|
Page 295
308 U.S. 295
60 S.Ct. 238 84 L.Ed. 281 PEPPER
v.
LITTON.
No. 39.
Argued Nov. 9, 10, 1939.
Decided Dec. 4, 1939.
Page 296
Mr. M. M Heuser, of Norton,
Va., for petitioner.
Mr. Henry Roberts, of Bristol,
Va., for respondent.
Mr. Justice DOUGLAS, delivered
the opinion of the Court.
This case presents the question
of the power of the bankruptcy court to
disallow either as a secured or as a general
or unsecured claim a judgment obtained by
the dominant and controlling stockholder of
the bankrupt corporation on alleged salary
claims. The judgment of the District Court
disallowing the claim was reversed by the
Circuit Court of Appeals, 4 Cir., 100 F.2d
830. We granted certiorari because of an
apparent restriction imposed by that
decision on the power of the bankruptcy
court to disallow or to subordinate such
claims in exercise of its broad equitable
powers. 307 U.S. 620, 59 S.Ct. 1042, 83
L.Ed. 1499.
The findings of the District
Court, amply supported by the evidence,
reveal a scheme to defraud creditors
reminiscent of some of the evils with which
13 Eliz. c. 5 was designed to cope. But for
the use of a so-called-
Page 297
'one-man' or family corporation, Dixie
Splint Coal Company, of which respondent was
the dominant and controlling stockholder,
that scheme followed an ancient pattern.
In 1931 Pepper, the petitioner,
brought suit in a state court in Virginia
against Dixie Splint Coal Company and
Litton, the respondent, for an accounting of
royalties due Pepper under a lease.1
While this suit was pending and in
anticipation that Pepper would recover,
Litton caused Dixie Splint Coal Company to
confess a judgment in Litton's favor in the
amount of $33,468.89, representing alleged
accumulated salary claims dating back at
least five years. This was done by P. H.
Smith, secretary and treasurer of Dixie
Splint Coal Company, who, according to the
District Court, was 'an employee of Litton
and subservient to the latter's will.' This
was on June 2, 1933. Execution was issued on
this judgment the same day but no return was
made thereon, Litton waiting 'quietly until
the outcome of the Pepper suit was
definitely known'. On February 19, 1934,
Pepper obtained a judgment against Dixie
Splint Coal Company for $9,000. On motion of
the company, execution on the judgment was
suspended for ninety days to permit an
appeal. But defendant in that suit did not
appeal.2 Instead, on March 19,
1934, while execution on the Pepper judgment
was suspended, Litton caused an execution to
issue on his confessed judgment and levy to
be made thereunder. Yet Litton 'had no
intention of trying to satisfy his confessed
judgment' against his corporation 'unless
and until it became necessary to do so'; he
was using it 'only as a shield against the
Pepper debt'. Thus, when execution and levy
were made March 19, 1934, no steps were
Page 298
taken for over two months towards a sale
of the property on which levy had been made.
On May 31, 1934, Pepper caused an execution
to issue on her judgment, and levy was made
June 2, 1934. On this latter date the
sheriff 'who seems to have been cooperating
with Litton' advertised the property for
sale under the Litton levy made in the
previous March. On June 14, 1934, the sale
was held and Litton became the purchaser of
the property sold at the sum of $3,200.
The next step in the 'planned
and fraudulent scheme' was the formation by
Litton of 'another of his one-man
corporations', Dixie Beaver Coal Company, to
which Litton transferred the property he had
acquired at the execution sale at a
valuation of $20,135.36 to be paid for in
stock of the new company.3
On September 4, 1934, the third
step in Litton's scheme was taken. On that
date Dixie Splint Coal Company, pursuant to
a resolution of the board of directors,
passed June 16, 1934, (two days after the
Litton execution sale) filed a voluntary
petition in bankruptcy. This step, according
to the findings below, was 'plainly for the
sole purpose of avoiding payment of the
Pepper debt'. The bankrupt at that time had
$4,500 on bank deposit and $12,000 in
accounts receivable, most of which was good.
The cash on deposit was then more than
sufficient to pay all creditors with the
exception of Pepper. And Litton caused the
voluntary petition to be filed 'feeling
confident that his confessed judgment would
cover and consume' the remaining assets.
Adjudication followed on September 7, 1934.
