O'Brien v. Drayage Transfer Co.
O'Brien v. Drayage Transfer Co.
Opinion of the Court
On March. 15, 1893, the respondent began bis suit in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis, against the St. Louis Drayage O'ompany, an Illinois corporation, but doing business in St. Louis, Missouri. This suit culminated in a final judgment in respondent’s favor for $800 on January 15,1898. On November 15, same year, an execution was issued and delivered to the sheriff, who summoned the appellant as garnishee and returned the execution nulla bona. To interrogatories filed the garnishee answered no indebtedness to defendant, and non-possession of any of its property or effects. Plaintiff in the execution, in reply to this answer, alleged substantially, that P. P. Henseler, the president and general manager of the St. Louis Drayage Company, without authority oí the board .of directors of said company, and for the purpose of defrauding the creditors of the St. Louis Drayage Company, and especially the plaintiff in execution, had transferred all the property and effects of his company to the garnishee; that the garnishee was a party to the fraud and under color of title acquired by such fraudulent transfer and held the property of the St. Louis Drayage Company. The. reply of the garnishee was a general denial. The issues were submitted to a jury, who found for the plaintiff; a motion for new trial filed by the garnishee was overruled, and judgment rendered on the verdict, from which the garnishee duly appealed.
The evidence is that the St. Louis Drayage Company was composed of three stockholders, one Hills, George Henseler and P. P. Henseler; that P. P. Henseler was the president and manager of the company, and George Henseler its secretary; that it owned from seven to forty wagons, a like number of harness sets and tarpaulins, and from fourteen to sixty head uf horses, and about $3,000 in solvent accounts; that it owed, in addition to respondent’s judgment, $2,000 to $3,000; that a short time prior to March, 1895, the two Henselers verbally agreed that P. P. Henseler should take all the property and assets of Ifche corporation and pay all of its debts; that after-
The general manager of a corporation may, without express authority from the board of directors, do any act necessary to carry on the ordinary business of the corporation (Furguson & Wheeler v. Venice Transportation Company, 79 Mo. App. 352, decided by this court at the March term, 1899), but he can not, without a resolution of the board of directors, make a general assignment of the assets of the corporation for the benefit of his creditors (Calumet Paper Co. v. Haskell Ptg. Co., 144 Mo. 331; Furguson & Wheeler v. Venice Trans. Co., supra), much less can he strip the corporation of all its property 'and assets, by selling or transferring them to another person or corporation. The attempt of E. E. Henseler to transfer the property of the St. Louis Drayage Company to the appellant on his individual account and for his individual use - and benefit, was not only void in law, for want of any
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.