| Page 358 129 N.J.Super. 358
324 A.2d 24 ROXBURY STATE BANK, a banking
corporation of New Jersey,
Plaintiff-Respondent and Cross-Appellant,
v.
THE CLARENDON et al.,
Defendants-Respondents,
and
William Putz et al., Defendants-Appellants.
Superior Court of New Jersey,
Appellate Division. Argued June 3, 1974.
Decided July 8, 1974. [324 A.2d 27]
Page 364 Richard B. Thomas, Jr., Morristown, for
defendants-appellants Putz (Schenck, Price,
Smith & King, Morristown, attorneys).
Steven S. Radin, Newark, for
plaintiff-respondent and cross-appellant
Roxbury State Bank (Sills, Beck, Cummis,
Radin & Tischman, Newark, attorneys; Thomas
J. Demski, Newark, on the brief).
Abraham Natovitz, Morristown, for
defendant-respondent O. David Fischer,
receiver of The Clarendon.
Before Judges CONFORD, HANDLER
and MEANOR.
The opinion of the court was
delivered by
CONFORD, P.J.A.D.
These are appeals by the
foreclosing plaintiff bank and the holders
of a second mortgage on real property and
equipment of The Clarendon, a corporation
engaged in the hotel and restaurant business
in Hackettstown, and since September 1971 in
statutory receivership, from a judgment of
the Chancery Division in the mortgage
foreclosure action. The judgment adjudicates
the $160,000 first mortgage held by the bank
a valid and prior lien only to the extent of
$79,122.24; and the second mortgage of about
$196,000 held by the Putz family to be
totally unenforceable against the property.
The opinion of the trial court is reported
as
Roxbury State Bank v. Clarendon, 123
N.J.Super. 400, 303 A.2d 340 (Ch.Div.1973).
It is fairly comprehensive of the pertinent
facts, and we refer thereto for the
background of this case, subject to such
comments and qualifications as appear
hereinafter.
Basically, the litigation springs
from two coordinated transactions
encompassing the sale of the hotel and
restaurant business by Ernest Putz and
Willie Putz (and their wives) to Codella and
Douglas, and the partial financing of that
transaction by plaintiff bank, in November
1970. The Putzes sold their shares in the
corporation, turning over to the corporation
at the same time a plenary liquor license
Page 365 and a parking lot held by them personally,
to Codella and Douglas for a base price of
$300,000. This was adjusted at closing to
about $250,000. Title to the shares was
taken by the purchasers in their dummy
corporation, Hook Mountain Industries (Hook
Mountain). The Putzes received about $50,000
in cash and took back the second mortgage
executed by The Clarendon, mentioned above,
securing a Hook Mountain note for the
balance of the price. Codella and Douglas
put no money into the deal. The transaction
was conditioned upon and made possible by a
$160,000 10% Note and mortgage executed by
The Clarendon to the bank. The giving of
that mortgage loan was contingent on the
discharge out of the proceeds of the loan of
two outstanding loans with the bank of
Douglas-owned corporations amounting to some
$34,000. About $45,000 in outstanding
Clarendon loan obligations was also
satisfied from the mortgage loan proceeds.
At closing, the bank deducted a 5% Fee of
$8,000 from the mortgage proceeds for
granting the loan.
The trial court held the Putz
second mortgage void on the ground that a
corporation has no power to mortgage its
assets to finance the sale of its stock by a
shareholder, as against a statutory
receiver. 123 N.J.Super. at 409, 303 A.2d
340. It found that The Clarendon had
received no consideration for the mortgage
to the Putzes. It also held the bank
mortgage invalid to the extent that the
proceeds thereof were used as a down-payment
on the stock sale ($50,000) and to pay off
the prior debts to the bank of the Douglas
corporations, as well as to the extent of a
proportionate share of the loan fee. The
mortgage lien was allowed as to the balance.
It is important in this case to
note the fact that all commercial creditors
of The [324 A.2d 28] Clarendon were paid off
by the Putzes shortly after the closing of
the stock and mortgage transactions. Thus,
none of the obligations to creditors as of
the time of the institution of the
receivership was existent when the mortgages
in question were executed.
Page 366
I
The Putzes asserted a crossclaim
against the bank for fraudulent concealment
from them of the use of part of the mortgage
loan proceeds to discharge the prior loans
of the Douglas corporations. On this premise
they sought a subordination of the bank
mortgage to their own or its nullification.
