148 Ind. 333 | Ind. | 1897
In the year 1892, the Wells Manufacturing Company, a corporation of Indiana, was indebted to numerous mercantile creditors in the sum of $17,000.00, and to the Findlay Window Glass Company in the sum of $9,000.00, and, to secure said indebtedness, executed, on the 8th day of March, 1892. a mortgage on its plant and certain of its other personal property to said Findlay Company, and on the 13th day of June, 1892, executed a mortgage to Smith, as trustee for said mercantile creditors, upon said plant. The proceedings herein were upon the consolidation of two suits by said mortgagees, respectively, to foreclose said mortgages, and the questions here presented arise upon a special finding of facts, with conclusions of law thereon.
. A question has been discussed as to the ruling of the lower court in overruling a demurrer to the second answer of the Findlay Company to the complaint of said
The facts found specially were, that the Wells Company, on the 8th day of March, 1892, was indebted to the Findlay Company upon notes, the amount of which, at the date of the judgment, was $12,349.50; that at the same time said company was indebted to Black & Gordon in the sum of $2,668.18, to certain mercantile creditors, represented by Smith, trustee, in the sum of $17,000.00, the balance whereof, at the time of the judgment, was $11,581.07, and to others; its aggregate indebtedness being $39,000.00, the larger portion of which was overdue and wholly unsecured, except the sum of $3,400.00, secured by a pledge of manufactured goods. At that time the assets of the Wells Company consisted of personal property, stock in trade, notes and accounts of the value of $20,300.00, and its real estate and plant, of the value to it of $15,000.00, but, for the purposes of sale, of an uncertain value, and said company was insolvent and had then abandoned any hope, prospect or expectation of continuing business as a going concern. At and after that time James A. Wells and wife, and Ulysses G. Baker and wife, severally owned and held a large
Upon the questions as to the authority of Wells to release said-mortgage to the Findlay Company, and of the ratification by said company of his action in releasing the same, it was found, in addition to the abstract finding, that he had no such authority, that
In July, 1893, Wells surrendered the notes, to secure which, said released mortgage had been executed to the Wells Company, and took from it, in lieu thereof, several notes in amounts proportioned to the stock holdings of the stockholders of the Findlay Company, ’his object being to distribute said notes to the Find-lay company stockholders in such proportions as they so held stock therein. Immediately thereafter said
In November, 1893, Tappan, being president of said Findlay Company, and acting as such trustee, then knowing all of the facts as to the release of said mortgage by Wells, and the execution of said other mortgage to Smith, trustee, and the agreement with reference thereto, took from said Wells Company a single promissory note for $11,190.66,payable to said Findlay Company, in lieu of said notes so last taken by Wells for distribution to the said stockholders, he having first procured them from said stockholders. At the same time said Tappan took from said Wells Company a mortgage of the property so theretofore mortgaged • to said Smith, trustee, to secure said note of $11,190.66. Two days later Tappan had suit brought to enforce foreclosure for said sum and to appoint a receiver of said property. On the same day, in said suit, one Snow was appointed receiver for the Wells Company and took possession of its property. On December 28, 1893, the board of directors of the Findlay Company, by resolution, repudiated, as unauthorized, and as not the act of said company, and as not having been ratified or approved by it, the release of said mortgage by said Wells, and the action of Tappan, of November 6, 1893, in accepting said note of $11,190.66 and the mortgage securing the same, and directed the surrender of said note to the Wells Company and a demand for the notes described in the mortgage of March 8, 1892, upon which latter notes and the mortgage first mentioned, it was further ordered that suit should be instituted. After demand, etc., and on January 11, 1894, the suit herein consolidated was brought by the Findlay Company upon the notes so surrendered and the mortgage so released, the suit
The court rendered conclusions of law that both of the mortgages in suit were void.
The appellees are not represented in this court, and there is no question made in their behalf, but the questions presented and discussed relate to the validity and priority of the mortgages of the appellants respectively.
As to the power of Wells, president, to release the mortgage, of March 8, 1892, to the Findlay Company, it will be observed that it is found generally that he had no such authority, while it is found also that, at a time when suit was pending to foreclose the mortgage and within a few days after its execution, the mercantile creditors had employed attorneys and were threatening to attack the mortgage as fraudulent. At that time it had not been definitely settled in this State whether an insolvent corporation could legally prefer a creditor, nor as to whether one, an officer in two corporations, might act in extending a preference by one of such corporations to the other. In this situation three of the five directors of the Findlay Company,
There is certainly little reason to claim that, under this comprehensive authority, Wells could not do any act which the board of directors might have done. Nor can it be seriously questioned that the board of directors would not be presumed to possess authority to decide whether the company should stand upon the mortgage, engage in extended and expensive litigation to maintain its validity upon questions of doubt and uncertainty, or should release the mortgage, when to do so would secure to the mortgagor, by an extension of time upon the mercantile debts, and a division of payments into small sums at favorable intervals and thus enable it, the mortgagor, to more easily remove $17,000.00 of its indebtedness, and thereby place the Findlay Company in a better position for the collection of its debt than it-would be without a mortgage. Of course, with the validity of the mortgage conceded, its release was not, for the Findlay Company, a wise step if it had been taken by the board of directors, but it was not less wise because taken by the president. Rut without the concession of the validity of the mortgage the step would not appear so unwise. However, the question of authority did not depend upon the wisdom of the decision, but it rested upon the right to make a decision. As we have said, there can be no doubt of the right of the board to decide and, in our opinion, the instruction to Wells to do the best he could gave him the authority to decide as to what course was best.