Page 299
Litton's next step in his
scheme to defeat the Pepper claim was to
purchase wage claims against the bankrupt
and to cause 'in some manner' other claims
to be withdrawn. This was done, according to
the District Court, so that Pepper might be
made to appear as the only general
creditora situation designed to give Litton
a decided technical advantage, as we shall
see.
On June 13, 1934, Pepper had
instituted suit in the Virginia state court
to have the Litton judgment declared void.
On June 15, 1934, the day following the sale
under the Litton execution, the sheriff
instituted an interpleader action joining
Litton, Pepper and the Clinchfield Coal
Corporation and alleging, inter alia, that
that corporation had a prior lien on all the
property sold for a debt of $2,153. Litton
and Pepper both answered admitting the prior
lien of the corporation, Pepper answering
'without prejudice to her rights' asserted
in the chancery cause to have the Litton
judgment set aside. On July 18, 1934, an
order in the interpleader suit was entered
directing payment of $2,153.00 to the
Clinchfield Coal Corporation.
Thereafter the trustee, with
the authority of the bankruptcy court, moved
in the state court to set aside the judgment
and to quash the execution thereof on the
ground that the judgment was void since it
had not been confessed in the manner
required by the Virginia statute.4
Page 300
The court concluded that the Litton
judgment was void but denied the motion on
the grounds that the trustee was estopped to
challenge it. The court held that Pepper in
the interpleader suit had treated the fund
derived from the execution sale under the
Litton judgment as valid and consequently
had elected to recognize the validity of the
judgment. Since Litton had acquired, or
caused to have withdrawn, all the remaining
claims against the
Page 301
estate, the trustee in this suit was
representing only Pepper. Therefore, since
Pepper was estopped, so was the trustee. On
appeal that judgment was affirmed on those
grounds.
Smith v. Litton, 167 Va. 263, 188 S.E. 214.
Thereafter the question of the
allowance of the Litton judgment came before
the bankruptcy court on exceptions
previously made by Pepper. That court
concluded that the decision by the state
court that the trustee was estopped to
attack the Litton judgment there, did not
prevent the bankruptcy court from
considering its validity. It therefore
reviewed all the facts and concluded (1)
that Litton and the Dixie Splint Coal
Company had made a 'deliberate and carefully
planned attempt' to avoid 'the payment of a
just debt'; (2) that Litton and the Dixie
Splint Coal Company were 'in reality the
same'; and (3) that the alleged salary
claims underlying the Litton judgment did
not represent an 'honest debt' of the
bankrupt corporation, being merely
bookkeeping entries for the double purpose
of lessening income taxes and of enabling
Litton to appear as a creditor of the
corporation in case it became financially
involved.
5 Accordingly, the
Page 302
District Court disallowed the Litton
claim either as a secured or unsecured claim
and directed the trustee to recover for the
benefit of the estate the property or its
value which Litton purchased at the
execution sale on June 14, 1934. On appeal
the Circuit Court of Appeals reversed that
judgment holding that the decision in the
state court was res judicata in the
bankruptcy proceedings.
We think that the Circuit Court
of Appeals was in error in reversing the
judgment of the District Court.
In the first place, res
judicata did not prevent the District Court
from examining into the Litton judgment and
disallowing or subordinating it as a claim.
When that claim was attacked in the
bankruptcy court Litton did not show that
the proceeding in the state court was
anything more than a proceeding under
Virginia practice to set aside the judgment
in his favor on the ground that it was
irregular or void upon its face. He failed
to show that the judgment in the state court
was conclusive in his favor on the validity
or priority of the underlying claim, as
respects the other creditors of the bankrupt
corporationa duty which was incumbent on
him. On the pleadings in the state court the
validity of the underlying claim was not in
issue. Nor was there presented to the state
court the question of whether or not the
Litton judgment might be subordinated to the
claims of other
Page 303
creditors upon equitable principles. The
motion on which that proceeding was based
challenged the Litton judgment on one ground
only, viz., that it was void ab initio
because it was not confessed by Dixie Splint
Coal Company in the manner required by the
Virginia statute and because P. H. Smith did
not have either an implied or express power
to confess it. In other words, in the state
court, under the pleadings and practice, the
only decree which was asked or could be
given in the plaintiff's favor was for
cancellation of the judgment as a record
obligation of the bankrupt. It is therefore
plain that the issue which the bankruptcy
court later considered was not an issue in
the trial of the cause in the state court
and could not be adjudicated there.6
Hence, the failure on the part of Litton to
establish that the state judgment was res
judicata plus his submission of his judgment
to the bankruptcy court for allowance (as a
preferred claim to the extent that it was
secured by the alleged lien and as a common
claim as respects the deficiency) plainly
left the bankruptcy court with full
authority to follow the course it took and
to determine the validity of Litton's
alleged secured claim and the priority which
should be accorded it in the distribution of
the bankrupt estate. In the second place,
even though we assume that the alleged
salary claim on which the Litton judgment
was based was not fictitious but actually
existed, we are of the opinion that the
District Court properly disallowed or
subordinated it.
