Anglo-American Land, Mortgage & Agency Co. v. Lombard
Decision Date | 16 July 1904 |
Docket Number | 1858-1861. |
Citation | 132 F. 721 |
Parties | ANGLO-AMERICAN LAND, MORTGAGE & AGENCY CO., Limited, v. LOMBARD (two cases.) RAMSDEN v. CHESHIRE PROVIDENT INST. SAME v. KEENE FIVE CENT SAV. BANK. |
Court | U.S. Court of Appeals — Eighth Circuit |
[Copyrighted Material Omitted][Copyrighted Material Omitted]
These were actions at law prosecuted by plaintiffs in error, as creditors of the Lombard Investment Company, a Kansas corporation (called herein the 'Kansas Company') against defendants in error, as stockholders of that company, to enforce the additional or double liability imposed by the Constitution and statutes of Kansas upon stockholders in corporations organized under the laws of that state, and to enforce a claimed unpaid subscription to additional stock issued by the corporation.
The petition allege, in effect, that all of the assets and property of the Kansas Company were placed in the possession of a receiver or receivers appointed in a creditors' suit commenced September 18, 1893, against that company and the Missouri Company, hereinafter mentioned, in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Western District of Missouri; that the bill in the creditors' suit prayed, in addition to the appointment of a receiver, an adjudication of the claims against the Kansas Company, a sale of its property, and the application of the proceeds upon the claims allowed; that the Anglo-American Company and the assignors of Ramsden intervened in the suit, and procured an adjudication of their claims against the Kansas Company; that the assets and property of the company were sold, and the proceeds distributed among the creditors, pursuant to a final decree entered May 22, 1895, in which the company was adjudged to have been insolvent at and subsequent to the time of the filing of the bill; that the orders and decree in the suit in the Western District of Missouri were confirmed by like proceedings in an ancillary suit in the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Kansas; that since said proceedings and sale the company has been wholly without any assets or property of any kind; that about August 1, 1890, the company, with its officers, permanently left the state of Kansas, and removed its offices therefrom; that at the same time the stockholders of the Kansas Company transferred the entire stock of that company, amounting to $1,875,000, to the Lombard Investment Company of Missouri, a newly organized Missouri corporation (called herein the 'Missouri Company'), in exchange for a like amount of the stock of the latter company, the total of which was $4,000,000; that this transfer and exchange were merely colorable, and made for the purpose of escaping the liability imposed upon stockholders by the Constitution and laws of the state of Kansas; that the transfer and exchange were therefore void, and in nowise relieved the stockholders of the Kansas Company from such liability; that defendants were at all of these times, and are now, stockholders of the Kansas Company; that plaintiffs are severally creditors of the Kansas Company upon claims allowed and adjudicated in the creditors' suit, as before stated; and that the amounts claimed by plaintiffs are due to them, respectively, after deducting the distributive shares or dividends received through the sale made under the decree in the creditors' suit.The prayer in each case is for a money judgment.
In addition to a set-off pleaded in two cases, three defenses presented by the answers are insisted upon: (1) The relief sought by plaintiffs is equitable in character, and cannot be had in actions at law.(2)The Anglo-American Company and the assignors of Ramsden accepted the benefits of the transaction of which the transfer of stock was part, and, with full knowledge of all the facts, acquiesced in, consented to, and affirmed, the transfer.In connection with this defense, the answers allege: (3) The claims are barred by the statute of limitations.In their replies to these answers, plaintiffs fully put in issue the allegation that they agreed to the transfer, and consented to substitute the Missouri Company as the debtor in lieu of the Kansas Company, and to discharge and release the latter from any obligation upon its part.The replies also contain these allegations: It was stipulated in the cases against James L. Lombard and B. Lombard, Jr., that plaintiff's recovery, if any, should be $15,000, with interest, in each case; that the statute of limitations of Missouri should apply in the case against James L. Lombard, and that of Massachusetts in the case against B. Lombard, Jr., these being the states of their residence, and their submission to the jurisdiction of the court below being voluntary; and that the action against the former should be deemed to have been commenced July 18, 1898, and the action against the latter May 27, 1898.The cases were tried together to the court, the parties having filed written stipulations waiving a jury.There was no general...
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