The question of the effect of the court’s general
The primary facts found reasonably support but one inference of fact, the presence of authority from the board to employ his own judgment in meeting and averting the threatened law suit. So far as the conclusion that no authority existed may have involved a question of law, if it did involve such question, the conclusion would in like manner be rejected.
Whether the act of Wells in releasing the mortgage had been ratified by the Findlay Company is a question which has been discussed, and, while the holding that authority existed to release it may seem to render a decision upon the question of ratification unnecessary, if we should be in error as to the existence of such authority, a conclusion against said company as to the ratification would support the judgment of the trial court against it. Leaving out of view the conduct of the board, and of Wells prior to June, 1893, when the stockholders turned the affairs of the Find-lay Company over to Tappan, the facts disclosed that Tappan, to whom the stockholders gave authority to do all things necessary in liquidating and closing up the business of the company, knew of the prior mort
The stockholders had given Tappan as full authority, with reference to the closing of the company’s business, and the securing, collecting, and disbursing its assets, as the board of directors could have possessed. The authority was sweeping and comprehensive. Subsequently, it is found, that by resolution, the board of directors repudiated all that he did. The court does not find as a primary or as an ultimate fact that Tappan did not ratify the action of Wells in releasing the mortgage, nor is it found, as a question of fact, that the action of the board had the effect to recall and obviate all that he did. As a question of law the board of directors possessed no authority to repudiate any act done by the authority of the stockholders. With the knowledge and authority possessed by Tappan his acts, as stated, were a complete confirmation or ratification of the release of said mortgage. It has been insisted that the silence of the find-, ing as to a ratification of the release must be held as a finding against the Findlay Company on that question. We do not decide the question, but there are authorities to the point that where a corporation asserts that an act of its officer is not binding upon it, the burden rests upon it to establish not only the absence of authority in the officer to do the act but that it has not ratified the act done. National State Bank v. Vigo County National Bank, 141 Ind. 352; Patterson v. Robinson, 116 N. Y. 193, 22 N. E. 372; Oakes v. Cat
The validity of the mortgage of the appellant, Smith, trustee, is denied on behalf of the Findlay Company upon the grounds that it was executed and received in fraud of creditors; first, because it was intended to hinder and delay the Findlay Company in the collection of its claim against the Wells Company, and second, because executed by an insolvent corporation. The first of these objections to the validity of that mortgage loses all of its force when it is considered that the Findlay Company is bound by the agreement and mortgage which extended the time of the payment of the mercantile claims, and gave the mortgage to Smith, trustee, precedence, and thereby hindered said company. Not taking into consideration the question as to whether the language of section 6645, Burns’ R. S. 1894 (4920, R. S. 1881), “All conveyances * * * made * * * with intent to hinder” or “delay * * * creditors * * * shall be void,” means with a fraudulent intent so to hinder, it is evident that it was not the purpose of that provision to deny the right of persons to contract for delay and to be bound by their own stipulations which delay or hinder them in the collection of their credits. But the language of the statute is more explicit, for it provides that any such conveyance, etc., “shall be void as to the persons sought to be defrauded,” not that they shall be void generally. Another provision of the statute, section 6649, Burns’ R. S. 1894 (4924, R. S. 1881), is, that “the question of fraudulent intent, in all cases arising under the provisions of this act, shall be deemed a question of fact,” and many decisions of this
The second objection to the validity of that mortgage is not tenable since our court adheres to the doctrine that a corporation in failing circumstances and with assets less than its liabilities may, like an individual or a copartnership, prefer creditors by executing mortgage or other liens upon its property. Levering v. Bimel, 146 Ind. 545; Henderson v. Indiana Trust Co., 143 Ind. 561; First Nat’l Bank v. Dovetail, etc., Co., 143 Ind. 550; First Nat'l Bank v. Dovetail, etc., Co., 143 Ind. 534.
It is held also that the mere fact that a contract is made between two corporations having common directors does not render spch contract fraudulent or void, Evansville, etc., Co. v. Bank of Commerce, 144 Ind. 34.
Upon a fair construction of the special findings it does not appear, as counsel for the Findlay Company seem to imply, that the Wells Company was under receivership at the time the mortgage to the trustee of the mercantile creditors was executed. The agreement, preceding the mortgage, comprehended the discharge of the receiver and the return of the property to the company, and that was done. The property covered by the mortgage did not, therefore, continue, if it became so by the receivership, a part of the trust fund or estate for the benefit of the Findlay Company as a creditor. By the terms of the agreement the Findlay Company stipulated for the release of the property from the receivership, and it cannot, therefore, claim that the property was held for its benefit.
We conclude that the court erred in its conclusions of law with reference to the invalidity of the mortgage to the appellant, Smith, trustee, and as to him