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Page 520
59 F.2d 520
SPEAKMAN
v.
BERNSTEIN.
No. 6436.
Circuit Court of Appeals, Fifth
Circuit.
June 8, 1932.
Page 521
Appeal from the District Court of
the United States for the Western District
of Louisiana; Benjamin C. Dawkins, Judge.
Action by Frank L. Speakman,
trustee in bankruptcy of the estate of the
Tex-la-homa Oil Corporation, against Ernest
R. Bernstein. Judgment for the defendant,
and the plaintiff appeals. The defendant
died pending the appeal, and his executors
were made parties.
Judgment affirmed.
William D. Tatlow, of
Springfield, Mo., Allen McReynolds, of
Carthage, Mo., and Sidney M. Cook, of
Shreveport, La., for appellant.
Robert A. Hunter, of Shreveport,
La., for appellee.
Before BRYAN, SIBLEY, and
HUTCHESON, Circuit Judges.
SIBLEY, Circuit Judge.
Speakman, as trustee in
bankruptcy of Tex-la-homa Oil Corporation,
was denied a recovery at law by the judge
sitting without a jury, for $380,000,
claimed against Bernstein as due on shares
of preferred stock originally issued to him
jointly with one Brown; and the trustee
appealed. Bernstein died pending the appeal,
and his executors have been made parties.
The Tex-la-homa Oil Corporation
was organized under the laws of Delaware,
and those laws primarily control the
liability of subscribers to its stock.
Harrigan v. Bergdoll, 270 U. S. 560, 46 S.
Ct. 413, 70 L. Ed. 733. The Constitution
of Delaware, § 3, art. 9, provides: "No
corporation shall issue stock, except for
money paid, labor done or personal property,
or real estate or leases thereof actually
acquired by such corporation." But General
Corporation Law, § 14 (Rev. Code Del. 1915,
§ 1928), provides that stock so paid for is
fully paid, and, in the absence of fraud,
the judgment of the directors shall be
conclusive as to the value of the labor,
real estate, or leases thus paid in. If
stock is issued whose full par has not been
paid to the corporation, assessment for the
deficiency may be made when necessary to pay
creditors against the first taker, or
against any other holder of the stock with
notice.
Bowen v. Imperial Theatres, 13 Del. Ch. 120,
115 A. 918;
Peters v. U. S. Mortgage Co., 13 Del. Ch.
11, 114 A. 598;
John W. Cooney Co. v. Hotel Co., 11 Del. Ch.
286, 101 A. 879. The no par common stock
it is conceded can be given away, since
creditors cannot be misled as to the paid-in
capital of the corporation by its issuance.
Of the several contentions made
by Bernstein and sustained, one alone need
be stated and decided, for it goes to the
merits and is sufficient to sustain the
judgment. That contention is that, if it be
assumed as the trustee contends that the
contract under which the stock was issued is
Bernstein's contract, nevertheless the stock
was in fact fully paid, and nothing is owing
in respect of it on a just settlement of
that contract. The pertinent facts as found
by the court on sufficient evidence are
these: On January 4, 1919, Bernstein and
Brown executed an option to Crescent Oil
Company, offering to sell it Louisiana oil
leases and other property in return for
stock of Crescent Oil Company and money
payable on stated terms all amounting to
$3,150,000. This option was assigned to J.
O. Mitchell, who with his associates on
January 28, 1919, organized the Tex-la-homa
Oil Corporation. On February 10, 1919,
Mitchell transferred his option to this
corporation and obtained on February 14th an
addendum to the option under which Bernstein
and Brown offered to accept 15,200 shares of
preferred stock of Tex-la-homa Oil
Corporation, par $100, and 15,200 shares of
common stock of no par value, in settlement
of installment payments named in the option
to an amount of $1,140,000. $2,010,000
remained to be paid in money, part cash and
part in installments running to 18 months,
but the property was to be deeded on
delivery of the stock and payment of
$510,000. Acceptance of the option was to be
by writing delivered to Bernstein or Brown.
On February 21, 1919, the directors of
Tex-la-homa Oil Corporation resolved that
"The offer set forth in addendum
Page 522
to the option contract of January 4th,
1919," be accepted, and that the stock be
issued to Bernstein and Brown, but no
written acceptance was transmitted to them.
On the contrary, in the same meeting the
president and the secretary were
"authorized, directed and instructed to
purchase from the Mohawk Oil Company in the
name of this corporation all the property
described in the option of date January 4,
1919, between E. M. Brown and E. R.
Bernstein on the one part and John O.
