230 P. 228 | Okla. | 1924
The principal question here to be decided is whether the president and general manager of an oil and gas company, a corporation, may, by the execution of his company's notes and mortgaging its property to secure their payment, apply his company's property to the payment of his individual debts. No question of an innocent purchaser for value is involved. The mortgagees are parties to the action.
This suit was commenced in the district court of Jefferson county by J.W. McKenney, receiver of the Big Diamond Oil Refining Company, a corporation, against John F. Campbell and the First National Bank of San Saba County, Tex., for the cancellation of a mortgage given to secure the payment of two notes, one to John F. Campbell, in the sum of $6,623.64, and one to the First National Bank of San Saba county, in the sum of $3,120, and to have the notes decreed to be null and void insofar as they affect the Big Diamond Oil Refining Company. The defendants answered by general denial and by cross-petition in which they prayed judgment for the amount of the notes and for a foreclosure of the mortgage. The plaintiff replied by general denial. Judgment was for the defendants for principal of the notes, interest and attorney's fee, and a foreclosure of the mortgage. Plaintiff has appealed.
Prior to the organization of the Big Diamond Oil Refining Company, its president, P.M. Faver, and its directors had engaged in an unsuccessful oil venture in Texas as a result of which they had become indebted to the First National Bank of San Saba and to J.W. Campbell, its president. Soon after the organization of the Big Diamond Oil Refining Company in 1917, the bank and Campbell, its president became insistent upon the settlement of these obligations. In October, 1919, the notes and mortgage in question were executed in settlement of that indebtedness, or as additional security for its payment. The only cash consideration for the notes and mortgage was $1,400.
The officers and directors of corporations are in a sense trustees for the stockholders, *183
and are required to act in good faith and for their benefit. In the case of McKee v. Interstate Oil Gas Co.,
"A director of a corporation occupies a fiduciary relation where his dealings with the subject-matter of his trust or agency and with the corporation are viewed with jealousy by the courts, and they may be set aside on slight ground."
And in the case of Bently et al. v. Zelma Oil Company,
"Directors and officers of a corporation, having the management of its corporate affairs, occupy the position of trustees of the welfare of the company, and guardians of the interests of the stockholders, and will not be permitted by a court of equity to violate such trust, by selling or purchasing the corporate property to their own personal advantage and to the detriment of their cestuis que trust."
The notes and mortgage were void in so far as it was sought to apply the company's property to the payment of the individual debts of its president and directors. The only authority cited by the defendants in error in support of the judgment is Skirvin Operating Co. v. Southwestern Electric Co.,
The judgment should be reversed, with directions to vacate the judgment and to proceed in accordance with the views expressed in this opinion.
By the Court: It is so ordered.