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Page 62
15 F.2d 62
In re UNIVERSAL RUBBER PRODUCTS CO.
No. 9857.
District Court, W. D. Pennsylvania.
March 5, 1926.
In Bankruptcy. In the matter of
the Universal Rubber Products Company,
bankrupt. On review of order of referee
levying an assessment against stockholders.
Modified and affirmed.
Page 63
Sturgis & Sturgis and E. C.
Higbee, all of Uniontown, Pa., for
exceptants.
H. M. Stephens, of New York City,
J. W. Hutchison, of Butler, Pa., and Jos. F.
Weis, of Pittsburgh, Pa., for trustee.
B. R. Williams, of Butler, Pa.,
for Topham.
SCHOONMAKER, District Judge.
We have for review an
administrative order of a referee in
bankruptcy, levying an assessment against
stockholders to pay debts.
The referee found that the entire
common stock of the bankrupt corporation,
$1,000,000 par value, and $100,000 par value
of preferred stock, had been issued to J. B.
Topham, the promoter of the company, who, on
its organization, became its president,
without anything substantial being paid for
it. The corporation was chartered by the
state of Delaware on May 26, 1919. The
incorporators met that day, adopted by-laws,
and elected J. B. Topham, Richard A. Ennis,
and Richard T. A. Ennis directors of the
company. The directors met at Newcastle,
Pa., September 1, 1919, for their first
meeting, and elected J. B. Topham president;
Richard A. Ennis vice president, and Richard
T. A. Ennis secretary and treasurer. Then
the directors, by resolution adopted at that
meeting, voted to buy from J. B. Topham land
in Zeliennople, Butler county, Pa., conveyed
to him on May 12, 1919, and all the property
and accounts receivable of the Universal
Rubber Products Company owned by said
Topham, and to give him in exchange therefor
10,000 shares of common stock and 1,000
shares of preferred stock of the
corporation, upon the following conditions,
written in said resolution:
"* * * However, this corporation
is to assume the purchase-money mortgage now
on said property and further to relieve the
said J. B. Topham from the payment or
payments due or to become due for machinery,
supplies, equipment, or other property
ordered or contracted for the completion of
the factory, and the corporation is to
reimburse J. B. Topham in cash for any
disbursements he may be called upon to make
on account of such purchases, as well as for
such disbursements made for such payments
already made, in addition to the 10,000
shares of common capital stock and 1,000
shares of preferred capital stock provided
for above; however, the services of the said
J. B. Topham up to this date in locating the
factory, planning its construction and
organization, etc., are included with the
property above mentioned in the full payment
for the stock above provided for."
The board of directors then found
and declared the value of said property to
be $1,100,000.
The referee found, as a matter of
fact, that the only thing of value paid for
said stock was the accounts receivable of
the Universal Rubber Products Company, of a
face value of $27,051.73, on account of
which the corporation was able to collect
only $988.44. The referee further found that
the utmost value of the services of J. B.
Topham to the corporation from the date of
organization, May 26, 1919, to September 1,
1919, the date of the resolution, was
$6,250, and therefore found that the total
value given by said Topham for said stock
was $33,301.73.
The objecting stockholders
contest this finding, and contend that the
court is concluded by the findings of the
board of directors as to the value of the
property given in exchange for the stock, in
view of the provisions of section 14 of the
General Corporation Law of Delaware (Rev.
Code 1915, § 1928), which is in the
following language:
"Sec. 14. Issuance of Stock for
Labor or Real or Personal Property.
Subscriptions to, or purchase of, the
capital stock of any corporation organized
or to be organized under any law of this
state may be paid for, wholly or partly, by
cash, by labor done, by personal property or
by real property or leases thereof; and the
stock so issued shall be declared and taken
to be full paid stock and not liable to any
further call, nor shall the holder thereof
be liable for any further payments under the
provisions of this chapter. And in the
absence of actual fraud in the transaction,
the judgment of the directors, as to the
value of such labor, property, real estate
or leases, shall be conclusive."
Under this statute, actual fraud
must be found. Was there evidence in this
case which justified the referee finding
actual fraud in the valuation of this
property? We think there was. In the first
place, the resolution itself discloses by
its very terms that Topham was to be
reimbursed by the corporation for all
payments already made by him on the property
conveyed; in addition thereto, the
corporation was to assume and pay all sums
due on purchase-money mortgage, machinery,
supplies, equipment, or other property for
the completion of the company's plant, so
that Topham got stock for property which the
corporation was later to pay for in full out
of other funds.
Page 64
Certainly Topham gave no value for the
property thus conveyed. This, in itself, we
think sufficient evidence to justify the
finding of the referee as to fraud. In
addition, the evidence discloses that Ernst
& Ernst, certified accountants, in opening
up a set of books for the corporation, with
the knowledge and consent of Topham, carried
the par value of this corporation promotion
stock on its records as good will,
$1,100,000.
Exceptants cite In re Pipe Line
Oil Co. (C. C. A.) 289 F. 698, and
Clinton Mining & Mineral Co. v. Jamison, 256
F. 577, 167 C. C. A. 607, as ruling the
instant case. We subscribe very fully to the
ruling of these cases, but cannot see that
they support the contention of exceptants,
for the reason that here we have evidence of
fraud on facts as they existed when this
stock transaction was consummated. We
therefore conclude that there was no error
in the findings of fact and conclusions of
law of the referee as to the bona fides of
this stock issue in exchange for property.
This leads us next to the
discussion of the amount and rate of
assessment. The referee found that the
allowed and approved claims against the
bankrupt estate, with accrued interest,
would amount to more than $500,000, and in
addition thereto estimated that the cost,
expense, disbursements, and attorney's fees
of the administration of the estate,
together with the cost of collecting unpaid
stock subscriptions, would amount to
$100,000. The referee then ordered the
collection of a preliminary assessment
against stock of sufficient amount to
realize $600,000. The inclusion of this
$100,000 for costs and attorney's fees is
objected to as being unwarranted by the
facts of the case, there being no evidence
to warrant such an estimate. The amount to
be included in the preliminary assessment
for attorney's fees and costs and expenses
must necessarily be an estimate. It may be
that the amount is high, but the referee
bases his estimate on the amount of costs
and attorney's fees that have already
accrued in the case, and we cannot at this
time say that his estimate is wrong.
Certainly, if there is an overplus collected
beyond that necessary to pay debts and the
costs of administering the estate, the
shareholder paying will be entitled on final
distribution to that overplus. We therefore
cannot convict the referee of error in this
regard.
Exceptants also urge that the
referee erred in computing the actual amount
of the assessment of shareholders involved
in dollars and cents, instead of merely
fixing the percentage. We can see no error
in making this computation. By so doing no
legal right is taken away from the
individual stockholders, who still have the
right to contest their individual liability
to such assessment, except that they are
concluded by the finding in this case as to
the administrative necessity of this
assessment. The referee has made it plain by
his order that it is without prejudice to
the individual rights of shareholders to
contest their respective individual
liability.
It is also contended that the
referee erred in directing the trustee to
bring action in equity in this court to
collect these assessments. Counsel for the
trustee contends that, inasmuch as this is a
Delaware corporation, and an action in
equity is authorized in Delaware to collect
stock subscriptions and to adjust
liabilities between stockholders, such an
action is proper here. We have grave doubts
that such an action would lie in this case,
and therefore conclude that the trustee
should not be limited as to his forum for
the recovery of these assessments. We
therefore conclude that the order of the
referee should be modified to that extent
only.
An order may be entered
accordingly.
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