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Page 151
19 F.2d 151
In re HAWKEYE OIL CO.
No. 604.
District Court, D. Delaware.
May 12, 1927.
In Bankruptcy. In the matter of
the bankruptcy of the Hawkeye Oil Company.
On petitions for review of an order of the
referee adjudging mortgage on property of
bankrupt, purporting to confer liens in
favor of holders of participating operation
certificates, to be null and void as against
trustee or creditors of bankrupt. Order
affirmed.
James I. Boyce, of Wilmington,
Del., for trustee.
E. Ennalls Berl, Edmund S.
Hellings, Ayres J. Stockley, and John P.
Nields, all of Wilmington, Del., for sundry
participating operation certificate holders.
MORRIS, District Judge.
The primary problem presented by
these petitions for review is the
ascertainment of the status and rights of
the holders of "participating operation
certificates" issued or assumed by Hawkeye
Oil Company, bankrupt, the owner of bulk and
service stations for the storage and sale of
gasoline. The relationship of the
certificate holders and of the bankrupt
arises out of contract. The rights of the
holders are fixed, and measured by the
terms, substance, and effect of the
contract. That contract, unless modified or
enlarged by mortgage, is found in the
certificates, which provide:
"That * * *, for and in
consideration of the receipt of two hundred
fifty dollars and other good and valuable
considerations, agrees to create a fund from
the operation of a so-called service station
in the place designated on the reverse side
hereof, and to distribute said fund in the
manner hereinafter set forth to the
registered owner of this certificate and all
other registered owners of such certificates
in said station, and such distribution shall
continue until there shall have been paid on
this certificate the sum of five hundred
dollars, whereupon it shall become null and
void.
"To provide the fund hereinbefore
mentioned, from the daily receipts of said
station there shall be set aside in a bank
one cent (1) on each gallon of gasoline and
five per cent. (5%) on all other merchandise
sold by said station, and the fund thus
created shall be distributed every month
among the registered holders of these
certificates in said station as their
interests may appear."
Certificates of this precise
character constitute, apparently, a
relatively new phase of corporate financing.
Yet the facts before me indicate that in
recent years certificates of the same or
similar character have been widely or
extensively used by companies engaged in the
sale of gasoline. The relation which the
holder of such certificates bears to the
corporation, its creditors, and
stockholders, and their respective rights
growing out of such relationship, have, so
far as I am advised, been considered by the
courts in but three instances.
The first was by Judge
Schoonmaker in United States & Mexican Oil
Company v. Keystone Auto Gas & Oil Service
Company, a receivership in equity, in an
unreported opinion. At the time of the
appointment of the receivers the defendant
had on deposit several thousand dollars,
designated either as "bond fund" or "sinking
fund," which grew out of the deposit by the
defendant of the moneys required by the
certificates to be set aside from the sale
of gasoline and other merchandise. The funds
so deposited were claimed by both the
certificate holders and the general
creditors of the insolvent defendant. Judge
Schoonmaker said that the certificates
evinced an attempt to create a novel type of
stock ownership superior in its claim to
corporate assets to that of the general
creditors, and that, "on general principles
of public policy, we believe that this
contract is void as against the claims of
general creditors. To permit corporations,
by reason of certificates of this kind, to
appropriate corporate assets to certain
classes of creditors or shareholders,
whatever they may be, would be an absolute
fraud upon the general creditors of the
corporations concerned and would permit the
creation of a special type of preferred
creditors not contemplated by law. If
enforceable at all, this contract should
only be enforced as against the stockholders
of the company, and not against the
Page 152
rights of creditors who have dealt with
the corporation in the ordinary way. To give
validity to such a contract would be to
establish a legal vehicle for corporation
fraud and illegal preference of creditors.
These certificate holders cannot claim any
part of the corporate funds to the detriment
of general creditors." He relied in part
upon
G. B. McAbee Powder & Oil Co. v.
Penn-American Gas Coal Co., 295 F. 630
(C. C. A. 3), and
Commonwealth v. Union Surety & Guarantee
Co., 37 Pa. Super. Ct. 179. A decree was
entered adjudging the general creditors
entitled to the fund.