Courts of bankruptcy are
constituted by §§ 1 and 2 of the bankruptcy
act 30 Stat. 544, 11 U.S.C.A. §§ 1(8), 11,
and by the latter
Page 304
section are invested 'with such
jurisdiction at law and in equity as will
enable them to exercise original
jurisdiction in bankruptcy proceedings.'
Consequently this Court has held that for
many purposes 'courts of bankruptcy are
essentially courts of equity, and their
proceedings inherently proceedings in
equity'.
Local Loan Co. v. Hunt, 292 U.S. 234, 240,
54 S.Ct. 695, 697, 78 L.Ed. 1230, 93 A.L.R.
195. By virtue of § 2 a bankruptcy court
is a court of equity at least in the sense
that in the exercise of the jurisdiction
conferred upon it by the act, it applies the
principles and rules of equity
jurisprudence. Larson v. First State Bank of
Vienna, S.D., 8 Cir., 21 F.2d 936, 938.
Among the granted powers are the allowance
and disallowance of claims;7 the
collection and distribution of the estates
of bankrupts and the determination of
controversies in relation thereto;8
the rejection in whole or in part 'according
to the equities of the case' of claims
previously allowed;9 and the
entering of such judgments 'as may be
necessary for the enforcement of the
provisions' of the act.10 In such
respects the jurisdiction of the bankruptcy
court is exclusive of all other courts.
United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company v.
Bray, 225 U.S. 205, 217, 32 S.Ct. 620, 625,
56 L.Ed. 1055.
The bankruptcy courts have
exercised these equitable powers in passing
on a wide range of problems arising out of
the administration of bankrupt estates.
11 They
Page 305
have been invoked to the end that fraud
will not prevail, that substance will not
give way to form, that technical
considerations will not prevent substantial
justice from being done. By reason of the
express provisions of § 2 these equitable
powers are to be exercised on the allowance
of claims, a conclusion which is fortified
by § 57, sub. k, 11 U.S.C.A. § 93 sub. k.12
For certainly if, as provided in the latter
section, a claim which has been allowed may
be later 'rejected in whole or in part,
according to the equities of the case',
disallowance or subordination in light of
equitable considerations may originally be
made.
Hence, this Court has held that
a bankruptcy court has full power to inquire
into the validity of any claim asserted
against the estate and to disallow it if it
is ascertained to be without lawful
existence.
Lesser v. Gray, 236 U.S. 70, 35 S.Ct. 227,
59 L.Ed. 471. And the mere fact that a
claim has been reduced to judgment does not
prevent such an inquiry. As the merger of a
claim into a judgment does not change its
nature so far as provability is concerned,
Boynton v. Ball, 121 U.S. 457, 7 S.Ct. 981,
30 L.Ed. 985, so the court may look
behind the judgment to determine the
essential nature of the liability
Page 306
for purposes of proof and allowance.
Wetmore v. Markoe, 196 U.S. 68, 25 S.Ct.
172, 49 L.Ed. 390, 2 Ann.Cas. 265. It
may ascertain the validity of liens, marshal
them, and control their enforcement and
liquidation.
Isaacs v. Hobbs Tie & Timber Company, 282
U.S. 734, 51 S.Ct. 270, 75 L.Ed. 645.
And the bankruptcy trustee may collaterally
attack a judgment offered as a claim against
the estate for the purpose of showing that
it was obtained by collusion of the parties
or is founded upon no real debt.13
That equitable power also
exists in passing on claims presented by an
officer, director, or stockholder in the
bankruptcy proceedings of his corporation.
The mere fact that an officer, director, or
stockholder has a claim against his bankrupt
corporation or that he has reduced that
claim to judgment does not mean that the
bankruptcy court must accord it pari passu
treatment with the claims of other
creditors. Its disallowance or subordination
may be necessitated by certain cardinal
principles of equity jurisprudence. A
director is a fiduciary.