They contended that they sold to Hook
Mountain on the expectation that The
Clarendon would net $60,000 for working
capital from the bank loan proceeds, and
that the bank concealed the fact that this
sum would not be available because some of
it was used to discharge the prior loans.
The trial court opinion, although
noting the facts on which the claim was
based (123 N.J.Super. at 406, 303 A.2d 340),
failed to determine the issue, and the
Putzes press it on the appeal. We conclude
it is without merit. We assume, without
deciding the fact issue, that the Putzes
never saw the commitment letter from the
bank dated October 9, 1970 mentioning the
arrangement concerning the prior loans,
Ibid., as testified to by them and
contradicted by the testimony of Codella.
The letter from the bank to Mr. Schuman,
attorney for the Putzes, was a true
statement of the facts Schuman had inquired
about, according to Mr. O'Neil, the bank
representative, and Schuman was not produced
as a witness to testify to any contrary
version. O'Neil testified that Schuman
simply inquired whether the bank had
committed itself for a mortgage loan to
Codella and Douglas and asked for a
confirmatory writing, which he gave. The
stipulation of the bank commitment to
Codella and Douglas, that the borrowers were
to pay off from the proceeds of the loan the
prior obligations of Douglas' companies, was
not a term of the note and mortgage to the
bank, and O'Neil had no obligation to the
Putzes to volunteer it. The latter were
represented by independent counsel, and it
was incumbent on him or them to inquire
about the intended disbursement of the loan
proceeds if that was material to the Putzes'
deal with the purchasers of the stock.
Page 367
Moreover, we are convinced that
the $34,000 disbursement from the loan
proceeds in discharge of the debts of the
Douglas companies would not, if disclosed,
have affected the decision of the Putzes to
sell out. Ernest Putz had retired from
active conduct of the business several years
previously. Willie Putz had become seriously
ill and testified he had made up his mind he
was 'going to get out of the place before I
get killed in the place.' Thus the Putzes
were intent on selling, and were absolutely
dependent for consummation of the sale on
the bank lending Codella and Douglas the
wherewithal for the downpayment and
discharge of the prior Clarendon
obligations.
Accordingly, we find neither
fraud on the part of the bank in relation to
the Putzes nor any material reliance by the
latter on the facts allegedly concealed in
the letter from the bank to Schuman.
II
The invalidation of the Putzes'
mortgage and the partial invalidation of the
bank mortgage below were determined without
reference to the New Jersey Business
Corporation Act, enacted by the Legislature
in 1968, N.J.S.A. 14A:1--1 et seq.,
effective January 1, 1969 (N.J.S.A.
14A:16--4), and generally referred to herein
as the 1968 Revision. The appellants cited
N.J.S.A. 14A:3--3 (empowering a corporation
to give a guaranty not in furtherance of
corporate purposes) to the trial court, but
on appeal they cite and rely on several
other provisions of the 1968 Revision as
well. The bank represents to us that it also
cited to the trial court the insolvency
provisions [324 A.2d 29] of the act
(N.J.S.A. 14A:14--10, 11) and argued they
were not operative to impair its lien. In
any case, we have concluded that the
interests of justice as well as of the sound
development of the law in this area require
us to consider the issues herein in the
light of that Revision, it having been
effective as of the date of the transactions
here involved. The court has heard
Page 368 argument and received supplemental briefs
from the parties on these added issues.
A predominant object of the 1968
Revision was to expand and render more
flexible the powers and uses of corporations
in the light of modern business convenience
and practice, thereby to attract
incorporators to this State. See Report of
the Corporation Law Revision Commission,
June 20, 1968, at IX of N.J.S.A., Title 14A,
'Corporations, General,' 14A:1 to 14A:7. The
Commission was careful to note, however,
'The fact that management may exercise
broader powers, if granted by the
certificate of incorporation, or may act by
simpler procedures does not mean that
actions may be taken to the detriment of
minority interests or creditors.' Id. at XI.
Our study of the authorities
cited by the trial court for its
invalidation of the instant obligations, of
the law generally applicable prior to the
1968 Revision, and of the Revision itself,
satisfies us that the insolvency provisions
of the latter, particularly in relation to
so-called fraudulent conveyances, are now
controlling in this area of the law and as
to this particular litigation.
