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Page 625
66 F.2d 625
ROCKWOOD
v.
FOSHAY et al. (two cases).
No. 9675.
No. 9676.
Circuit Court of Appeals, Eighth
Circuit.
August 21, 1933.
Rehearing Denied September 28, 1933.
Page 626
Appeal from the District Court of
the United States for the District of
Minnesota.
Two suits by C. J. Rockwood, as
receiver of the W. B. Foshay Company,
against Wilbur B. Foshay and another. The
bills were dismissed, and plaintiff appeals.
Affirmed.
John P. Dalzell, of Minneapolis,
Minn. (M. B. Mitchell, of Minneapolis,
Minn., on the brief), for appellant.
Samuel H. Maslon, of Minneapolis,
Minn., for appellees.
Before KENYON and VAN
VALKENBURGH, Circuit Judges, and DEWEY,
District Judge.
VAN VALKENBURGH, Circuit Judge.
This is a suit by the chancery
receiver of the W. B. Foshay Company, a
Delaware corporation licensed to do business
in the state of Minnesota, to recover from
appellees, as directors of said corporation,
the amounts of dividends alleged to have
been unlawfully declared and paid in
violation of the provisions of sections 34
and 35 of the General Corporation Law of the
state of Delaware (Rev. Code Del. 1915, §§
1948, 1949, as amended by 35 Del. Laws, c.
85, §§ 16, 17) at that time in force.
These sections of the Delaware
Corporation Law so far as pertinent read as
follows:
"Sec. 34. Dividends; Reserves:
The directors of every corporation created
under this Chapter, subject to any
restrictions contained in its Certificate of
Incorporation, shall have power to declare
and pay dividends upon the shares of its
capital stock either out of its annual net
profits or out of its net assets in excess
of its capital as determined pursuant to the
provisions of Section 14 of this Chapter;
provided, however, that if the capital of
the corporation shall have been diminished
by depreciation in the value of its
property, or by losses, or otherwise, to an
amount less than the aggregate amount to
which the holders of the issued and
outstanding stock of all classes having a
preference upon the distribution of assets
would be entitled upon such distribution,
the Directors of such corporation shall not
declare and pay out of annual net profits
any dividends upon any shares of any classes
of its capital stock until such deficiency
in its capital assets shall have been
repaired. Subject to any restrictions
contained in its Certificate of
Incorporation, the directors of any
corporation engaged in the exploitation of
wasting assets may determine the annual net
profits derived from the exploitation of
such wasting assets without taking into
consideration the depletion of such assets
resulting from lapse of time or from
necessary consumption of such assets
incidental to their exploitation. * * *
"Sec. 35. Dividends; How
Declared and Paid; Violations of Section;
Penalty; Exoneration from Liability:
No corporation created under the provisions
of this Chapter, nor the Directors thereof,
shall pay dividends upon any shares of the
corporation except in accordance with the
provisions of this Chapter. Dividends may be
paid in cash, in property, or in shares of
the capital stock, in the case of shares
with par value at par, and in the case of
shares without par value at such price as
may be fixed by the Board of Directors. In
case of any willful or negligent violation
of the provisions of this Section, the
Directors under whose administration the
same may happen shall be jointly and
severally liable, in an action on the case,
at any time within six years after paying
such unlawful dividend, to the corporation
and to its creditors, or any of them, in the
event of its dissolution or insolvency, to
the full amount of the dividend so
unlawfully paid, with interest on the same
from the time such liability accrued;
provided that any Director who may have been
absent when the same was done, or who may
have dissented from the act or resolution by
which the same was done, may exonerate
himself from such liability by causing his
dissent to be entered at large on the books
containing the minutes of the proceedings of
the Directors at the time the same was done,
or forthwith after he shall have notice of
the same, or by causing a true copy of such
dissent to be published, within two weeks
after the same shall have been so entered,
in a newspaper published in the County where
the corporation has its principal office."
Page 627
Defendants moved to dismiss the
bill of complaint on two grounds: (a) That
the court did not have jurisdiction of the
subject-matter, and (b) that the bill of
complaint did not state facts sufficient to
constitute a cause of action in equity. This
motion was sustained by the trial court and
the bill was dismissed. The contentions
presented may be thus stated:
(1) Appellant contends that the
bill states a good cause of action under the
Delaware statute.