Mitchell on the other, the said property
having subsequent to the said option been
assigned to the said Mohawk Oil Company
subject to the terms thereof" "for the
following consideration: $510,000.00 in
cash, 15,200 shares of preferred stock in
this Company, 35,200 shares of common stock,
no par value, and cash to be paid as
follows:" $200,000 on the 15th of each
alternate month, beginning with June 15,
1919, until $1,500,000 shall be paid, with
interest from date at 6 per cent. On March
12, 1919, a formal deed was passed, signed
by Mohawk Oil Company and by Tex-la-homa Oil
Corporation, expressing these exact terms;
the Mohawk Oil Company acknowledging the
receipt of the $510,000 cash and of the
stock and conveying the property to
Tex-la-homa Oil Corporation. Bernstein and
Brown owned all the stock in Mohawk Oil
Company, and the stock issued by Tex-la-homa
Oil Corporation was in fact delivered to
them. Tex-la-homa Oil Corporation afterward
made further payments and became entitled to
credits amounting to about $800,000, but a
balance of about $700,000 remains unpaid.
Bernstein by assignment owns this claim.
We may assume as contended by the
trustee that, notwithstanding the use of the
name of Mohawk Oil Company, the contract was
really that of Bernstein and Brown, who have
its burdens and its benefits. Nevertheless
it remains true that the contract is not to
be found in the amended option, for that was
a mere offer until accepted by a writing
delivered according to its terms, which
never happened. The contract resulted from
acceptance of the proposal of Tex-la-homa
Oil Corporation which, though quite similar
in its terms to those contained in the
option, was still materially different. It
was integrated into a binding contract by
the formal deed of March 12, 1919. That
writing on principles familiar alike to the
common law and the law of Louisiana under
which it was executed is the exclusive
evidence of the final agreement. Under it
and in pursuance of it the stock was
delivered and accepted. The terms of the
option never became binding on Tex-la-homa
Oil Corporation. It cannot therefore be
contended that the preferred stock of par
value $1,520,000 was taken to pay
obligations of the Tex-la-homa Oil
Corporation of $1,140,000 as was proposed in
the amendment of the option. According to
the deed of March 12, the property was
conveyed as a whole for one general
consideration consisting of the two blocks
of stock and $510,000 paid cash, and
$1,500,000 to be paid in the future. If the
contention of the trustee be allowed that
the property was valued by the directors at
$3,150,000 in the negotiations, and that no
different value was fixed by them in the
final transaction, and that the preferred
stock must be put at par by requirement of
the law and could not be disposed of by the
corporation for less, it results that the
value of the property is less than the
aggregate consideration promised by
$380,000. This result, involving an issue of
stock, would be in violation of the law of
Delaware, and, if the consideration had been
fully paid by the corporation a repayment of
this difference would be in order. But
$700,000 is still unpaid. If Bernstein were
attempting to collect this balance, the
shortage of consideration might be set up to
defeat him pro tanto. It is allowable in a
settlement of the contract to charge to him
the stock received at its par value, but not
allowable to withhold the $700,000 balance
and also recover as for a supposed
undervaluation of the stock. The value
received by the corporation is always to be
accounted for.
Holcombe, Trustee, v. Trenton White City
Co., 80 N. J. Eq. 122, 82 A. 618, 619.
In the property valued as the directors
valued it, made conclusive by the statute of
Delaware, since fraud is not found, the
corporation has received the full value of
its par stock issued and of all cash paid
and $320,000 in addition which it should
still pay. That Bernstein as the court held
is barred by limitation from asserting any
claim against the bankrupt corporation for
this balance, although because of the
recency of the assessment on the stock the
trustee is not barred, does not alter the
result. Bernstein's defensive right of
recoupment under the contract remains so
long as any right under that same contract
is urged against him offensively regardless
of limitation or prescription.
Lastrapes v. Rocquet, 23 La. Ann. 68;
Morrow v. Hanson, 9 Ga. 398, 54 Am. Dec. 346;
Williams v. Neely (C. C. A.) 134 F. 1, 2
(9), 69 L. R. A. 232; 37 C. J.
"Limitations," § 149;
Page 523
57 C. J. "Set-Off," § 17. It would be
otherwise if Bernstein were attempting to
set off some demand arising out of another
transaction. Such a demand, if not barred,
could only claim a dividend along with other
creditors, while the debt for the capital
stock would have to be paid in in full. John
W. Cooney Co. v. Hotel Co., supra. Bernstein
claimed no set-off but only that what he
paid the corporation exceeded in value what
it had paid under the same contract,
including the stock at par.
Judgment affirmed.
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