72 Iowa 666 | Iowa | 1887
Substantially, there is no dispute as to the facts. The authorized capital of the Marshall Company was $25,000, but the paid-up stock was $6,000, and it was practically all absorbed in purchasing the required real estate, the erection of buildings, and procuring machinery and other property for the prosecuting of the business of the Marshall Company. Money was required to prosecute such business. The corporation had neither money nor credit, but money was borrowed upon the notes or indorsements of the individual stockholders,.and used by the corporation. The latter never paid the money so procured, and such indebtedness continued to exist from the time the money was first procured, for a less or greater amount, until the execution of the mortgage. The business of the corporation was not profitable, nor Avas the paid-up capital sufficient to purchase the required machinery or appliances.
I. Counsel for the appellant contends that the “ organization of the company by the stockholders of the old corporation was for the purpose of transferring the property of the old organization in fraud of creditors.” It is not alleged in the petition that such sale and conveyance Avas made with the intent and for the purpose of defrauding creditors, but that
We find the fact to be that the Gilman Company assumed and agreed to pay the debts of the Marshall County Company to the full value of all property conveyed. Unless restrained by statute, a corporation may sell and dispose of its property, and one corporation may purchase the property of another corporation; both possessing, in this respect, the same power as individuals. (Mor. Priv. Corp., §§ 335, 420.) This being so, and no fraudulent intent being shown, it is difficult to see why the sale in the present case should be set aside, or that the plaintiff should have a lien on the prop • erty of the Gilman Company for which it paid full value. Especially is this true when at least a fair proportion of the stock of that company was contributed by persons who had no connection with the Marshall County Company, and who became such shareholders in good faith. While it is true that the shareholders in the Marshall Company are shareholders in the Gilman Company, they did not become so because of their being shareholders in the former; but they paid money for the stock in the latter company. It is true, there seems to have been an understanding or expectation that they might have stock in the Gilman Company for a portion or all of their stock in tlie Marshall Company,
The judgment of the district court is
AíTíTRMED.