(2) If not so held, still the
pleading is sufficient under the common law;
the statute being merely declaratory
thereof.
(3) The statute does not deprive
the corporation of its primary right of
recovery, even though the corporation be
insolvent.
(4) The appellant receiver may
enforce the rights of creditors, if recovery
is solely in them in case of insolvency.
Appellees' contentions are that:
(a) The liability of the
defendants (appellees), and all rights and
remedies to enforce it, are governed and
limited by the Delaware statute.
(b) That statute, by its terms,
deprives the appellant receiver, in the
event of corporate insolvency, of the right
to enforce a director's liability of this
nature, because a chancery receiver, in the
absence of statutory authority, cannot
enforce rights belonging exclusively to
creditors; that the order of his appointment
invests him with power to sue and recover
only for such claims, estate, interest, and
demand to which the corporation may be
entitled.
(c) Federal jurisdiction cannot
in this case be based upon the doctrine of
ancillary jurisdiction.
The trial court, in its order
dismissing the bill, held that this action
is based upon the Delaware statute, which
creates a liability unknown to the common
law, and is not declaratory thereof; that
the bill does not state a cause of action
under the common law; that the Delaware
statute, as construed by the highest court
in the state of Delaware, vests the right to
recover from directors, for dividends
unlawfully declared, exclusively in the
creditors if the corporation be insolvent;
that a chancery receiver, such as appellant
is has no power, under the authority of his
appointment, to institute a suit in behalf
of creditors for the liability created in
their favor by this statute; nor is there in
the Delaware statutes any provision creating
such power.
It seems necessary first to
determine what power of recovery the statute
confers, and upon whom. The language about
which this controversy centers is the
following from section 35 of the General
Corporation Laws of Delaware (Rev. Code Del.
1915, § 1949, as amended by 35 Del. Laws, c.
85, § 17): "In case of any willful or
negligent violation of the provisions of
this Section, the Directors under whose
administration the same may happen shall be
jointly and severally liable, in an action
on the case, at any time within six years
after paying such unlawful dividend, to the
corporation and to its creditors, or any of
them, in the event of its dissolution or
insolvency, to the full amount of the
dividend so unlawfully paid, with interest
on the same from the time such liability
accrued."
It is conceded that the W. B.
Foshay Company is insolvent. At the outset
it may be said that it is unimportant to the
decision of this case whether or not the
pleading states a good cause of action under
the common law, or whether the Delaware
statute creates a new liability unknown to
the common law. That statute fixes the
liability of directors, specifies to whom
that liability runs, and provides the
procedure of enforcement. The pleading is
expressly based upon the statute, and we
think that statute governs the recovery
sought. It is true that the remedy provided
by the amended act is a law action on the
case; but we think under the principles
announced in many cases, a suit in equity,
in order to insure a ratable distribution of
a fund among creditors similarly situated,
would not be inappropriate.
It is unnecessary also to discuss
the question of ancillary jurisdiction. The
applicable rule is announced
White v. Ewing, 159 U. S. 36, 15 S. Ct.
1018, 1019, 40 L. Ed. 67: "Any suit by
or against such receiver, in the course of
the winding up of such corporation, whether
for the collection of its assets or for the
defense of its property rights, must be
regarded as ancillary to the main suit, and
as cognizable in the circuit court,
regardless either of the citizenship of the
parties or of the amount in controversy."
Whether this suit is ancillary to
the main receivership case depends upon
whether it is for the collection of assets
of the corporation, and, therefore, one in
which the receiver may be a proper party
plaintiff. It remains to consider upon whom
the statute of Delaware confers the right of
recovery, and by whom an action therefor may
be brought. This statute has been expressly
construed by the superior court of Delaware
in John A.
Page 628
Roeblings Sons Co. v. Mode, 1 Pennewill
(Del.) 515, 43 A. 480, 481. Since then the
statute has been amended, as shown by the
following quotation from the applicable
language of the act, the parts inserted by
the amendment being enclosed within the
brackets: "In case of any [willful or
negligent] violation of the provisions of
this section, the directors, under whose
administration the same may happen, shall,
in their individual capacities, jointly and
severally, be liable [in an action on the
case] at any time within the period of six
years after paying any such [unlawful]
dividend to the said corporation, and to the
creditors thereof [or any of them] in the
event of its dissolution or insolvency, to
the full amount of the dividend made or
capital stock so divided, withdrawn, paid
out or reduced, with legal interest on the
same from the time such liability accrued."