The former Corporation Act called
for the invalidation of certain transfers by
a corporation insolvent or contemplating
insolvency, or suspending its business for
lack of funds. N.J.S.A. 14:14--2. Stemming
from L. 1896, c. 185, it subsisted until
1968 side by side with the Uniform
Fraudulent Conveyance Act, adopted in New
Jersey by L. 1919, c. 213. N.J.S.A. 25:2--7
et seq. See In re J. Rosen & Sons, 130 F.2d
81 (3 Cir. 1942). The latter, very similar
to the provisions of the Bankruptcy Act, see
11 U.S.C.A. § 107(d)(2), was incorporated
practically verbatim into the 1968 Revision.
N.J.S.A. 14A:14--10. That section is a part
of Chapter 14 of Title 14A, reading
'Insolvency, Receivers and Reorganization.'
So far as here material, the section reads
as follows:
Page 369
(1) Every transfer made and every
obligation incurred by a corporation which
is or will be thereby rendered insolvent, is
fraudulent As to creditors without regard to
its actual intent if the transfer is made or
the obligation is incurred without a fair
consideration.
(2) Every transfer made without fair
consideration when the corporation making it
is engaged or is about to engage in a
business or transaction for which the
property remaining in its hands after the
transfer is an unreasonably small capital,
is fraudulent As to creditors and as to
other persons who become creditors during
the continuance of such business or
transaction without regard to its actual
intent.
(3) Every transfer made and every
obligation incurred without fair
consideration when the corporation making
the transfer or entering into the obligation
intends to or believes that it will incur
debts beyond its ability to pay as they
mature, is fraudulent As to both present and
future creditors.
(4) Every transfer made and every
obligation incurred by a corporation with
actual intent, as distinguished from intent
presumed in law, to hinder, delay, or
defraud either present or future creditors
of the corporation, is fraudulent As to both
such present and future creditors. (Emphasis
added.)
For present purposes, a most
significant feature of this statutory scheme
is that paragraph (1), as contrasted with
the others, extends its benefits only to
existing creditors, not those who came into
being after the alleged fraudulent
transaction. [324 A.2d 30] The parallel
provision of the Uniform Fraudulent
Conveyances Act has been so construed,
TWM Homes, Inc. v. Atherwood Realty &
Investment Co., 214 Cal.App.2d 826, 29
Cal.Rptr. 887 (D.Ct.App.1963); and the
contrast in the language identifying
creditors in paragraphs (2), (3) and (4), as
compared with paragraph (1), leave no doubt
about the matter. Any transfer 'fraudulent'
as to a creditor under N.J.S.A. 14A:14--10
is also 'fraudulent' as to a receiver,
except as to a purchaser for a fair
consideration without knowledge of the fraud
at the time of the purchase. N.J.S.A.
14A:14--11(1).
The cases, both in New Jersey and
elsewhere, antedating the 1968 Revision and
voiding corporate conveyances or mortgages
entered into for the benefit only of
shareholders, directors or officers
generally involve insolvency situations
where it is inferable that at least some of
the creditors represented
Page 370 by the receiver or trustee had claims
existing at the time of the transaction
impugned. See, E.g.,
Pemberton v. Longmire, 194 Okl. 311, 151
P.2d 410 (Sup.Ct.1944);
Steph v. Branch, 255 F.Supp. 526
(E.D.Okl.1966), aff'd 389 F.2d 233 (10
Cir. 1968);
In re Atlas Foundry Company, 155 F.Supp. 615
(D.N.J.1957);
Martin v. General Finance Co., 239
Cal.App.2d 438, 48 Cal.Rptr. 773
(D.Ct.App.1966);
Catabene v. Wallner, 16 N.J.Super. 597, 85
A.2d 300 (App.Div.1951);
Heidler v. Werner & Co., 97 N.J.Eq. 505,
508, 128 A. 237 (E. & A.1925).
1
When the question has been
expressly posed as to whether
post-transaction creditors, or a receiver on
their behalf, could attack the validity of
an obligation given by a corporation for a
personal debt of an officer or stockholder,
there has been a division of view on the
point. Annotation, 47 A.L.R. 78, 80--81
(1927).
Notwithstanding the general
principle that creditors, or the corporate
receiver on their behalf, may attack
transfers of corporate property made for the
benefit of favored officers or shareholders,
the cases clearly hold a corporation
estopped to challenge such a transaction
where all the shareholders have agreed to it
and the rights of corporate creditors are
not affected.
