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Page 661
24 F.2d 661
WOOD
v.
NATIONAL CITY BANK et al.
Circuit Court of Appeals, Second
Circuit.
March 5, 1928.
No. 174.
Page 662
Elliott W. Smith, of New York
City, for appellant.
Benjamin P. De Witt, of New York
City (Edmund H. Cox, of New York City, of
counsel), for appellee William West & Co.
Choate, Larocque & Mitchell, of
New York City (Clarence V. S. Mitchell, of
New York City, of counsel), for appellees
Post and Flagg.
Cook, Nathan & Lehman, Curtis,
Mallet-Prevost & Colt, William D. Gaillard,
and Frederick S. Fisher, all of New York
City (Mortimer Brenner, Cornelius C.
Webster, and Chester Rohrlich, all of New
York City, of counsel), for appellees Kuhrt,
Benedict, Drysdale & Co., Moore, Holt, Jones
and Mawhinney.
Page 661
The amended bill set forth the
following facts: At some undisclosed time
the District Court for the Eastern District
of Kentucky appointed a receiver for the
Stanton Oil Company, a Delaware corporation,
and later the plaintiff was appointed
ancillary receiver 'by an order entered in
the District Court of the United States for
the Southern District of New York.' The
nature of neither suit was disclosed. From
July 16, 1917, to April 1, 1919, the
defendants were stockholders of the
corporation, between which dates they had
received certain dividends from its assets.
At th time when all these dividends were
paid, the corporation 'was in debt, and was
in fact insolvent and unable to pay its
debts, and had not then, nor had it ever
had, any reserve over and above its capital
stock, or any surplus or net profits of any
kind, and
Page 662
each and all of the said dividends were paid
wholly from and out of the capital of said
corporation.' Claims had been 'filed'
against the corporation, amounting to more
than $100,000, and receiver's certificates
issued in the sum of $25,000.
Before MANTON, L. HAND, and
AUGUSTUS N. HAND, Circuit Judges.
L. HAND, Circuit Judge (after
stating the facts as above).
It is impossible from the bill to
learn just what the plaintiff meant to
allege. On the one hand, he may have meant
only that, when the dividends were paid, the
corporate assets did not equal its debts
together with the aggregate amount of its
corporate shares, considered as a liability,
and that the payments left the assets
insufficient to pay the shares in full. On
the other hand, he may have meant that the
assets were not at those times enough to pay
the debts; that is, that the corporation was
insolvent, as that word is used in the
Bankruptcy Act (11 USCA). Considering the
liberal attitude which courts now take
towards pleadings, we think that some of the
language is susceptible of being understood
in the second sense. 'Unable to pay its
debts' certainly says more than that the
corporation has failed to pay them in due
course. It more naturally means that the
assets were not enough for that purpose. We
must, it is true, confess to a complete
inability to understand the relevancy of the
remainder of the third article of the bill,
in which these words appear. They strongly
suggest that the gist of the suit was the
receipt of dividends paid in depletion of
capital, without regard to whether the
corporation was solvent or insolvent.
However that may be, if there is a
sufficient allegation of insolvency, as we
think, the bill is at worst only indefinite
and ambiguous, and the proper remedy was to
move under rule 20 for a better statement,
not to dismiss it under rule 29.
Such being a permissible
construction of the complaint, the question
of its sufficiency depends upon the law of
stockholders' liability. We have not to do
with the liability commonly imposed by
statute, because, whatever that may be in
Delaware, the plaintiff does not invoke it
here. He depends upon the fact that the
directors have paid, and the defendants
received, dividends when the corporation was
insolvent. Merely because this impairs the
capital stock, it is commonly regarded as a
wrong to creditors on the directors' part,
and it is often made such by statute. We
may, without discussion, assume that it
would be a wrong in the case at bar. Even
so, it is primarily only the wrong of those
who commit it, like any other tort, and
innocent participants are not accomplices to
its commission. Hence it has been settled,
at least for us, that, when the liability is
based merely on the depletion of the
capital, a stockholder must be charged with
notice of that fact.
McDonald v. Williams, 174 U.S. 397, 19 S.Ct.
743, 43 L.Ed. 1022. This has become a
thoroughly fixed principle in the federal
courts. Lawrence v. Greenup (C.C.A. 6) 97 F.
906; New Hampshire Savings Bank v. Richey
(C.C.A. 8) 121 F. 956; Great Western, etc.,
Co. v. Harris (C.C.A. 2) 128 F. 321;
Ratcliff v. Clendenin (C.C.A. 8) 232 F. 61;
Atherton v. Beaman (C.C.A. 1)
264 F. 878.
It is apparent that this result
could not have been reached if the capital
of the corporation were regarded as a trust
fund for its creditors, because a
stockholder is not a purchaser, but a donee,
and his bona fides would not protect him, in
the absence of some further equity, in
retaining the proceeds of a trust. So it
became necessary to decide that the capital
was not such a fund, and McDonald v.
