Goodyear Rubber Co. v. George D. Scott Co.

STONE, C. J.

The case made by the original bill is substantially as follows: The Goodyear Manufacturing Company and the George D. Scott Company were, each of them, private corporations. The former company is engaged in importing the material of which India Rubber is made, and manufacturing it into merchandise for sale. The business of the latter corporation was that of merchant tailoring, and it dealt in gentlemen’s furnishing goods. The latter corporation became indebted to the former for merchandise purchased, — the indebtedness being due in August, 1890. The *441present suit is a creditor’s bill, instituted in December, 1891, and it is so framed as to let in other creditors, should they desire to join in the suit. It is charged in the original bill that the Geo. D. Scott Oo. became indebted in greater amount than its assets, and was insolvent; and that “in November, 1891, it sold, transferred and delivered to the Alabama National Bank for the alleged consideration of $13,000 all of its stock of goods, wares and merchandise.” The consideration was an alleged indebtedness of the Geo. D. Scott Co. to the bank for borrowed money. This conveyance left the Scott Co. without merchandise or means, and it ceased to carry on business.

It is nowhere charged in the pleadings that the recited consideration, thirteen thousand dollars, was not a real debt from the one corporation to the other. No charge of simulated debt, or other actual fraud is made. The precise ground on which relief was claimed in the original bill was and is, that the corporation had come to be unable to pay all its debts, was insolvent, and was going out of business, and that the assets of the corporation had thereby become a trust fund in the hands of the governing board of trustees, to be distributed and divided ratably among all the creditors of the insolvent corporation. The prayer of the original bill was, that the bank be declared and decreed a trustee of the merchandise and effects it had received from the Scott Co., for the pro rata benefit of all the creditors alike.

There was a demurrer to the original bill, assigning causes, of which the following is one of the specifications: 2. “The fact alleged in said bill of complaint that the defendant, the Geo. D. Scott Co., being an insolvent corporation and largely indebted at the time in excess of its assets, sold and delivered the property named in the complaint to its co-defendant, the Alabama National Bank, does not constitute such sale a general assignment for the benefit of all the creditors; or the said Alabama National Bank a trustee for such creditors.”

In Corey v. Wadsworth, (in Mss.) we cited and collated many authorities, and reached the following conclusions: That the capital stock and assets of an insolvent corporation are, in a sense, a trust fund, of which the governing board are trustees for the benefit of the creditors, and that such governing board can not convey or assign such corporate assets in such manner as to secure to themselves, or to any member of their board, as a creditor of the insolvent corporation, a preference over the other creditors. This principle rests not alone on the fact that the assets are a trust *442fund, of wbiob tbey are tbe trustees. It is largely supported by tbe undue "advantage tbe knowledge tbey necessarily bave of tbe corporation’s embarrassments will secure to them over outside creditors, and by tbe fact tbat in paying or securing themselves no antagonistic interest is represented. Tbey deal with themselves, and are thus both seller and buyer. Transactions of this kind by any one filling a fiduciary relation are voidable, if seasonably objected to by tbe beneficiary.

We did not, however, go to tbe length of bolding tbat directors of an insolvent corporation are so completely hampered by tbe trust relation tbey sustain, as to disable them from paying or securing some creditors, in preference to, and at tbe expense of others, to whom tbe corporation is indebted. Tbe trust element of tbe relation tbey sustain to tbe assets, considered alone, points in this direction; and perhaps it would be tbe sounder policy if such were tbe rule. Tbe very great weight of tbe authorities, however, is tbe other way, and we are not inclined to run counter to them.— Globe Iron R. & C. Co. v. Thacher, 87 Ala. 458; 2 Mor. Priv. Corp., § 802; Cook on Stock & Stockholders, § 691; 4 Amer. & Eng. Encyc. of Law, 220; Catlin v. Eagle Bank, 6 Conn. 233; Savings Bank v. Bates, 8 Conn. 505; Dana v. Bank U. S., 5 Watts & S. 233; Wilkinson v. Banerle, 41 N. J. Eq., 635; State of Md. v. Pres. & Dir. Bank, 6 Gill. & Johns. 205; Ringo v. Biscoe, 13 Ark. 563; 2 Wat. Corp., § 208; Hospes v. Nor. Wes. Man’g. Co., 50 N. W. Rep. 1117. See also Ashurst’s App. 60 Penn. St., 290; Rouse v. Mer. National Bank, 5 L. R. Annotated, 378.

Before any ruling was made on tbe demurrer to tbe original bill, complainants were permitted to amend, and a demurrer was interposed to the amendment. Tbe amended bill charges “tbat said Geo. D. Scott was tbe manager and one of tbe officers of said Geo. D. Scott Oo. Tbat at tbe time of tbe sale aforesaid to tbe defendant Bank tbe said Geo. D. Scott was personally liable for said indebtedness of the said Geo. D. Scott Co. to tbe Alabama National Bank, having become liable therefor as guarantor, or indorser, or joint maker of a note or notes given therefor; tbat tbe said Geo. D. Scott, without any meeting of tbe board of directors of bis company, or any participation or authority from them, turned over to tbe defendant Bank all tbe assets of said Scott Co. as aforesaid, in payment of said indebtedness in which be was interested, and for which be bad become responsible, and was then personally responsible.”

One ground of demurrer to tbe amended bill is. in sub*443stance, tbat the additional averments therein made do not give it equity. The City Court sustained the grounds of demurrer we have noted, and that ruling raises the question presented by this appeal.

It is nowhere charged in the bill or amendment that the corporation known as the “Geo. D. Scott Company” had a board of directors. But, being a private corporation, we suppose it had. The statute requires that they shall have such board, and we can not suppose this company disobeyed this statutory requirement. — Code of 1886, § 1665. The amended bilí, as we have seen, charges that Scott alone conveyed to the bank, without the authority or sanction of the board of directors. If this be so, the sale did not vest a good title in the bank. Sales of that kind could be made only by the board of directors; and not every sale by them would be valid. —Cook on Stock and Stockholders, § 712 ; 1 Morawetz Corp., §§ 511-12-13; Dana v. Bank U. S., 5 Watts & Serg. 223; Beach Priv. Corp., § 241.

But the amended bill charges, also, that Scott, equally with the corporation, was personally bound to the bank for the debt he attempted to pay by a sale of the corporation’s assets; tha the was co-maker, indorser, or guarantor of the Geo. D. Scott Company’s debt to the bank. A sale so made would, in effect, be making himself a preferred creditor of an insolvent corporation, and a director, or member of the governing board, is without authority to do that. Corey v. Wadsworth, (Mss.); Gibson v. Trowbridge Furniture Co., ante p. 357; Birmingham M. & M. Co. v. Mut. Loan & Trust Co., ante p. 364.

If the averments of the amended bill set forth the true facts, the sale or assignment of Scott to the Alabama National Bank can have no other effect than to place them in trust for the equal benefit of all the creditors of the insolvent corporation, the Geo. D. Scott Company.

To the extent the decretal order of the City Court conflicts with this opinion, it must be reversed.

Beversed and remanded.

McClellaN, J., dissenting.