Both the trial court and counsel
for appellant speak of this amendment as
immaterial to this controversy. In the
Roeblings Case the suit was an action on the
case brought by an individual creditor under
the statute as it stood before amendment. In
the course of its opinion the court said,
after quoting the statute: "It will be noted
that by express language the directors'
liability is to the corporation first, but,
if it be dissolved or insolvent, then to the
creditors."
This was a legitimate issue to be
decided; one of the main questions being
whether and to what extent rights in the
creditors had been created. This
construction of the Delaware court is made
still more clear by subsequent language in
its opinion: "Section 7 does not make the
offending director so liable for the payment
of the debts of the company in terms, and
thereby create a separate liability to each
creditor, nor does it authorize each
creditor to sue separately for his
individual claim. The section provides,
broadly, that the illegal dividends, which
constituted a part of the capital stock,
shall be restored as a part of the common
fund, to the corporation, if in existence
and solvent, and to the creditors in case of
its dissolution or insolvency."
It will thus be seen that it is
squarely decided that the exclusive right of
recovery is in the creditors in case of
insolvency. In that case, however, it was
held that, under the statute as it then
existed, a separate right in each creditor
was not created, the amount to be recovered
being a common fund to be distributed
ratably among the creditors as their
interests might appear.
In the light of this holding it
seems to us that the language of the
subsequent amendment, now in force, has
significance. The action on the case was
provided to meet the decision in the
Roeblings Case, and a right of action was
lodged in a single creditor by the words "or
any of them." These words obviously apply
only to creditors and do not include the
corporation. This construction of the
Delaware statute is logical and reasonable.
After insolvency or dissolution recoveries
of this nature in practice do not become a
part of the capital stock again. Ordinarily
they constitute trust funds primarily for
the benefit of creditors. This is evidently
what Chief Justice Lore had in mind in the
following language of his opinion: "When so
recovered and restored, whether at the
instance and in the name of the corporation
primarily, or in the name and at the
instance of the creditors, it becomes at
once a part of the capital stock again, to
be held and disposed of as such for the
benefit of all concerned. Manifestly this
would be so if the amount was recovered by
the corporation itself, before dissolution
or insolvency. Of necessity, it would then
go into the common funds. No other
construction seems tenable, if, on the other
hand, the recovery should be at the instance
of the creditors after the dissolution or
insolvency of the corporation. Under this
view, each creditor would be entitled to his
proportionate share thereof, and any action
for the recovery of such illegal dividends
or abstracted capital must contemplate such
proportionate distribution."
He was emphasizing the right of
every creditor to participate in a
proportionate distribution of the common
fund, as against the attempt of a single
creditor to recover in a law action for his
own personal benefit. A number of cases are
cited from other jurisdictions, none of
which, in our opinion, serve to detract from
the force of the decision in Roeblings Sons
Co. v. Mode, supra.
Appleton
v. American Malting Co., 65 N. J. 375, 54 A.
454, was a suit by stockholders under a
similar New Jersey statute to compel
directors to pay back into the treasury
certain dividends paid by them from the
capital stock of the company. The
corporation was a going concern. It was
contended by the defendants that, under this
statute, a corporation could not compel
directors to make good the loss in the
absence of dissolution or insolvency. This
contention was rejected by the
New Jersey Court of Errors and Appeals. In
Stevirmac Oil & Gas Co. v. Smith, 259 F. 650,
the District Court for the Eastern District
of Oklahoma, under a similar Oklahoma
Page 629
statute, reached an opposite conclusion.
But whatever may be the rule of construction
in other jurisdictions, we are bound in this
case by that announced by the Delaware court
of last resort. It being established that
under the Delaware statute, in case of an
insolvent corporation, the right of recovery
against directors for such disregard of duty
in the payment of dividends is exclusively
in the creditors, the crucial question is
whether the action may be maintained by the
ordinary chancery receiver. The general rule
is that such a receiver "cannot maintain an
action to enforce the statutory liability of
officers or directors, unless he is
specially so authorized by statute."