Twin-Lick Oil Company v. Marbury, 91 U.S.
587, 588, 23 L.Ed. 328. So is a dominant
or controlling stockholder or group of
stockholders.
Southern Pacific Company v. Bogert, 250 U.S.
483, 492, 39 S.Ct. 533, 537, 63 L.Ed. 1099.
Their powers are powers in trust.
Jackson v. Ludeling, 21 Wall. 616, 624, 22
L.Ed. 492. Their dealings with the
corporation are subjected to rigorous
scrutiny and where any of their contracts or
engagements with the corporation is
challenged the burden is on the director or
stockholder not only to prove the good faith
of the transaction but also to show its
inherent fairness from the viewpoint of the
corporation and those interested therein.
Geddes v. Anaconda Copper Mining Company,
254 U.S. 590, 599, 41 S.Ct. 209, 212, 65
L.Ed. 425. The essence of the test is
whether or not under all the circumstances
the transaction carries the earmarks of an
Page 307
arm's length bargain.14 If it
does not, equity will set it aside. While
normally that fiduciary obligation is
enforceable directly by the corporation, or
through a stockholder's derivative action,15
it is, in the event of bankruptcy of the
corporation, enforceable by the trustee.16
For that standard of fiduciary obligation is
designed for the protection of the entire
community of interests in the corporation17creditors
as well as stockholders.
As we have said, the bankruptcy
court in passing on allowance of claims sits
as a court of equity. Hence these rules
governing the fiduciary responsibilities of
directors and stockholders come into play on
allowance of their claims in bankruptcy, in
the exercise of its equita-
Page 308
ble jurisdiction the bankruptcy court has
the power to sift the circumstances
surrounding any claim to see that injustice
or unfairness is not done in administration
of the bankrupt estate.18 And its
duty so to do is especially clear when the
claim seeking allowance accrues to the
benefit of an officer, director, or
stockholder. That is clearly the power and
duty of the bankruptcy courts under the
reorganization sections.
Taylor v. Standard Gas & Electric Co., 306
U.S. 307, 59 S.Ct. 543, 83 L.Ed. 669,
this Court held that the claim of Standard
against its subsidiary (admittedly a claim
due and owing) should be allowed to
participate in the reorganization plan of
the subsidiary only in subordination to the
preferred stock of the subsidiary. This was
based on the equities of the casethe
history of spoliation, mismanagement, and
faithless stewardship of the affairs of the
subsidiary by Standard to the detriment of
the public investors. Similar results have
properly been reached in ordinary bankruptcy
proceedings. Thus, salary claims of
officers, directors, and stockholders in the
bankruptcy of 'one-man' or family
corporations have been disallowed or
subordinated where the courts have been
satisfied that allowance of the claims would
not be
Page 309
fair or equitable to other creditors.19
And that result may be reached even though
the salary claim has been reduced to
judgment.20 It is reached where
the claim asserted is void or voidable
because the vote of the interested director
or stockholder helped bring it into being or
where the history of the corporation shows
dominancy and exploitation on the part of
the claimant.21 It is also
reached where on the facts the bankrupt has
been used merely as a corporate pocket of
the dominant stockholder, who, with
disregard of the substance or form of
corporate management, has treated its
affairs as his own.22 And
so-called loans or advances by the dominant
or controlling stockholder will be
subordinated to claims of other credi-
Page 310
tors and thus treated in effect as
capital contributions by the stockholder not
only in the foregoing types of situations
but also where the paid-in capital is purely
nominal, the capital necessary for the scope
and magnitude of the operations of the
company being furnished by the stockholder
as a loan.23
Though disallowance of such
claims will be ordered where they are
fictitious or a sham,24 these
cases do not turn on the existence or
non-existence of the debt. Rather they
involve simply the question of order of
payment.25 At times equity has
ordered disallowance or subordination by
disregarding the corporate entity.26
That is to say, it has treated the
debtor-corporation simply as a part of the
stockholder's own enterprise, consistently
with the course of conduct of the
stockholder. But in that situation as well
as in the others to which we have referred,
a sufficient consideration may be simply the
violation of rules of fair play and good
conscience by the claimant;
Page 311
a breach of the fiduciary standards of
conduct which he owes the corporation, its
stockholders and creditors. He who is in
such a fiduciary position cannot serve
himself first and his cestuis second. He
cannot manipulate the affairs of his
corporation to their detriment and in
disregard of the standards of common decency
and honesty. He cannot by the intervention
of a corporate entity violate the ancient
precept against serving two masters.27
He cannot by the use of the corporate device
avail himself of privileges normally
permitted outsiders in a race of creditors.