The precedent set by Judge
Schoonmaker was followed, but without
written memorandum, by this court in the
receivership cause of Cities Service
Refining Company v. Go-Gas Company. The
decision by John Biggs, Jr., the referee in
the pending cause, is the third instance in
which the status of certificate holders has
been judicially considered. In a
well-reasoned opinion the referee held the
status of the certificate holders to be
analogous to that of sleeping partners,
denied that they were entitled to an
equitable lien upon the stations of the
bankrupt for the unpaid portion of their
certificates, and adjudged mortgages upon
the property of the bankrupt, purporting to
confer liens in favor of the certificate
holders, to be null and void as against the
trustee in bankruptcy or any creditor of the
bankrupt.
That the ascertainment of the
relation of the certificate holders to the
corporation, and the definition of that
relationship in terms of well-established
legal relations between individuals or
individuals and corporations, is not free
from difficulty, Judge Schoonmaker and the
referee both concede. The difficulty exists
because the contract seems to give rise to
rights or incidents hitherto probably not
brought into combination, and which, when
severally considered, have been recognized
as peculiar to different, even contrasting
relationships. The petitioners for review
take the position that by the contract
evidenced by the certificates the bankrupt
undertook to do certain things, not directly
to repay with interest the money delivered
by the certificate holders to the issuing
company, but to set aside out of the
proceeds arising from the business or
operation of the company a fund, to
distribute it, and to continue so to do
until double the sum of money delivered to
the company by each certificate holder had
been paid to him. Relying upon
Central Trust Co. v. Chicago Auditorium, 240
U. S. 581, 36 S. Ct. 412, 60 L. Ed. 811,
L. R. A. 1917B, 580, they further contend
that the adjudication in bankruptcy,
disenabling the company from creating the
fund and continuing its distribution,
constituted an anticipatory breach, giving
to the certificate holders a provable claim
in bankruptcy.
The trustee, on the other hand,
takes the position that, though the relation
between the certificate holders and the
bankrupt is contractual, yet the contract is
not of the class that gives rise to the
particular relation of debtor and creditor,
or to any fixed liability within the meaning
of section 63 of the Bankruptcy Act (Comp.
St. § 9647). In this I think the trustee's
position is correct. The consideration for
the undertaking of the bankrupt was the
delivery of money. That which the
certificate holders were entitled to receive
from the issuing company was money, not,
however, in the amount paid, with interest,
but double that amount, regardless of the
period of time, whether long or short,
required to obtain it under the terms of the
contract. No definite time was fixed by the
contract within which the money, principal
or increment, should be paid. The absence of
such provision is some evidence that the
certificates were not given for debts.
Jefferson Banking Co. v. Trustees of Martin
Institute, 146 Ga. 383, 91 S. E. 463;
Kidd v. Puritana Cereal Food Co., 145 Mo.
App. 502, 122 S. W. 784.
The money to be paid by the
company was not to be paid absolutely and at
all events, but from a fund arising from the
operation of the company. Whether the
holders of such contracts are more analogous
to stockholders (Fletcher, Cyclopedia
Corporations, § 3631) than to sleeping
partners is, I think, not of such vital
importance as the underlying fact, upon
which I am in accord with Judge Schoonmaker
and the referee, that they are not
creditors, but are coadventurers with the
stockholders, hazarding their investment
upon the continued operation, and hence upon
the success, of the company. The rights of
such persons are subordinate to those of
general creditors. See Fletcher, Cyclopedia
Corporations, § 3634. Nor is their status
improved by the mortgages.
Black v. Hobart Trust Co., 64 N. J. Eq. 415,
53 A. 826;
Reagan v. First Nat. Bank, 157 Ind. 623, 61
N. E. 575, 62 N. E. 701.
I am of the opinion that the
order of the referee is correct. It must be
affirmed.
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