93 Kan. 638 | Kan. | 1915
The opinion of the court was delivered by
In order better to understand the present case it will be necessary to refer to some facts involved in certain previous litigation.
Many of the facts are recited in detail in the case of Trust Co. v. Zinc Co., 86 Kan. 860,122 Pac. 875. In that case the Commonwealth Trust Company as trustee foreclosed a mortgage or deed of trust given by the Cockerill Zinc Company to secure an issue of one thousand two hundred bonds, each for the face value of $1000. By the terms of the mortgage the maturity of the bonds was to be accelerated by the default in interest, upon the election of the majority of the bondholders, and there was a provision that upon demand of the' trustee the mortgagor should surrender possession, and the trustee or such agents as it should appoint might take possession of all the property, wliich included three zinc smelting plants and other property located in Allen county and in Wilson county, and also the company’s books and accounts. It also provided that the trustee or agent should operate and manage the plants, carry on the business, and make all needed repairs, alterations, additions and improvements, and out of the incomes and profits pay all proper costs and expenses of such taking, holding and managing the properties. There was a default in the payment of the interest on the bonds, and thereafter, on July 12, 1909, A. B. Cockerill, George E. Nicholson and the National Bank of Commerce of St. Louis, who were the holders of 1084 of the bonds, made a written request to the Commonwealth Trust Company of St. Louis to act as substituted trustee and to take charge of the property through Mr. Nicholson, and administer the trust for the bondholders. It was not deemed advisable to foreclose the mortgage at once.
In the case of Trust Co. v. Zinc Co., supra, the question involved the power of the district court in the foreclosure proceedings to create preferential liens upon the mortgaged property in favor of certain inter-pleaders who furnished labor or material for the benefit of the property and its preservation, and it was held that, notwithstanding the business of the corporation was one in which the public had no interest, it was proper for the court to make the claims for labor and material, furnished to improve and preserve the property and increase its value as security, paramount liens to that of the mortgage, and the judgment was affirmed.
Thereafter the action in the district court to foreclose the mortgage proceeded to a sale, and the property was purchased by a new corporation, the Kansas Zinc Company. In the present action the plaintiff, a coal company, sues to recover $4531.21 on account of coal which it claims to have furnished the bondholders in the operation and preservation of the property prior to and during the foreclosure proceedings. In addition to the claim for coal furnished, the plaintiff sues upon several causes of action which have been assigned to it by other creditors and which embrace claims for material and supplies claimed to have been furnished in the same way to the bondholders while in possession and control of the property. The petition sets out the history of the organization of the Cockerill Zinc Company, the
George E. Nicholson and the Kansas Zinc Company were the only defendants who answered. The answer expressly denies that Cockerill and the Cockerill Zinc Company, or either of them, were the agents of the other defendants, or that either of them was the agent of the Commonwealth Trust Company or any of the bondholders. The answer was verified and put in issue all allegations respecting the agency of any of the parties and their authority to bind the bondholders.
One of the issues at the trial was whether the bondholders of the Cockerill Zinc Company had taken possession of the properties of that company, and incidentally this involved the question of the authority of A. B. Cockerill and George E. Nicholson to bind the bondholders by their acts. One of the principal errors complained of is that the court overruled objections to certain evidence which it is claimed was incompetent, and without which it is insisted the trial court could not have found this issué in favor of the plaintiff. On the other hand, the plaintiff claims that the admission of the evidence was not made a ground of the motion for a new trial, and relies upon Washbon v. Bank, 86 Kan. 468,121 Pac. 515, where it was ruled as follows:
“Certain evidence was admitted over the objection of plaintiffs. No complaint of the ruling was made in the motion for a new trial. Held, that the question can not be raised in this court.” ■ (Syl. ¶ 1.)
Part of the evidence objected to consists of documents attached to the deposition of George L. Edwards on the ground that they were not properly identified, and because copies were used instead of the originals. It appears from a stipulation in the case that the originals had been used in evidence in certain actions still pending in the circuit court of St. Louis, Mo. They were, therefore, unavailable, and it became necessary
“The mortgagor, upon demand of the trustee, shall forthwith surrender to the trustee the actual possession of, and it shall be lawful for the trustee by such officer or agent as it may appoint, to take possession of all the property hereby conveyed or intended to be (with the books, papers and accounts of the mortgagor) and to hold, operate and manage the same.”
