70 Fla. 317 | Fla. | 1915
This is an appeal from an order made by the Judge of the Circuit Court for Dade County overruling a demurrer h> a bill filed by the appellee here against H. G. Wheeler, for an accounting.
The amended bill of complaint alleges that the Wheeler Mercantile Company is a Florida corporation
The bill prayed for accounting against Wheeler of the moneys collected by him after the fire, and what claims of creditors or others were paid by him and that he pay over to' the Receiver such sums of money which may have been paid by him to any person who was not entitled to receive payment, and for general relief and subpoena.
To this bill the defendant Wheeler demurred, which demurrer was overruled, and Wheeler appealed from such order. The grounds of the demurrer argued here are that the bill does not state such a case as entitles the complainant to any discovery or relief from or ag'ainst the defendant touching the matters contained in the bill, and that the Receiver has an adequate reemdy by petition to the court to require the defendant to surrender the assets in his hands.
It appears from the bill that the Reeciver was not appointed until about eight and a half months after the fire, during which time Wheeler was president of the corporation and collected the moneys and.paid them out as alleged. No fraud is charged against him, nor is there any charge that any money was improperly paid by him to persons who were not entitled to receive the same.
From anything appearing to the contrary in the bill Wheeler fis president of the corporation had collected the money and paid it to the creditors of the corporation before the Receiver was appointed. Even if he collected the money without authority of the Board of Directors, could the corporation complain that he paid it to its bona ñde creditors?
The allegations of the bill do not show any corrupt disposition of the corporation’s assets by its president, nor any spoliation by him of a trust fund. The payment by the president of the corporation, under the circumstances alleged in the bill of some of its creditors in full and others in part does not constitute fraud on his part, nor is such conduct a violation of law.
While the officers of an insolvent corporation are referred to as trustees of the corporation’s creditors in the case of Southern Life Insurance and Trust Co. v. Lanier, 5 Fla. 110, we do not conceive the meaning of the court to have been that the assets of an insolvent corporation become immediately upon its insolvency a trust fund or estate, as to which the corporation or its officers become the trustees and the creditors of the corporation the cestuis que trust eut thereof. That by the mere act of becoming insolvent the assets of the corporation which were not charged with any trust before, were changed into a trust fund or estate for the benefit of the corporation’s creditors, so that it may be administered as such by a court of equity. This doctrine, which is said to have orginated in a decision of Judge Story in Wood v. Dummer, 3 Mason 308, Fed. Cas. 17,944, has never been adopted in this State. The assets of an insolvent corporation may not be distributed among the shareholders without first providing for the corporate debts. To this extent only it
The allegations of the bill are not specific and clear as to the possession by the defendant of any assets of the corporation. The allegation that the defendant has “refused to pay the claims of a large part of the creditors” of the corporation, is entirely consistent with the idea that all the money collected by him was paid by him to the corporation’s creditors.
The Receiver seeks information of the defendant as to the names of the creditors of the corporation whose claims were paid in full or in part, but this discovery is merely incidental to the main relief sought, which is an accounting, and to which the receiver is not entitled, because the money collected by the president does not appear to have been a trust fund that a court of equity would administer as such, nor that any part of such money is now in his hands, rather that it was not all expended by him in the payment of the creditors of the corporation before the appointment of the receiver. The court appointing the receiver may upon proper application to it direct the corporation or its officers to turn over to the Receiver all property, books, accounts and papers in their hands belonging to the corporation. Such sum
We think the demurrer should have been sustained. The order oí the court overruling the demurrer is therefore reversed.
Taylor, C. J., and Shackleford, Cockrell and Whitfield, JJ., concur.