Stony Brook Lumber Co. v. Blackman

133 A. 556 | Pa. | 1926

The plaintiff, Stony Brook Lumber Company, a corporation chartered in 1910, was located in Sullivan County, with an authorized capital stock of $200,000, divided into shares of $100 each, of which 1,500 were issued. The defendants, Blackman and Hughes, were respectively president and treasurer of the corporation and Frank E. Carter was vice-president and general manager of production, from its organization until August, 1915. They were also the directors of the corporation, the original by-laws limiting the number to three. Defendants owned eleven hundred shares of the outstanding stock and Carter the remaining four hundred shares, except two shares thereof which stood in the name of his wife. In May, 1915, defendants gave Carter a written option on their stock, by the terms of which they were to receive approximately $48,000 for the stock and $6,000 for salary due Blackman; while Carter was to pay all the corporation's direct and contingent liabilites, amounting to some $37,000. The option as drawn expired July 15, 1915, but was extended to August 4th. It was a hard struggle for Carter to raise the necessary $91,000, but he finally succeeded and on August 2d the parties, including the defendants, also Carter and those assisting him to raise the money, met in the directors' room of the Miners Savings Bank at Pittston to close the deal. A bank teller named Wilson was called in to handle the cash, checks, etc., in fact to act as a clearing house in the transaction. The trial court *308 refused to find Wilson was acting as agent for Blackman, but under the evidence it may be assumed he acted for both Carter and Blackman. A Mr. Ruggles, representing a bank, raised some objection and the matter was passed to August 4th, when the parties met again in the same room and Wilson produced the checks, money, etc., which he had kept in escrow and the transaction was closed by delivery of the stock to Carter and by his payment of the $54,000 to defendants and all debts and liabilities of the corporation. Meantime, on August 2d, at a special corporate meeting, defendants had resigned their offices as president, treasurer and directors, the vacancies at the same time being filled by electing Carter president and his friends to the other offices, the directors being increased from three to five. The transfer, however, was tentative until August 4th. Carter died the following November and the plaintiff corporation ceased doing business practically at the same time. In some unexplained manner, John G. Scouton acquired the Carter stock, became president of the corporation and on August 1, 1921, practically six years after defendants sold their stock, caused the filing of this bill against them for an accounting, averring, inter alia, that they unlawfully received corporate property in payment for their stock. This was denied, and after a full trial, the lower court made findings of facts and legal conclusions favorable to defendants and in due course entered a final decree dismissing the bill; therefrom plaintiff brought this appeal.

The record discloses no cause for reversal. There was neither proof nor finding of any fraud on part of defendants, nor of any collusion between them and Carter. The sale of their stock was a straightforward business transaction and they had nothing to do with its financing by Carter, or with the corporation notes or property he gave to assist in raising the money. Their connection with the corporation had ended and they retired when all its liabilities were paid. True, they could not *309 retire from the corporation and carry away its assets to the prejudice of creditors or nonconsenting stockholders, but nothing of that kind occurred. The parties received what they were entitled to under the option agreement and all corporate liabilities were paid. Furthermore, on August 4th, Carter was the sole stockholder, except for the two shares held by his wife, to which we will refer; every debt was paid and there was no public interest involved. Therefore the rule applies that, "Where all the stockholders consent and there are no creditors, the officers may dispose of the property of a private corporation as they see fit": 2 Fletcher, Cyc. of Corp., par. 1203, p. 2154. It is found as a fact that Carter did not pledge the corporation for more than sufficient to liquidate its existing liabilities; but, if otherwise, who could complain? Certainly he could not, of his own act. If any wrong was done, which we do not assert, it was done by Carter, and he would be estopped from setting up his own wrong for his own gain, and Scouton, who thereafter acquired Carter's stock, is in no better position. He attended the meeting of August 2, 1915, where he was chosen a director under Carter and acted as such; he was also present on August 4th and there loaned the corporation $5,000 to help finance the deal and received its note for the same (see Scouton v. Stony Brook Lumber Co.,261 Pa. 241); so he took the stock charged with all Carter had done and with full knowledge of the facts. Again, Carter as sole owner of the stock could in the absence of creditors dispose of the corporate property as pleased him. "If all the stockholders of a corporation consent, and it is not detrimental to creditors, officers may appropriate corporate assets. It follows that if there are no stockholders except the directors and officers, the latter may, of course, by unanimous consent, give away corporate property, where the rights of creditors are not impaired": 2 Fletcher, Cyc. of Corp., par. 2507, p. 3753. We are aware that a corporation has an entity distinct from that of its stockholders; *310 this separate personality equity will disregard if necessary to do substantial justice. In S. G. V. Co. v. S. G. V. Co.,264 Pa. 265, 269, we say: "It is well stated by Judge ENDLICH, in Kendall v. Klapperthal Co., 202 Pa. 596, 607, affirmed by this court, that equity looks to the substance of the transaction, not to its mere form or color, and 'a corporation does not lose its legally distinct and separate personality by reason of the ownership of the bulk or the whole of its stock by another, . . . . . . nor by its joining hands with another in a common enterprise. But it is well understood that for purposes of equity, courts will look behind that artificial personality, and, if need be, ignore it altogether, and deal with the individuals who constitute the corporation' "; and such is the general rule. 7 R.C.L. p. 27 states: "The doctrine, however, that a corporation is a legal entity existing separate and apart from the persons composing it is a mere fiction, introduced for purposes of convenience and to subserve the ends of justice. This fiction cannot be urged to an extent and purpose not within its reason and policy, and it has been held that, in an appropriate case, and in furtherance of the ends of justice, a corporation and the individual or individuals owning all its stock and assets will be treated as identical." To like effect is C. S. Goss Co. v. Goss, 132 N.Y.S. 76, 79; 1 Morawetz on Private Corporations, par. 1.

As to Mrs. Carter, it may be sufficient to say she has never complained about her two shares of stock. She did not authorize this suit and is no party to it. She cannot be treated as a dissenting stockholder, whatever the rights of such a one might be. Considering her relation to Mr. Carter, her silence of ten years may be treated as an implied ratification of his act. See Trefts v. King, 18 Pa. 157. Long acquiescence by stockholders may amount to a ratification: 14a C.J. p. 102. Her stock cannot now, without her consent, be used to bolster up a cause devoid of equity. The defendants owe *311 the corporation nothing and there is no reason for an accounting.

This is a stale case, but as the question of laches was not pressed, we express no opinion thereon.

The decree is affirmed and the appeal dismissed at the cost of appellant.

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