The evidence shows that after the Commonwealth Trust Company was substituted as trustee on the request of the majority of the bondholders, including George E. Nicholson and the Bank of Commerce, a resolution was adopted by the board of directors of
“Until better informed, I cannot direct payment of any bill for which it is claimed the bondholders are responsible until administration of the bondholders has been checked and their liability determined. . . . It is a puzzle I cannot understand and which must be made clear why the bondholders, resulting from possession of these properties for the period they were operating them, have become liable to pay, as I understand,*646 from thirty thousand to forty thousand dollars in the face of your reports that you were making money or breaking even.”
Space will not permit a reference to the numerous exhibits and letters from Edwards to Cockerill and statements made by Nicholson himself, which were amply sufficient, in our opinion, to sustain a finding that the bondholders had taken possession of all the properties and were operating them through Nicholson and Cockerill. The trial was to the court, and it has been repeatedly held that the introduction of incompetent evidence under those circumstances will be presumed not to have influenced the court’s finding. (See Whiteley v. Watson, post, p. 145 Pac. 568.)
It is contended by the defendant that there was no evidence showing whether all or a majority of the bondholders ever became stockholdérs in the Kansas Zinc Company, or that the subscribers to the capital stock of that company ever owned any of the bonds, or that any of the stockholders, directors or officers of the new company were ever stockholders of the Cockerill Zinc Company. George L. Edwards, counsel for the principal bondholders, was also vice president and manager of the Kansas Zinc Company, and in his deposition testified that there are no stockholders in the Kansas Zinc Company except the bondholders of the Cockerill Zinc Company; that'the new company was organized for the purpose of buying in the properties of the other company at foreclosure sale on behalf of the bondholders, and that the property is held by this corporation for that purpose; that it was paid for in bonds of the old company, together with certain expense money which the bondholders advanced for the purpose of effecting a reorganization.
In the former case of Trust Co. v. Zinc Co., 86 Kan. 860,122 Pac. 875, it was held that the bondholders were mortgagees in possession, and that they had employed labor and purchased supplies which were used to improve and preserve the property and to increase its
The main question to be determined is whether the new company can be held liable for the indebtedness sued for by the plaintiff. The defendant’s contention in this respect is that the new company can not be made liable for the debts of the old unless such liability was assumed as part of the consideration for the purchase of the property; or unless there is evidence to show that the transaction was a fraud on the creditors. It is insisted that the new company purchased the property at sheriff’s sale, freed from all obligations on account of debts and liabilities of the former company. Of course, where a new company actually purchases from an old one, the rule is that there is no liability for the debts of the old, unless the new company assumes them as part of the consideration.
In the case of Flemming v. Light and Power Co., 90 Kan. 763, 136 Pac. 228, a corporation was organized by the officers of an investment company for the purpose of purchasing property and franchises of a gas-distributing company purchased at a sale under a mortgage owned by the investment company. No consideration was paid for the purchase of the property by the new company, except the interest its incorporators might own in the mortgage as shareholders in the investment company, and it was held that the new company, in carrying on the business first conducted by the mortgagor, and afterwards by the mortgagee, should be considered as an agent of the parent company in the purchase and operation of the plant. In Altoona v. Richardson, 81 Kan. 717, 106 Pac. 1025, it was held:
“Where one corporation becomes practically extinct, transferring all its assets to another and receiving in return stock in the other corporation, which succeeds to its business, the new corporation is liable, to the extent of the value of the property acquired, for the debts of the old one.” (Syl.)
To the same effect see 5 Thompson on Corporations, 2d ed., § 6547. Sometimes in a like situation a court of equity considers the assets of the old company as a trust fund to be followed into the hands of one who is shown not to be a bona fide purchaser for a good
In Condenser Co. v. Electric Co., 87 Kan. 843, 126 Pac. 1087, it was ruled:
“Where a newly organized corporation succeeds to the business, property and assets of an established corporation without giving to the old corporation any means of discharging its obligation to a creditor, and all the circumstances of the transaction justify an inference that the new corporation is a mere continuance or reorganization of the former, with substantially the same stockholders, the new corporation is responsible for such debt of the former corporation.” (Syl. ¶ 2.)
The opinion refers to Austin v. Tecumseh Nat. Bank, 49 Neb. 412, 68 N. W. 628, 35 L. R. A. 444. In that case the Nebraska court criticises the accuracy of the rule declared by Beach in his work on Private Corporations (vol. 1, § 360), to the effect that “where an old-established corporation sells out to a newly organized one, and turns over all its property, the new company becomes liable upon the debts and contracts of the old,” and the court classifies the cases where the new company will be held liable, as follows: First, those in which the liability of the new corporation results, not from the operation of law, but from its contract relations with the old; second, eases in which the transfer of the property and franchises amounts to a fraud upon the creditors of,the old corporation; and third, cases where, as in Reed Bros. Co. v. First Nat. Bank of Weeping Water, 46 Neb. 168, 64 N. W. 701, the circumstances connected with the creation of the new company and the manner in which it succeeds to the business and property of the old “are such as to raise the presumption or warrant the finding that it is a mere continuation of the former — that it is, in short, the same corporate body under a different name.” (49 Neb. 419.)
