272 F. 833 | 6th Cir. | 1921
(after stating the facts as above).
In a state where it is required that capital stock shall be paid either in cash or in property at actual cash value, it might well be held that the promoters-of the new corporation could not deny that the property was worth $100,000 upon a cash basis, and that there was therefore ample surplus out of which Oehring might have been provided for in full; but that restricted theory of payment does not prevail in Michigan. Full-paid stock may be issued in exchange for property at any figure which the directors in good faith fix, and the subsequent judgment of the court or jury as to the real value of the property cannot be substituted for the good faith exercise of the directors’ discretion. Young v. Erie Iron Co., 65 Mich. 111, 122, 31 N. W. 814; Coit v. Gold Co., 119 U. S. 343, 345, 7 Sup. Ct. 231, 30 L. Ed. 420.
The defendants’ testimony tends to show that the reputation of the typewriter business, as having been consistently unsuccessful, was so bad that the promoters had the utmost difficulty in raising the $46,000, and would have been unable to make the purchase if the price had been substantially larger. As to every asset, except the factory buildings, it is evident that there is a considerable gulf between their cash value upon liquidation after years of unsuccessful business, under a discredited management, and without capital or credit, and their reasonable prospective value to continue the business, under new management, with debts paid, and with sufficient working capital or credit. Even the factory buildings would be subject to similar considerations, particularly if located, as these were said to be, at a point which was not
A similar principle might even be applied, under conceivable facts, to make the class of purchasers of the property open and let in Oehring for a proportionate interest; but here, again, there is a lack of pleadings and of parties, to say nothing about the difficulty of upsetting the contract of the purchasers, who insist that they would not have bought at any substantially greater price. It does not follow that there is no remedy for Oehring, and substantially within the lines of his bill of complaint. The old company had actual notice of Oehring’s claim. All its stockholders would be, for many purposes, chargeable with notice. Practically all the stocldiolders in the new company were also stockholders in the old one, and the three or four active promoters of the new company had actual notice. It must follow that the new company, through the medium of its body of stockholders and its promoters, was chargeable with this notice. Under these conditions, all the participants in the plan to devote the^ entire assets to the payment of debts other than Oehring’s must be held to a scrupulous regard of his rights, whatever they were; and when this duty is coupled with the facts that there was a general assumption that all debts were being provided for, that no actual notice of sale was given to him, that he had ho constructive notice through the happening of a public sale or receivership, or any procedure that would attract general attention, and that the new company continued the same business under the
5. After it had been determined to sell the assets at $46,000 and pay the book debts, if Oehring had appeared on the ground, what would have been his standing? What the parties would have done by way of compromise, adjustment, or yielding can only be surmised. In looking backward, to restore the situation which should now be recognized as a basis for relief, we can only'assume that each party would have availed itself of its full legal rights. Oehring had no judgment, or any certainty that he would ever get any; the procedure of the banks to get their pay in full would not have been enjoined until the future indefinite time when Oehring’s suit might be finished; the transaction by which all the assets were to be sold and the money used to pay the book debts was_not in form preferential, because Oehring was not recognized, but in substance it was, and, whatever the parties might have done under other conditions, this is what they did do; and, as we have said, it was their legal right, in Michigan, to devote all the assets first to this purpose, leaving only the surplus, if there was one, for Oehring. The utmost relief which could have been given him at the time would have been the making of a decree or order by which he should have a chance to participate in fixing the realizable value of the assets — as at a public sale — and by which Sie ^surplus, if any, over the $46,000 necessary to pay the debts which could be given priority over him, should be preserved for the satisfaction of any judgment which he might be able to obtain. This was the limit of his right which could have been preserved against the other adverse rights if they had been asserted to their respective limits; and it is this right, and only this, to which Oehring should be restored, as against the interests of the $46,000 purchasers.
6. This record does not inform us how far the body of property which might have been available to create this surplus has been prer served, nor what changes there have been in it. For the present, we assume that, as between Oehring and the $46,000 purchasers, the general identity of the body of the property has been preserved in specie or by substitutions, except for additions which have been made as the result of new capital. In view of the limited character of Oehring’s right, and the absence of any lien in his favor (since we recognize that he lost, not a lien, but a contingent right to get a lien), his claim against this body of property should be considered as subject to, first, the.debts of the new company; second, additional capital which has been put into the company since its organization, which debts and additional capital may be assumed to stand for additions and improvements which ought not to be subject to Oehring’s claim; and, third, the $46,000. Any general gain or loss in’value of the assets since 1915 is an incident to which the parties respectively must submit.
We cannot undertake to fix the details of the provisions which will accomplish the general result we have indicated. They must be left
We do not regard the Michigan Bulk Sales Taw as applicable.
The decree below is reversed, and the record remanded for the entry of a new decree in accordance with this opinion.