Williams did expressly so decide. The
so-called 'trust fund' doctrine had, indeed,
earlier been repudiated by the Supreme
Court, especially in Hollins v. Brierfield,
etc., Co., 150 U.S. 371, 14 S.Ct. 127, 37
L.Ed. 1113; but it was a hardy weed and
would not die at the first uprooting. It is
apparent, therefore, that the bill does not
set forth a cause of suit based upon the
impairment of the capital, because the
stockholders are not alleged to have been
privy to the directors' tort. This is not a
defense which must be pleaded, like that of
bona fide purchaser; it is necessary
positively to allege the stockholders'
complicity in the wrong to set forth any
case at all.
Page 663
However, there is quite another
theory, and quite another liability, if the
payments not only impair the capital, but
are taken out of assets already too small to
pay the existing debts. The situation then
strictly is not peculiar to corporation law,
but merely an instance of a payment from an
insolvent estate. Since, as we have said, a
stockholder is a donee, he receives such
payments charged with whatever trust they
were subject to in the hands of the
corporation. In that situation it can indeed
be said with some truth that the corporate
assets have become a 'trust fund.' Wabash,
etc.,
Ry. v. Ham, 114 U.S. 587, 594, 5 S.Ct. 1081,
29 L.Ed. 235. Hence it has never been
doubted, so far as we can find, at least in
any federal court, that if the dividends are
paid in fraud of creditors the stockholder
is so liable. Hayden v. Thompson (C.C.A. 8)
71 F. 60; Hayden v. Williams (C.C.A. 2) 96
F. 279. The defendants, who suppose that
there has been an inconsistency in the
decisions of the Eighth Circuit (and they
might have added in our own), have failed to
distinguish the quite independent bases of
the two liabilities.
If the bill be regarded as
presenting only an instance of a payment in
fraud of creditors, the question arises
whether it is enough merely to allege that
the payment was made while the corporation
was insolvent. It is agreed with substantial
unanimity that, when an insolvent makes a
voluntary payment out of his assets, it is
regarded as at least presumptively in fraud
of his creditors,
Hume v. Central Washington Bank, 128 U.S.
195, 9 S.Ct. 41, 32 L.Ed. 370;
Kehr v. Smith, 20 Wall. 31, 22 L.Ed. 313;
Parich v. Murphree, 13 How. 92, 99, 14 L.Ed.
65;
Klinger v. Hyman, 223 F. 257 (C.C.A. 2);
Hessian v. Patten (C.C.A. 8) 154 F. 829,
832;
Cole v. Tyler, 65 N.Y. 73;
Smith v. Reid, 134 N.Y. 568, 31 N.E. 1082;
Lehrenkrauss v. Bonnell, 199 N.Y. 240, 246,
92 N.E. 637. We shall assume, for
argument, in accordance with the language of
some of the foregoing decisions, that such a
transfer is fraudulent per se. In Hayden v.
Williams no more is mentioned than that the
corporation was insolvent, and apparently no
more was thought necessary. Even so, the
bill is bad, because, when the invalidity of
the gift depends only upon the fact of the
donor's insolvency, regardless of his
intent, it is voidable only at the demand of
creditors existing when it is made.
Horbach v. Hill, 112 U.S. 144, 149, 5 S.Ct.
81, 28 L.Ed. 670 (semble); Ratcliff v.
Clendenin (C.C.A. 8) 232 F. 61 (semble);
Church v. Chapin, 35 Vt. 223;
Sheppard v. Thomas, 24 Kan. 780;
Eckhart v. Burrell Mfg. Co., 236 Ill. 134,
86 N.E. 199; Crowley v. Brower, 201
Iowa, 257, 207 N.W. 230. Hummell v.
Harrington (Fla.) 109 So. 320, if holding
otherwise, is an exception; it probably
meant no more than that, if there be actual
intent to defraud subsequent creditors, they
also may avoid the gift.
Day v. Cooley, 118 Mass. 524. In the
case at bar the bill does not allege that
any of the creditors in existence when the
receiver was appointed were creditors when
the dividends were declared. Only in case
the bill had alleged this, would the
question arise whether insolvency per se
avoids the gift. For this reason, and this
alone, the decree was right.
Our mandate will contain a
provision that the affirmance is without
prejudice to the power of the District Court
to grant a second amendment, notwithstanding
the first, and while the question is
primarily for that court, and not for us, we
think it permissible to say the it would be
proper to allow it. The case has clearly not
been presented in all aspects which the
facts may warrant, and it is always
desirable to have the merits finally
disposed of on mere pleading, unless we can
be sure that it faithfully presents them.
The plaintiff will then have an opportunity
to allege, if he deems it necessary, that
the dividends were paid in fraud of
creditors, and that some of the creditors
existing when the receiver was appointed
existed also when the dividends were paid.
Again, while the point has not
been argued at bar, it will be desirable for
the plaintiff to set forth more completely
the source of his right to sue; that is, the
nature of the suit in which he was
appointed, and indeed whether he was
appointed in a suit at all. How the suit in
Kentucky can have any bearing upon his right
to sue in New York is not apparent to us,
unless it be assumed, quite erroneously,
that a creditors' bill in one state gives
some further warrant for a receiver in
another than would exist without it. All
such questions we reserve until the
plaintiff has made a better statement of his
cause of suit under rule 20.
Decree affirmed.
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