Breslin v. Fries-Breslin Co., 70 N.J.L. 274
(E. & A.1904);
N.J. Car Spring and Rubber Co. v. Fields, 85
N.J.L. 217 (E. & A.1913); Pine v. Hyed
Page 371 Realty Corp., 145 N.Y.S.2d 548
(Sup.Ct.1955), aff'd 1 A.D.2d 952, 151
N.Y.S.2d 610 (App.Div.1956); and see,
Jennings v. Studebaker Sales Corp., Supra
(112 N.J.L. at 404). Taken together with the
rule that a receiver stands in the shoes of
the insolvent corporation and has no rights
it does not have,
Grobholz v. Merdel Mortgage Investment Co.,
115 N.J.Eq. 411, 425, 170 A. 815 (E. &
A.1934);
Bankers Trust Co. v. Maxson, 100 N.J.Eq. 1,
8, 134 A. 875 (Ch.1926), the principle
of estoppel aforestated poses the following
inquiry. Precisely which creditors were
entitled to be vindicated, under the law
antecedent to the 1968 Revision, as to
corporate actions unduly favoring an officer
or director at corporation expense when all
shareholders, as in the present case,
concurred in the action? Could a receiver
challenge such a transfer no matter how long
before the inception of the insolvency, or
no matter how unrelated causally the
questioned corporate transaction and the
incidence of insolvency?
[324 A.2d 31] We find no clear
answers to these questions either in our own
research or in the submissions of counsel.
But we think it does not matter, in the
light of the evidence that the Legislature
in the 1968 Revision appears to have
addressed the problem frontally in the
recasting of the insolvency provisions of
the former Corporation Act through N.J.S.A.
14A:14--10, 11, particularly specifying in
which categories of 'fraudulent' transfers
relief should be available for existing
creditors only, I.e., N.J.S.A.
14A:14--10(1), and in which for existing and
future creditors alike, I.e., N.J.S.A.
14A:14--10(2), (3) and (4).
2
Page 372
We see no evidence, in examining
the 1968 Revision in entirety, that the
draftsmen had in mind two distinct types of
fraudulent transfer voidable by a corporate
receiver--one encompassing all the
situations falling within N.J.S.A.
14A:14--10, and regulated by that
section--and another consisting only of
transfers fraudulent as to the corporation
itself, independent of its effect upon
creditors, and not regulated by that
section.
3 To the
contrary, there is indication in the 1968
Revision that aside from adverse effects
upon the interests of shareholders and
creditors, particularly in the case of close
corporations, N.J.S.A. 14A:1--1(3)(c), a
tolerant approach was to be taken in respect
of Ultra vires acts, see N.J.S.A. 14A:3--2
and Commissioners' Comment--1968 thereon, at
155--56 of N.J.S.A., Title 14A,
'Corporations, General,' 14A:1 to 14A:7.
We consequently conclude that in
the whole range of fraudulent (actual or
imputed) transfers described in any of the
subparagraphs of N.J.S.A. 14A:14--10,
whether the transfer is to an officer,
director or shareholder of the corporation
or to anyone else, the right of the receiver
to sue to impugn any such transfer for
purposes of distribution of the corporate
assets in his hands, as here, is controlled
and qualified by that section and those
immediately following it so far as
pertinent. Transfers violative of N.J.S.A.
14A:14--10(1) are voidable by the receiver
only if there are creditors whose present
claims existed at the time of the questioned
transaction. Per contra as to paragraphs
(2), (3) and (4).
Page 373
III
In view of the conclusions in II,
Supra, and none of the present claims of
creditors
4 having
been in existence in November 1970, we have
here no direct interest in whether it can be
found from the proofs that the mortgage
transactions in question, or either of them,
'rendered' The Clarendon 'insolvent,' within
N.J.S.A. 14A:14--10(1). But that subject may
be indirectly relevant in relation to the
several questions as to whether the making
of the mortgages was accompanied by any of
the operative criteria for invalidation
specified in paragraphs (2), (3) or (4) of
the section. See the discussion Infra.
IV
Invalidation of the instant
mortgages under paragraphs (2) or (3) of
N.J.S.A. 14A:14--10 requires a finding that
they were made without 'fair consideration.'
