Court Opinion

ID: 8814551
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-26 15:14:05.026022+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:04:25.099516
License: Public Domain

HUNT, Circuit Judge
(after stating the facts as above). [1, 2] Plaintiff in error takes the ground that the contract referred to was made for the benefit of. the Hotel Company, as well as for the benefit of its creditors; that the Hotel Company is a party in privity and entitled to recover money paid out of its treasury, which inured to the benefit of the Estate Company, and which should have been paid out of the funds of the Estate Company, and relies principally upon the decision of this court in Weinhard et al. v. Estate Co., 247 Fed. 951, 160 C. C. A. 376, affirming Weinhard et al. v. Estate Co. (D. C.) 242 Fed. 315. We there held that, under the contract between the Estate Company and the Gevurtz Company, the Estate Company assumed-the entire indebtedness of the Hotel Company and looked to the indemnity evidenced by the warranty obligation for reimbursement for any liabilities in excess of the $210,000 that it might have to pay in-order to clear the hotel property of the debts incurred by the Flotel Company. The facts of that case were that Weinhard’s claim against the Flotel Company was upon a note executed March 6, 1912, to the Estate Company by the Hotel Company and the Gevurtz corporation, and we regarded the claim as a part of the debt of the Hotel Company owing upon January 10, 1913, or at the time of the purchase and assumption by the Estate Company, and therefore held the Estate Company liable for its payment. The rule of that case clearly controls as-to all creditors of the Hotel Company who were such prior to and at the date of the agreement of assumption and to whom Gevurtz Company was liable. The question here is whether, under the contracts, the Estate Company is liable for the balances due upon the debts of the Flotel Company here sued upon and which have been paid.
,At the time of the purchase of the stock by the Estate Company, the Hotel Company owed about $244,000. The Gevurtz Company, which sold the stock, was secondarily liable to pay these debts. The Estate Company made no contract, directly, at least, with the Hotel Company *300or with any of the creditors of the Hotel Company. It did agree, however, with the Gevurtz corporation, to clear the Hotel Company of the debt which the Gevurtz corporation was then carrying. It was not held in the Weinhard Case, supra, that the Estate Company assumed any other or greater liability than that which rested on the Gevurtz corporation, or that the Estate Company would be liable for a greater amount than the Hotel Company owed at the time of the transfer. Nor was it decided that there was any agreement whereunder the Hotel Company was relieved of the obligation to pay its own debts. In other words, it has not been held that the Estate Company substituted itself as a principal debtor so as to relieve the Hotel Company of all liability. We must measure the obligation of the Estate Company solely by the terms of the contract it made with the Gevurtz Company and what was done thereunder. Clearly the purpose of the contract between the Estate Company and the Gevurtz corporation was to clear the Hotel Company-of debts which it owed at the time of the purchase óf the stock. The money which the Estate Company was paying for the stock was to be applied in payment of claims against the Hotel Company.
But the language of the contract expressly provided that the Estate Company disclaimed the assumption or acknowledgment of any liabilities of the Hotel Company or the payment of any greater sum for the stock than represented by the purchase price of the stock. The $35,000 advanced was “accommodation” to the Gevurtz corporation and not an acknowledgment of any assumption of debt of the Hotel Company. The obligation of the Hotel Company to pay its own debts never was extinguished, although a creditor of the Hotel Company on January 16, 1913, could have enforced payment as against the Estate Company because of the implied assumption of payment of his claim under the Estate Company contract with the Gevurtz corporation. Such a claim, however, was against the Hotel Company, yet enforceable against the Estate Company because of the guaranty. The attitude of the Estate Company was not unlike that of a surety to a contract.
The allegation by the trustee that the Estate Company, as owner of the stock of the Hotel Company, “caused” the Hotel Company to pay debts amounting to $14,000, which the Hotel Company owed, implies, as we understand it, that the Hotel Company was obliged to do that which it ought not to have done, and that the Estate Company has become responsible for a depletion of the estate of the Hotel Company to the amoimt of $14,000. But, as it is plain that the Hotel Company owed the money, paying it was certainly not wrongful, even though another corporation was secondarily liable for the payment of the debts. The fact that the Estate Company had agreed with the Gevurtz corporation to pay debts that the Hotel Company failed to pay does not make the payment by the Hotel Company unlawful.
While the Estate Company could have made a general enforceable promise to pay the claims of the creditors of the Hotel Company, it did not do so, and when it acquired ownership of the hotel it had a right to “cause” the Hotel Company to pay $14,000 of its own debts out of its own earnings, provided, always, there was no fraud or unlawful preference. Questions of unlawful preference, however, are *301not material. If the Gevurtz corporation had remained owner of the Hotel Company stock, the Gevurtz Company would have had the right to cause the Hotel Company to pay the debts for which the Gevurtz Company was surety, and, if there had been a failure, it would have had the right 1o require the Estate Company to make the payment.
[3] It is said, however, that in its proof of claim in the Gevurtz Company bankruptcy proceedings the Estate Company included the four claims involved in this suit, and which amounted to some $14,000, and that the Estate Company received a dividend of some 23 per cent, on the claims out of the assets of the Gevurtz Company estate in bankruptcy. Assuming that the court should have ruled that such proof was admissible, it would not have affected the case. The Estate Company being liable for payment of the claims on an implied assumption of the Gevurtz corporation obligation to pay them, whether the Estate Company paid the $14,000 directly or not, or whether the Hotel Company paid it, the loss would come finally upon the Estate Company as owner of the stock of the Hotel Company, and such loss would be covered by the indemnity contract between the Gevurtz corporation and the Estate Company. Under the terms of the warranty the Estate Company had a right of action against the Gevurtz corporation to recover the $14,000, and therefore had a provable claim against the Ge-vurtz Company estate in the bankruptcy court.
The primary liability of the Hotel Company is the determining point; and as the Hotel Company has paid the debts in question, the transactions had between the Estate Company and the Gevurtz corporation cannot be made the subject of complaint by the Hotel Company. The trustee of the estate of the Hotel Company, bankrupt, cannot avail himself of the benefit of a promise made by the Estate Company to the Gevurtz corporation, when the Hotel Company could not have compelled the Gevurtz corporation to pay the debts of the Hotel Company. Those who were benefited by die Gevurtz guaranty and the Estate Company’s assumption were those creditors of the Hotel Company in existence January 16, 1913, and, as all such have been paid, the Hotel Company has no cause of action. Brower Lumber Co. v. Miller, 28 Or. 570, 43 Pac. 659, 52 Am. St. Rep. 807; Jefferson v. Asch, 53 Minn. 446, 55 N. W. 604, 25 L. R. A. 257, 39 Am. St. Rep. 618; Parker v. Jeffery, 26 Or. 186, 37 Pac. 712; Washburn v. Investment Co., 26 Or. 436, 36 Pac. 533, 38 Pac. 620.
Nor can we find any fraud upon creditors. The creditors, except the Estate Company, of the 'Hotel Company, have been paid, and there seems to be no cause of action in favor of the Hotel Company against the Estate Company for failure to perform the contract with Gevurtz Company, made for the benefit of the existing creditors of the Hotel Company.
The judgment is affirmed.