He cannot utilize his inside information and
his strategic position for his own
preferment. He cannot violate rules of fair
play by doing indirectly through the
corporation what he could not do directly.
He cannot use his power for his personal
advantage and to the detriment of the
stockholders and creditors no matter how
absolute in terms that power may be and no
matter how meticulous he is to satisfy
technical requirements. For that power is at
all times subject to the equitable
limitation that it may not be exercised for
the aggrandisement, preference, or advantage
of the fiduciary to the exclusion or
detriment of the cestuis. Where there is a
violation of those principles, equity will
undo the wrong or intervene to prevent its
consummation.
On such a test the action of
the District Court in disallowing or
subordinating Litton's claim was clearly
correct. Litton allowed his salary claims to
lie dormant for years and sought to enforce
them only when his debtor corporation was in
financial difficulty. Then he used them so
that the rights of another creditor were
impaired. Litton as an insider utilized his
strategic position for his own preferment to
the damage of Pepper. Litton as the dominant
influence over Dixie Splint Coal Company
used his power not to deal fairly with the
Page 312
creditors of that company but to
manipulate its affairs in such a manner that
when one of its creditors came to collect
her just debt the bulk of the assets had
disappeared into another Litton company.
Litton, though a fiduciary, was enabled by
astute legal manoeuvering to acquire most of
the assets of the bankrupt not for cash or
other consideration of value to creditors
but for bookkeeping entries representing at
best merely Litton's appraisal of the worth
of Litton's services over the years.
This alone would be a
sufficient basis for the exercise by the
District Court of its equitable powers in
disallowing the Litton claim. But when there
is added the existence of a 'planned and
fraudulent scheme', as found by the District
Court, the necessity of equitable relief
against that fraud becomes insistent. No
matter how technically legal each step in
that scheme may have been, once its basic
nature was uncovered it was the duty of the
bankruptcy court in the exercise of its
equity jurisdiction to undo it. Otherwise,
the fiduciary duties of dominant or
management stockholders would go for naught;
exploitation would become a substitute for
justice; and equity would be perverted as an
instrument for approving what it was
designed to thwart.
The fact that Litton perfected
his lien more than four months preceding
bankruptcy is no obstacle to equitable
relief. In the first place, that lien was
but a step in a general fraudulent plan
which must be viewed in its entirety. The
subsequent sale cannot be taken as an
isolated step unconnected with the long
antecedent events, all designed to defeat
creditors.
Buffum, Trustee in Bankruptcy v. Peter
Barceloux Co., 289 U.S. 227, 232, 233, 53
S.Ct. 539, 541, 77 L.Ed. 1140. In the
second place, Litton is seeking approval by
the bankruptcy court of his claim. The four
months' provision of the bankruptcy act, is
certainly not a statutory limitation on
equitable defenses arising out of a breach
of fiduciary duties by him who seeks
allowance of a claim.
Page 313
In view of these considerations
we do not have occasion to determine the
legitimacy of the 'one-man' corporation as a
bulwark against the claims of creditors.28
Accordingly the judgment of the
Circuit Court of Appeals is reversed and
that of the District Court is affirmed.
Reversed.
1 During this litigation A. P.
Pepper, the plaintiff, died and the suit was
continued in the name of Jean McNeil Pepper,
as his executrix.
2 Plaintiff, however, did
appeal on certain phases of the case.
Pepper v. Dixie Splint Coal Company, 165 Va.
179, 181 S.E. 406.
3 The resolution of the board
of directors of this new company certified
that in their opinion the property 'formerly
owned by Dixie Splint Coal Company and now
owned by Scott Litton is worth $20,135.36 in
current money of the United States and we
fix the value of the same at this sum, which
is to be paid for in stock.'
4 At the first meeting of
creditors held on September 26, 1934, the
strategic position of Litton was further
improved by two other events which later the
District Court quite properly denounced. In
the first place, P. H. Smith, secretary and
treasurer of Dixie Splint Coal Company and
the one who had caused the entry of the
Litton judgment on June 2, 1933, by
confession against the company, was elected
trustee. In the second place, Smith was
authorized to employ, and did in fact
employ, as attorney for the trustee, one I.
