to it and their privies (including among the latter assenting stockholders, and perhaps all stockholders of the corporation) .”
In the memorandum of decision of the District Court it is said as to the opinion of this court:
“The contract was not held to be illegal and void ab initio. It was apparently regarded as valid and binding between the parties to it and their privies (including among the latter assenting stockholders and perhaps all stockholders of the corporation), and as invalid against creditors.”
This was error but (probably) harmless error. This court, assumed, “without deciding,” all questions as to authorization, ratification, lack .of fraud in fact, etc.; i. e., all questions except the one decided were expressly left undecided. It seemed unnecessary, and on such a confused and confusing record unwise, to indulge in any broad and general discussion of the doctrine of ultra vires, and the results of its application to contracts executory, executed, or partly executory and partly executed. See Central Trans. Co. v. Pullman Co., 139 U. S. 24, 11 Sup. Ct. 478, 35 L. Ed. 55, where most of the prior Supreme Court decisions are reviewed by Mr. Justice Gray. As in that decision ultra vires contracts are held void, not voidable, this court could not properly on the record before us hold Kilmer's contract valid. But it was not necessary, in order to dispose of the litigation, to hold that out of the transaction, sought to be covered in part by this contract,
Moreover, if this court had' found it necessary to decide many of the questions argued before us by Kilmer’s counsel, It would probably have been found necessary to send the case back for a new trial before the District Court or the referee. Many facts material to ouestions argued cannot, we think, on the present record be determined. We did not, and do not, regard the record as an adequate basis for the determination of all possible questions as to the right of Kilmer against other stockholders involved in the complicated transactions of which this alleged contract was a comparatively small part. Much evidénce offered before the referee was excluded, subject to exceptions which have never been passed upon by the District Court. Whether, in bankruptcy, any contention sought to be supported by such excluded evidence can be sustained we cannot on the record now before us determine. Apparently the claimant contends that, if given a standing to contest certain alleged invalid claims of Creditors, and to insist that the trustee in bankruptcy should proceed to collect from Jewett, and perhaps others, assets belonging to the corporation, a surplus above all ordinary claims would accrue in which the claimant as stockholder or in other capacity might have rights. None of these questions are now before us. We held and bold the claim of Kilmer to be invalid against the bankrupt (insolvent) estate. So far as now appears, there is no estate against which his claim has rights. Eut we anticipate no question not now before us.
it may be appropriate to add that we assume in the claimant’s favor that, even if only a stockholder of the bankrupt corporation, he might be heard before the court or the referee on his contention that proper administration of the claims by and against the corporation would or might result in a surplus of assets belonging either to the corporation, or to its stockholders as their rights inter sese might he determined. It cannot be that control of the corporation, by stockholders and officials who wreck it by wrongful abstraction of its assets and the creation of fraudulent claims against' it, can he carried to successful fruition, to the profit of the wrongdoers, through the machinery of a voluntary bankruptcy. But we repeat that on the record before us we can decide only the question we have decided, to wit, that Kilmer has
We see no reason for revising the decree below as to costs in the former case.
As we regard both of the present appeals as needless, no costs in this court should be awarded.
The decree of the District Court is vacated, and the case is remanded to that court for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion; neither party recovers costs.