[324 A.2d 32] Paragraph (4) of the section
does not expressly require such a showing,
but it does require 'actual intent, as
distinguished from intent presumed in law'
to hinder, delay or defraud either present
or future creditors. The receiver has not
charged, nor has the trial court found,
actual or specific intent on the part of the
bank or the Putzes to defraud creditors. Nor
do we. This provision must be read with
N.J.S.A. 14A:14--11(3).
The inquiry consequently narrows
to the applicability of paragraphs (2) and
(3) of the fraudulent transfer section. We
have no difficulty in concluding there was
an absence of fair consideration in both
mortgage transactions. To be a fair
consideration, what the corporation gets in
return for what it gives up by the
'transfer' (which includes mortgages,
N.J.S.A. 14A: 14--1(j)) must be 'a fair
equivalent
Page 374 therefor' or 'not disproportionately small'
and exchanged 'in good faith.' N.J.S.A.
14A:14--1(e).
As to the bank mortgage, to the
extent that, to the bank's knowledge, The
Clarendon was not beneficially receiving so
much of the face amount of the mortgage as
went to meet prior obligations of Douglas
and to provide a down-payment to the Putzes
on their sale of stock, the consideration
received beneficially by the corporation was
clearly not a fair equivalent of its
obligation.
The case for absence of fair
consideration is even more pointed as to the
Putzes' mortgage. The corporation received
from them only a liquor license and a plot
of land. There is no reliable evidence in
the record as to the value of these assets,
but it obviously did not remotely approach
the $196,000 lien imposed on The Clarendon's
assets.
Zellerbach Paper Co. v. Valley National
Bank, 13 Ariz.App. 431, 477 P.2d 550
(Ct.App.1970).
We turn next to the other
criteria for application of paragraphs (2)
and (3), which, in the peculiar
circumstances of this case, require
treatment together. Under (2) the inquiry is
whether the property remaining in the
corporation's hands after the transfer was
'unreasonably small capital' for the
business it was to continue to conduct;
under (3), whether the corporation (actually
Douglas and Codella) intended or believed it
would incur debts beyond its ability to pay
as they matured. An approach to these
questions requires consideration of the
combined effect of both mortgages, as they
were consummated at the same time and each
obligee knew of the existence and burden
upon the corporation attendant upon the
other obligation.
While the trial court did not
have the precise criteria of N.J.S.A.
14A:14--10 in mind, it made findings of fact
relevant thereto. It held that out of both
transactions The Clarendon netted only
$40,854.52 for expenses of 'renovation and
operation' while encumbering all its assets
for $356,000, 'with an overwhelming debt
service on the respective mortgages which
the corporation could not meet.' 123
Page 375 N.J.Super. at 408, 303 A.2d at 344. It was
also found that Codella and Douglas
'syphoned off' substantial sums of corporate
funds, and that '(i)n reality, both
corporations (Hook Mountain and The
Clarendon) were insolvent in a statutory and
in an equitable sense, on the day of the
closing or shortly thereafter.' Id. at 409,
303 A.2d at 344. As to these observations,
it will be seen that the court neglected to
note that The Clarendon obtained, in
addition to the cash noted, the liquor
license and the parking lot. Further, the
record of the trial does not clearly
indicate the depletion of Clarendon assets
by Douglas and Codella. This trial finding
appears to have been derived from the
receiver's depositions of these men, taken
in the separate receivership action, in
proceedings at which neither appealing
mortgagee was represented nor on notice. The
court's conclusion that the corporation was
insolvent 'on the day of the closing or
shortly thereafter' seems also to have been
materially dependent on such depositions.
The mortgagees are entitled[324 A.2d 33] to
an opportunity to meet and be heard in a
hearing on remand as to any such proofs so
far as they may be pertinent to the criteria
for application of paragraphs (2) or (3) of
N.J.S.A. 14A:14--10.
On what is before us and properly
of record in this case we are unable to say
with sufficient certainty to justify an
original appellate finding of fact either
that The Clarendon was left with
unreasonably small capital in its hands to
conduct its business or that The Clarendon
(through Codella and Douglas) intended or
believed that it would incur debts beyond
its ability to pay as they matured.
Kearny Plumbing Supply Co. v. Gland,105
N.J.Eq. 723, 149 A. 530 (Ch.1930); same
case at later phase, 8 N.J.Misc. 789, 151 A.
873 (Ch.1930);
Bertsch v. McBride, 58 F.2d 799 (6 Cir.
1932), aff'g 58 F.2d 797
(W.D.Mich.1930);
Waukesha County Dept. of Social Services v.