Stevirmac Oil & Gas Co. v. Smith (D. C.) 259
F. 650, 654;
Minneapolis Baseball Co. v. City Bank, 66
Minn. 441, 69 N. W. 331, 333, 38 L. R. A.
415.
In the latter case it is said
that property transferred by the corporation
in fraud of its creditors and capital
fraudulently withdrawn are assets in the
hands of the receiver as to creditors, and
that he may recover them because they were
at one time assets of the corporation. This
may be true with respect to the
subject-matter there under discussion, but
it is clear that a chancery receiver
generally, in the absence of statutory
authority, has no more power over assets
that have ceased to be the property of the
corporation, than he has over those to which
the corporation never had title. It is well
settled that, in the absence of statute, the
receiver of an insolvent corporation makes
his title through the corporation. While he
represents creditors in the administration
of the corporate estate, his trust relates
only to some phase of the corporate assets,
and not to assets which belong to the
creditors individually, or as a body.
Jacobson v. Allen (C. C.) 12 F. 454, 456,
457. This rule has received consistent
recognition in the
Supreme Court of the United States. In Hale
v. Allinson, 188 U. S. 56, 23 S. Ct. 244, 47
L. Ed. 380, the holding, as stated in
the syllabi, follows:
"As construed by the highest
court of Minnesota the statutes of that
State do not provide that a receiver of an
insolvent corporation can recover the amount
of the added liability of non-resident
shareholders of the corporation; nor do they
provide that such liability shall be an
asset of the corporation, to be recovered by
the receiver and payable to its creditors
when such liability is enforced and the
money recovered.
"A receiver, appointed by a
Minnesota Court of Equity, in the exercise
of its general jurisdiction, of the assets
of an insolvent Minnesota corporation, who
has no title to the fund but simply acts as
the arm of the court, cannot by virtue of
his appointment, or of directions contained
in the decree appointing him, maintain an
action in equity in a foreign State against
non-resident stockholders of a corporation
to enforce their double liability, nor can
be maintain such an action in a Circuit
Court of the United States in a District
outside of Minnesota.
"The question of comity cannot
avail in a case where the courts of the
State in which the receiver was appointed
hold that an action similar to the one
brought in the foreign jurisdiction cannot
be maintained by him in the courts of the
State of his appointment."
In the body of the opinion it is
said: "The receiver, if he be appointed, is
not given power to represent the creditors
or to maintain, as representative owner or
trustee, an action, inside or outside the
State, to enforce the liability spoken of.
That is the right of the creditors
themselves, and the statute provides for
their action against the stockholders."
Later a statute of Minnesota
conferred upon a chancery receiver, as quasi
assignee, the right to collect such
statutory liabilities in behalf of the
creditors, and it was held, upon that
ground, that such a receiver, so authorized,
may sue even in a foreign jurisdiction.
Bernheimer v. Converse, 206 U. S. 516, 27 S.
Ct. 755, 51 L. Ed. 1163;
Converse v. Hamilton, 224 U. S. 243, 32 S.
Ct. 415, 56 L. Ed. 749, Ann. Cas. 1913D,
1292.
There is no statute of Delaware
to which our attention has been called, nor
of Minnesota, except in case of the double
liability of stockholders, that authorizes a
chancery receiver to maintain an action to
enforce the statutory liability of corporate
officers and directors. Appellant contends
that a receiver appointed under the
authority of section 3883 of the Revised
Code of Delaware of 1915, as was the
appellant in this cause, "becomes a
quasi-assignee of the corporation" to
represent creditors. That section reads as
follows: "3883. Sec. 40. Insolvent
Corporations; Receivers of; How Appointed;
Powers; Duties; Continuance of; Excepted
Corporations: Whenever a corporation
shall be insolvent, the Chancellor, on the
application and for the benefit of any
creditor or stockholder thereof, may, at any
time, in his discretion, appoint one or more
persons to be receivers of and for such
corporation, to take charge of the estate,
effects, business and affairs thereof, and
to collect the outstanding debts, claims,
and property due
Page 630
and belonging to the company, with power
to prosecute and defend, in the name of the
corporation or otherwise, all claims or
suits, to appoint an agent or agents under
them, and to do all other acts which might
be done by such corporation and may be
necessary and proper; the powers of such
receivers to be such and continued so long
as the Chancellor shall think necessary;
provided, however, that the provisions of
this Section shall not apply to corporations
for public improvement."