M. Quillen. Quillen, or his firm, was
attorney for Dixie Splint Coal Company. As
such he or his firm had prepared and filed
the petition in bankruptcy for the company.
And he appeared at the first meeting of
creditors as counsel for the bankrupt and
yet at that time, as attorney for Litton,
filed the claim of Litton for $33,468.89 as
a preferred or secured claim. And at the
time these appointments were made the
controversy between Pepper and Litton over
the latter's judgment was known and
recognized, although formal proof of the
Pepper claim was not filed until November 8,
1934. The grave impropriety of these
appointments became striking as
administration of the estate was commenced.
On October 6, 1934, Pepper moved in her
state court action to quash all execution
issued and outstanding on the Litton
judgment. Quillen, attorney for the
bankruptcy trustee, appeared in opposition
to the motion, acting as attorney for Litton
and contended that the intervention of
bankruptcy had deprived the state court of
jurisdiction. The state court reserved
decision. On October 15, 1934, Pepper
petitioned the referee to direct the trustee
to contest the Litton judgment in the state
court proceeding.
Quillen, stating that he acted as
attorney for Litton, opposed the petition.
After some delay, new counsel for the
trustee were obtained who soon asked the
court for authority to institute a new and
independent suit in the state court to have
the Litton judgment declared void. This
authority was granted.
The District Court, though condemning
such steps, stated it did not suggest that
Smith and Quillen were acting 'with any
fraudulent plan or intention of utilizing
their positions in aid of Litton and to the
detriment of the estate'. Yet he denounced
the impropriety of such conduct and
emphasized the incompatible and conflicting
positions which these persons occupied. On
the professional ethics of the conduct of
Quillen, the District Court aptly observed:
'It is generally accepted that an attorney
for the bankrupt should not be chosen
attorney for the trustee in any case. And it
is even more evident that an attorney who
represents a creditor whose claim is under
attack should not be chosen as attorney for
the trustee who, on behalf of other
creditors, is charged with the duty of
making that attack.'
5 This conclusion was based on
the history and nature of the claims for
salary. Litton's alleged claim of $33,468.99
represented $7,427.25 owed Litton and
$26,041.64 owed P. H. Smith which the latter
had assigned to Litton for $1 and 'other
considerations' which Litton was unable to
recall. As we have noted, these claims date
back over a number of years. The regular
salaries paid Litton and Smith were entered
on the corporation's books under a 'payroll'
account; the salary claims here in question
were carried under separate accounts, 'P. H.
Smith Personal' and 'Scott LittonPersonal'.
No sums were paid Smith from that personal
account. The District Court concluded that
it was hard to believe that Smith, a
bookkeeper and clerk, who had been paid
$2700 a year, should, with no change in the
nature of his work, receive a sudden
increase in salary to $8,000 a year, except
upon an understanding that it was merely for
record purposes and not to be paid. This
conclusion was strengthened by the fact that
the $26,041.64 accumulated for over five
years with no effort on Smith's part to
collect it and by the fact that shortly
before bankruptcy he assigned the claim to
Litton for a nominal consideration. As to
the $7,427.25 alleged to be owed Litton the
court likewise concluded that it had been
entered on the books for income tax purposes
and was not a 'bona fide obligation' of the
company. Furthermore, a substantial part of
these claims was barred by the statute of
limitations. On the most tolerant assumption
that could be made, according to the court,
the salaries credited to Litton and Smith
were merely contingent or conditional
obligations not provable since they were
intended to be paid only whenever the
profits of the company permitted. Hence they
were not fixed liabilities absolutely owing.
See § 63, sub. a(1), 11 U.S.C.A. § 103, sub.
a(1).
6 It should be noted that
there is authority for the conclusion that
the trustee is not necessarily precluded
from questioning a judgment in the
bankruptcy proceedings merely because he
attacked it in a state court proceeding,
where the state court did not pass upon the
validity of the underlying claim.
In re James A. Brady Foundry Co., 7 Cir., 3
F.2d 437; Gilbert's Collier on
Bankruptcy (4th ed.) § 1247.
7 Section 2(2), 11 U.S.C.A. §
11(2). The sections are cited as they were
at the time of the bankruptcy in this case.