Loper, 53 Wis.2d 713, 193 N.W.2d 679
(Sup.Ct.1972). For the guidance of the
trial court we express our views, however,
that (a) for purposes of application of
statutory paragraph (3) the test of
intention or belief is what the corporate
managers believed or
Page 376 reasonably should have believed under the
circumstances, Id., 193 N.W.2d at 681; and
(b) in connection with both statutory
paragraphs (2) and (3) the debt service
requirements of both mortgages are proper
factors to take into account in appraising
the corporate business prospects and
reasonable ability to meet accruing debts.
In this latter regard, however, it should be
kept in mind that the first payment of
principal and interest on the Putz mortgage
did not come due until a year after the date
of the note and mortgage, and The Clarendon
clearly became insolvent some time before
that.
The case will have to be remanded
for retrial as to these issues arising under
N.J.S.A. 14A:14--10(2) and (3). If the
determinations go against the mortgages on
either of these issues, they will
nevertheless be entitled to the protection
of their liens, at least to the extent, in
the case of the bank, of the amount so fixed
by the trial court, with which we are in
agreement and, as to the Putzes, to the
extent of the value of the liquor license
and the parking lot as of the date of
closing of the transaction. The trial court
shall determine such values upon proofs.
Since we have found both mortgagees to be
without actual fraudulent intent they are
entitled to these directions under N.J.S.A.
14A:14--11(3).
Trust Co. of Orange v. Garfinkel, 107
N.J.Eq. 20, 26, 151 A. 858 (E. &
A.1930).
V
Both mortgagees rely upon
N.J.S.A. 14A:3--3 to support their claims.
This section provides that a corporation
'may give a guaranty not in furtherance of
its corporate purposes' when approved at a
meeting of shareholders by a two-thirds
vote. Such a guaranty may be secured by a
mortgage on corporate property. We do not
believe this section helps appellants.
In the first place, neither
transaction challenged by the receiver
constitutes a guaranty. A guaranty is an
Page 377 agreement to be answerable personally for
the debt of another. The bank loan was a
principal obligation of The Clarendon, not a
guaranty of an obligation of another. The
Putz mortgage was only a security agreement,
not an original undertaking at all by The
Clarendon, either personally or as a
guarantor of the Hook Mountain note
obligation. Thus neither obligation meets
the literal coverage of the statute.
In any case, the statutory
section was designed only to prevent a
corporate guarantor from invoking the
defense of Ultra vires when the guaranty was
approved by the requisite number of
shareholders and was 'not intended to affect
the application of the law of fraudulent
conveyances.' See Commissioners'
Comment--1968, at 158 of N.J.S.A., Title
14A, 'Corporations, General,' 14A:1 to
14A:7. Thus the section invoked will not
save either[324 A.2d 34] mortgage if
voidable by the receiver under N.J.S.A.
14A:14--10.
VI
The bank also calls to its aid
the provisions of N.J.S.A. 14A:6--11 which
provides that a corporation may lend money
to or guarantee any obligation of, 'or
otherwise assist,' any officer or other
employee of the corporation whenever any
such loan, guaranty or assistance 'may
reasonably be expected to benefit the
corporation'. The section contains a proviso
that if the person so assisted is a
director, the transaction must be authorized
'by the certificate of incorporation or a
by-law adopted by the shareholders.' Codella
and Douglas were directors of The Clarendon,
and we do not find that there was the
requisite enabling provision in the
certificate of incorporation or by-laws.
The bank mortgage was, moreover,
not a loan to nor, as noted above, a
guaranty of any obligation of Codella and
Douglas. While it may have been intended to
'assist' them, in a sense, we find no basis
for a finding that the corporation, as
distinguished from Codella and Douglas
personally, could reasonably be expected to
benefit from the transaction, particularly
in the context of the inseparable
conjunction of
Page 378 the debt burden imposed on the corporation
by the Putz--Hook Mountain contract.
An examination of the
Commissioners' Comments--1968 on this
section reveals that it had a purpose
altogether foreign to the type of
transaction here involved. See pages
330--331 of N.J.S.A., Title 14A,
'Corporations, General,' 14A:1 to 14A:7.