“All that the corporation paid for the property transferred to it was the stock issued in exchange — simply a metamorphosis of a partnership into a corporation, without any change of individuals, and unless it assumed the payment of the debts of the firm there was no consideration for the transfer of the property — for the stock without the property represented nothing and was worth nothing. That a corporation could be formed and with its capital purchase' a partnership and its business without being liable for its debts unless expressly assumed is not doubted; but this is not such a case. This is like the case of Reed Brothers Co. v. First Nat. Bank, 46 Neb. 168, 64 N. W. 701. . . . Where there is a purchase in fact by a new company from an old one there is, as before observed, no liability of the new for the debts of the old company unless assumed as a part of the consideration. But where*652 a mere transformation is had — parties remaining the same, and the property is transferred by the members of the old company transferring their interest in it for an equal interest in it as property of the new, the transaction does not constitute a sale by the one and a purchase by the other; it is simply a change in the manner and form of carrying on the same business by the same persons; and brushing aside the fiction of a legal entity, it is seen that no real change has taken place, and that in looking to the new formation fox-payment the creditor looks to the same persons, possessed of the same property and rights, he contracted with in the first instance; and to construe the transaction as to creditors as a purchase tends to operate a fraud on their rights. Every purchase implies two distinct persons — a buyer and seller. It is a moral impossibility for one person to buy of or sell to himself. Modern decisions, as observed by Mr. Taylor (Taylor on Private Corporations, sec. 51), are tending to a disregard of the mental conception that a corporation is an entity separate from its corporators, as in many, instances it is simply a ‘stumbling block’ in the way of doing justice between real persons.” (pp. 244, 245.)
Cases are cited by the defendant which hold to the contrary, but we think their reasoning is based upon a slavish adherence to the conception of the new corporation as an entire separate entity from its incorporators, and by losing sight of the substantial facts and of the lawful rights of creditors. With much that was said in the opinion in Armour v. E. Bement's Sons, 123 Fed. 56, we agree. It was there said:
“The stockholders of an insolvent corporation are not bound to maintain the corporation in a hopeless struggle. The claims of creditors do not impose such an obligation, and public policy requires that they should be free to engage in new enterprises.” (p. 59.)
It was also said in the opinion:
“They may do this, but they can not gain profit from the assets of the corporation, to the detriment of the lawful rights of creditors, any more than any other person may.” (p. 59.)
Nor do we agree with the cases cited which hold that actual fraud or collusion must be shown before the assets in the hands of the new corporation can be followed by particular creditors. The doctrine may be true as to creditors generally, but the defendant can not invoke it because of the very necessity of the case and the obligation courts are under to prevent the failure of justice where it can be avoided by the application of equitable rules. We see no basis for a rational distinction in the principles which should control in the situation here and those applicable to a case where a private individual holding a mortgage on business property takes possession under the terms of his mortgage, conducts the business in the name of the mortgagor for a period of a year or two, incurs obligations, though in the name of the mortgagor, for material and supplies used for improvements which add to the value of the security, and then proceeds to foreclose his mortgage and purchase the property at foreclosure sale in the name of a third person who pays no consideration, credit being given upon the indebtedness for the price the property sells for. If in such a case he should seek to defeat the claims of creditors who furnished material and supplies used in the operation, management and control of the property and business while conducted by him, the courts would have no hesitation in rendering personal-judgment against him upon the claims, nor in holding the assets as a trust fund liable for the satisfaction of
There is a cross appeal in which the plaintiff claims the court erred in rendering judgment in defendant’s favor on several causes of action founded on promissory notes given by the Cockerill Zinc Company for royalties on gas leases held by that company, which it is claimed the bondholders received the benefit of. The terms of the leases required the payment of the royalties in order to keep the leases in force. The periods for which the notes extended the term of the leases covered the time in which the property was controlled by the bondholders. The mortgage covered the leases, and they were sold under the decree and were acquired by the new company. They constituted part of the assets of the old and of the new company. We think these claims can not be distinguished in principle from those involved in the other causes of action, and the judgment will be modified with directions to render judgment upon those causes of action in favor of the plaintiff. In all other respects the judgment is affirmed.