But the amendments made by the Chandler Act
(52 Stat. 840), approved June 22, 1938, are
not material so far as the issues here
involved are concerned.
8 Section 2(7).
9 Section 57, sub. k, 11
U.S.C.A. § 93, sub. k.
10 Section 2(15).
11 Thus the bankruptcy court
has been held to have jurisdiction over a
supplemental and ancillary bill to enjoin a
creditor, after adjudication and discharge
of the bankrupt, from prosecuting his claim
in a state court. Local Loan Co. v. Hunt,
supra. As a court in equity it has been held
to have the power to protect the bankrupt
estate against a fraudulent assessment;
Cross v. Georgia Iron & Coal Co., 5 Cir.,
250 F. 438; to compel execution of a deed to
make the bankrupt's equitable title a
complete legal title; Dearborn Electric
Light & Power Co. v. Jones, 8 Cir., 299 F.
432; to recover assets of the estate which
have been used to pay dividends under a
composition order later reversed; In re
Lilyknit Silk Underwear Co., Inc., 2 Cir.,
73 F.2d 52. And even though the act provides
that claims shall not be proved against a
bankrupt estate subsequent to six months
after the adjudication, the bankruptcy court
in the exercise of its equitable
jurisdiction has power to permit claims to
be proved thereafter in order to prevent a
fraud or an injustice. Williams v. Rice, 5
Cir., 30 F.2d 814;
In re Pierson, D.C., 174 F. 160; Larson
v. First State Bank, supra; Burton Coal Co.
v. Franklin Coal Co., 8 Cir., 67 F.2d 796.
12 Section 57, sub. k
provides: 'Claims which have been allowed
may be reconsidered for cause and reallowed
or rejected in whole or in part, according
to the equities of the case, before but not
after the estate has been closed.'
13 Chandler v. Thompson, 7
Cir., 120 F. 940;
In re Thompson, D.C., 276 F. 313;
In re Continental Engine Co., 7 Cir., 234 F.
58. This is of course in absence of a
plea of res judicata.
14 This Court said in
Twin-Lick Oil Company v. Marbury, supra, 91
U.S. page 590, 23 L.Ed. 328: 'So, when the
lender is a director, charged, with others,
with the control and management of the
affairs of the corporation, representing in
this regard the aggregated interest of all
the stockholders, his obligation, if he
becomes a party to a contract with the
company, to candor and fair dealing, is
increased in the precise degree that his
representative character has given him power
and control derived from the confidence
reposed in him by the stockholders who
appointed him their agent. If he should be a
sole director, or one of a smaller number
vested with certain powers, this obligation
would be still stronger, and his acts
subject to more severe scrutiny, and their
validity determined by more rigid principles
of morality, and freedom from motives of
selfishness.'
15
Converse v. United Shoe Machinery Co., 209
Mass. 539, 95 N.E. 929.
Davenport v. Dows, 18 Wall. 626, 21 L.Ed.
938. It is also clear that breach of
that fiduciary duty may also give rise to
direct actions by stockholders in their own
right.
Strong v. Repide, 213 U.S. 419, 29 S.Ct.
521, 53 L.Ed. 853. Cf. Green v. Victor
Talking Machine Co., 2 Cir., 24 F.2d 378, 59
A.L.R. 1091.
16 Section 70, sub. a(6), 11
U.S.C.A. § 110, sub. a(6);
Manning v. Campbell, 264 Mass. 386, 162 N.E.
770; Stephan v. Merchants' Collateral
Corp., 256 N.Y. 418, 176 N.E. 824;
Dean v. Shingle, 198 Cal. 652, 246 P. 1049,
46 A.L.R. 1156.
17 See Wyman v. Bowman, 8
Cir., 127 F. 257, 274; Burnes v. Burnes, 8
Cir., 137 F. 781; Texas Auto Co. v.
Arbetter, Tex.Civ.App., 1 S.W.2d 334, 339;
McCandless v. Furlaud, 296 U.S. 140, 56
S.Ct. 41, 80 L.Ed. 121; Jackson v.