While conceding in its brief that
in respect of the loan proceeds which the
bank used to repay itself on the outstanding
Douglas loans, the trial court in the
exercise of its equity powers 'could
eliminate this portion of the mortgage,' the
bank contends that it was not on notice as
to any 'per se' invalidity of the loan in
respect of the portion of the loan proceeds
which went as part payment to the Putzes for
their transfer of stock. It cites in support
of its position O'Connor
v. First Bank & Trust Co., 12 N.J.Super.
281, 79 A.2d 687 (App.Div.1951), which
held that a bank which accepts for deposit
to the account of a director of a
corporation a check payable to the
corporation and endorsed to the director by
himself and another director, as authorized
by a corporate resolution on file with the
bank, is not on notice as to any corporate
illegality underlying the transfer of the
note by the corporation to the director. The
case is far from authority for the claimed
immunity of plaintiff bank here.
The testimony at trial shows that
Mr. O'Neil, who negotiated the matter for
the bank, had discussed the transaction,
including the sale of the Putz stock, not
only with Codella and Douglas, but with at
least one of the Putzes and with their
attorney Schuman. He admitted he had seen a
copy of the Putz-Hook Mountain sale contract
either prior to or at the closing of the
bank transaction. That instrument called for
a down-payment on account of the sale of the
shares of stock of $50,000 to the Putzes.
The bank was to act as escrowee of the stock
in the Putz transaction. We entertain no
doubt, and find, that O'Neil knew that the
down-payment to the Putzes was to come out
of the mortgage proceeds the bank was
advancing to The Clarendon.
Page 379 He, and the bank through him, were imputable
with knowledge of the elementary principle
that it is Prima facie illegal for corporate
funds to be paid out to defray the expense
of a transaction for the benefit of a
shareholder, officer, or director.
We do not here hold, contrary to
O'Connor v. First Bank & Trust Co., Supra,
that a bank which receives a negotiable
instrument in due course is under a duty of
inquiry, where the corporate payee of the
instrument has endorsed it over to a
director, to inquire as to the legality of
the transaction between the corporation and
its director before making payment on it. We
[324 A.2d 35] do hold that a bank lending
money on a mortgage to a corporation, which
Knows that a substantial portion of the
mortgage proceeds will be used to finance a
sale of the corporate stock by a shareholder
to third persons, is on notice that the
mortgage is to that extent voidable, and
such a mortgage is made at the peril of
invalidation at the instance of creditors
under the corporation act.
In re Atlas Foundry Co., Supra, 155 F.Supp.
at 618.
The judgment is modified to the
extent indicated herein and the cause is
remanded to the Chancery Division for
further proceedings consistent with this
opinion. No costs to any party on this
appeal.
1 The present action is not one by the
receiver to recover damages or obtain
restitution from directors or officers who
have wrongfully diverted corporate assets
for their own benefit,
Hays v. Pierson, 65 N.J.Eq. 353, 58 A. 728
(E. & A.1899); or from a knowing recipient
of corporate funds used to meet the
obligation of an officer or director,
particularly where less than all the
shareholders have consented to the payment,
Jennings v. Studebaker Sales Corp., 112
N.J.L. 399 (E. & A.1934). The cited
cases held that the fact of corporate
solvency or the absence of effect of the
transaction upon creditors as of the time of
its occurrence were not necessarily material
to the receiver's rights; and we have no
occasion here to consider the continued
viability of such decisions as against the
1968 Revision. See N.J.S.A. 14A:14--5;
14A:3--2. See also the discussion Infra of
transactions consented to by all
shareholders.
2 However, we entertain no doubt that if
there are some creditors whose claim goes
back to the time of a fraudulent transaction voidable under N.J.S.A. 14A:14--10(1), then
all creditors in the same class, whether or
not with claims existing as of that time,
are entitled to share equally in the
insolvency distribution. N.J.S.A.
14A:14--21(1).
Cohen v. Hodes, 54 F.2d 680, 681
(E.D.N.Y.1931). In the instant case, as
noted, none of the present creditors have
claims antedating the challenged mortgages.
3 No problem of statutory construction is
here presented with respect to relief for
dissenting shareholders in the instance of
abuse of corporate assets by other
shareholders as there were no dissenting
shareholders in this case. Further, this is
not a suit for damages against officers or
directors for improprieties. See N.J.S.A.
14A:3--2(b).
4 We are advised by the receiver that
claims of creditors exclusive of the
mortgages here in question aggregate
$92,152.87. After payment of the amount
adjudicated below as due the bank and other
expenses, including taxes, the receiver has
in his hands $55,873.16. |