Cooney
Co. v. Arlington Hotel Co., 11 Del. Ch. 286,
101 A. 879, 886, and
Keedy v. Sterling Electric Appliance Co., 13
Del. Ch. 66, 75, 115 A. 359, 363, are
cited in support of this contention. The
first of these cases was a suit to collect
from shareholders the money not paid on
their shares of stock; the second, to set
aside the sale and transfer of corporate
property as fraudulent and void. In both
cases the property involved was an asset of
the corporation. Neither supports
appellant's contention. Undoubtedly the
receiver of an insolvent corporation
represents the creditors, as well as the
stockholders and the company itself, for the
purpose of determining the insolvency of the
company, collecting its assets, ascertaining
and adjudicating the claims against it, and
the priorities thereof; but in the absence
of statutory authority he does not represent
creditors in the collection of claims
belonging exclusively to them. The Delaware
statute quoted certainly does not expressly
or impliedly confer such authority, nor do
the cases cited so hold. As has been said,
the Cooney Case was a suit to collect from
shareholders the money unpaid for their
shares of stock concededly an asset of the
corporation itself. The opinion says: "The
unpaid capital due from stockholders always
was and is a part of the assets of the
company, and so belongs to the company and
not to the creditors," citing
Sanger v. Upton, 91 U. S. 56, 61, 23 L. Ed.
220, to the same effect.
The opinion next cites
approvingly Judge Bradford's opinion in
Irvine v. Elliott (D. C.) 203 F. 82, 104, as
pointing out "the difference in this regard
between the statutory double liability of
stockholders and the liability for unpaid
subscriptions to stock"; the former
belonging exclusively to creditors, and the
latter being an asset of the corporation,
and, as such, being collectible by a
receiver. The language of the opinion upon
which appellant relies is this:
"Furthermore, this liability is more
effectively enforced through a receiver, for
a Delaware receiver may now sue anywhere to
enforce an assessment when made. This is
surely a consequence of the act of 1913 (27
Del. Laws, p. 479; Revised Code, par. 3884),
which in effect makes a receiver a quasi
assignee and so removes the limitation of an
ordinary receiver to the territorial limits
of the jurisdiction wherein he was
appointed."
Of course the assessment to which
the chancellor refers is that which was
sought to be made and enforced in the case
before him. He was not considering a right
of recovery which his own citations hold
belong exclusively to creditors. This same
remark applies to Keedy v. Sterling Electric
Appliance Co., supra, the language of which
is expressly based upon that in Cooney v.
Arlington Hotel Company.
A Pennsylvania case,
Cochran v. Shetler, 286 Pa. 226, 133 A. 232,
234, permitted a receiver to recover for
dividends "willfully and negligently" paid
by directors of a Delaware corporation. But
this decision was rendered under the laws of
Pennsylvania, and without information
respecting those of Delaware, as witness the
following language of the opinion: "It is
further insisted that the present proceeding
cannot be maintained in the state of
Pennsylvania, since liability in such cases
is fixed by statute in Delaware, the place
of incorporation. What the law of that state
in this regard is does not appear in the
record now before us. There is a presumption
that the same legal rules apply as are in
force in our own commonwealth."
We have examined the late case of
United States Rubber Co. v. Eagle
Transportation Co., etc. (Minn.) 248 N. W.
729, and find nothing therein which
militates against the conclusions here
reached.
It may be that collection by a
receiver, all things considered, would be
the most economical and efficient method to
employ. To this suggestion a complete answer
is found in the language of the opinion in
Minneapolis Baseball Co. v. City Bank,
supra: "If it be desirable, in order to
secure a speedy, economical, and practical
method of enforcing the liability, to invest
the receiver with such power, it must be
done by statute."
Such action has been taken in
some other jurisdictions.
We find in the order appointing
the receiver in the instant case only the
usual powers conferred upon an ordinary
chancery receiver, and, manifestly, the
subsequent leave to bring this suit could
not, and does not, operate to enlarge those
powers. Holding as we do, that the right
conferred by the Delaware statute belongs
exclusively to the creditors
Page 631
and not to the corporation after
insolvency, and that this right cannot be
enforced by appellant, an ordinary chancery
receiver, it follows that the decree
dismissing the bill of complaint should be
and is affirmed.
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