Ludeling, supra, 21 Wall. pages 624 et seq.,
22 L.Ed. 492.
18 Thus in National Cash
Register Co. v. Dallen, 3 Cir., 76 F.2d 867,
the bankrupt, prior to bankruptcy, turned in
to petitioner an old cash register as a
credit on account of the purchase of a new
one. Pending delivery of the new machine,
petitioner loaned the bankrupt another one
and after the bankruptcy adjudication sought
to reclaim the loaned machine. The court
affirmed an order of the District Court
allowing the reclamation on condition that
petitioner first deliver to the bankrupt the
old machine or pay the amount of its agreed
value. The court said, 76 F.2d page 868, 'We
do not think it necessary to determine
whether the contract for the purchase of the
new cash register amounted to a bailment
lease or a conditional sale. Bankruptcy
courts may apply rules regulating equitable
actions.'
19 In re Burntside Lodge,
Inc., D.C., 7 F.Supp. 785. In that case the
court said, 7 F.Supp. page 787:
'The relations of a stockholder to a
corporation and to the public require good
faith and fair dealing in every transaction
between the stockholder and the corporation
which may injuriously affect the rights of
creditors and the general public, and a
careful examination will be made into all
such transactions in the interests of
creditors.
'If the business had not been
incorporated and the Cooks had conducted the
enterprise personally, they would not have
been allowed compensation for services in
the event of bankruptcy, and there is no
cogent reason why they should be paid when
the same service is rendered as an officer
and manager of a corporation of their own
creation and to serve their own interests.
To allow claims under such circumstances in
effect would permit bankrupts to collect on
claims against their own bankrupt estate. It
would give effect to form rather than to
substance, to the letter of the law rather
than the spirit and purpose of it.'
20
In re Wenatchee-Stratford Orchard Co., D.C.,
205 F. 964.
21
In re McCarthy Portable Elevator Co., D.C.,
196 F. 247, affirmed 3 Cir., 201 F. 923.
22 In re Chas. K. Horton,
Inc., D.C., 22 F.Supp. 905;
In re Kentucky Wagon Mfg. Co., 6 Cir., 71
F.2d 802; Forbush Co. v. Bartley, 10
Cir., 78 F.2d 805; Clere Clothing Co. v.
Union Trust & Savings Bank, 9 Cir., 224 F.
363.
23
Albert Richards Co., Inc. v. The Mayfair,
Inc., 287 Mass. 280, 191 N.E. 430.
Erickson v. Minnesota & Ontario Power Co.,
134 Minn. 209, 158 N.W. 979;
Oriental Investment Co. v. Barclay, 25
Tex.Civ.App. 543, 64 S.W. 80; Joseph R.
Foard Co. v. State of Maryland, 4 Cir., 219
F. 827.
24 New York Trust Co. v.
Leland Island Oil & Transport Corp., 2 Cir.,
34 F.2d 655; In re H. Hicks & Son, Inc., 2
Cir., 82 F.2d 277.
25 See comment in 45 Yale L.
Journ. 1471.
26
In re Otsego Waxed Paper Co., D.C., 14
F.Supp. 15. The court said, 14 F.Supp.
page 16, 'The applicable principle is that,
where a corporation is so organized and
controlled as to make it a mere
instrumentality or adjunct of another, and
the subsidiary becomes bankrupt, the parent
corporation cannot have its claim paid until
all other claims are first satisfied.' See,
also, Hunter v. Baker Motor Vehicle Co.,
D.C., 225 F. 1006; Henry v. Dolley, 10 Cir.,
99 F.2d 94.
The same result has been reached in
equity receiverships. Central Vermont Ry.
Co. v. Southern New England R. Corporation,
D.C., 1 F.Supp. 1004, affirmed Centmont
Corp. v. Marsch, 1 Cir., 68 F.2d 460; S.G.V.
Co. v. S.G.V. Co., 264 Pa. 265, 107 A. 721.
A fortiori that result is reached where
there is a fraudulent purpose. E.E. Gray
Corp. v. Meehan, 1 Cir., 54 F.2d 223.
27 See Alexander v. Theleman,
10 Cir., 69 F.2d 610, 613.
28 On this point the District
Court said: 'An examination of the facts
disclosed here shows the history of a
deliberate and carefully planned attempt on
the part of Scott Litton and Dixie Splint
Coal Company to avoid the payment of a just
debt. I speak of Litton and Dixie Splint
Coal Company because they are in reality the
same. In all the experience of the law,
there has never been a more prolific breeder
of fraud than the one-man corporation. It is
a favorite device for the escape of personal
liability. This case illustrates another
frequent use of this fiction of corporate
entity, whereby the owner of the
corporation, through his complete control
over it, undertakes to gather to himself all
of its assets to the exclusion of its
creditors.' |