14 Mo. App. 109 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1883
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was a bill in equity against James S. Eollins, George J. Davis, and the superintendent of the insurance department of Missouri in charge of the assets of the Life Association of America, to avoid a transaction by which Eollins obtained possession of certain stock notes and bonds, part of the assets of the Columbia Life Insurance Company. Judgment is asked against Eollins for the amount of the notes, which were made by him, and that he be required to deliver up the bonds.
The petition alleges that Davis acquired these assets by fraud, and fraudulently transferred them to Eollins, in furtherance of a conspiracy between Davis, the Life Association, and A. M. Britton, of which Eollins had notice, to release the stockholders of the Columbia (once called the St. Louis Life Association), and to effect a merger of that company with the Life Association of America by means of a transfer of all the stock of the former to the latter company, which was then to reorganize, directors of the Life Association being first chosen directors of the Columbia for that purpose.
Before any answers were filed, plaintiff dismissed as to the Life Association. Davis filed a general denial. Eollins, after a general denial, sets up that he sold his stock to Davis in good faith, and received his stock notes in pax-t
On hearing, plaintiff’s petition was dismissed. The matters in controversy have been repeatedly before this court in the progress of the complicated litigations growing out of these transactions. Especially the matters in evidence in this case wore before this court in Alexander v. Relfe (9 Mo. App. 133), and in Alexander v. Supe et al. (11 Mo. App. 597). Besides a great deal of viva voce testimony, the whole record of this court and of the supreme court in Alexander v. Relfe (supra), was put in evidence on this trial. The testimony is, of course, very voluminous. The sum of it, so far as it is material for the purpose of this appeal, is as follows : —
The St. Louis Life Insurance Company was first called the Mound City Mutual Life Insurance Company ; it changed its name repeatedly. Its last name was the Columbia, and by that name, to avoid confusion, it will be called in this opinion.
It appears that defendant, Rollins, whose residence was throughout at Columbia, Missouri, subscribed, in December, 1873, for one hundred shares of the capital stock of the Columbia, of the par of $100. At the same time, Rollins borrowed of the Columbia $10,000, for which he delivered his two notes, one for $1,500 at one year, and the other for $8,500 at three years, and delivered as collateral, eleven Missouri State bonds of $1,000 each. Rollins paid for his stock with the money thus borrowed. The notes remained in the possession of the Columbia until December 10, 1875, and were unpaid, except as to $1,000 credited in April, 1875, on the $1,500 note.
Mr. Davis then submitted a list of securities belonging to
“ Resolved, That the vice-president be authorized to sell and deliver to George J. Davis the following securities, or any one or all of said securities, at the price named in the list hereto appended, and that the vice-president be authorized to receive in payment for said securities, so sold and delivered, the draft of W. H. Hough, president, drawn at one day’s sight to the order of George J. Davis and by him indorsed to the Life Association of America and by said Association accepted.”
The list of securities mentioned in the contract, with prices aggregating $1,111,898.34, follows. The notes of Rollins are included, and they were afterwards duly indorsed by the Columbia and delivered to Davis. Davis complied with his contract, and received in payment, on December 10, 1875, from Britton, as acting president of the Columbia, the draft of the Life Association for $1,111,-898.34 to Davis’ order. This draft Davis indorsed without recourse and delivered to the Columbia on December 10th, on which day the minutes of that company show that the president informed the board that Davis had tendered to him the draft as specified in the resolutions on the 30th, and that, in accordance with those resolutions, he had sold and delivered the securities. The directory of the Columbia then resigned, and the Life Association, holding all its stock, elected a directory composed of persons who had been directors of the Columbia. Besides the Rollins notes, there were, amongst the assets transferred, notes of the firm of which Davis was a member, of Lomax, and of Britton. These persons all got back their notes from Davis
In the record in the case of Alexander v. Relfe introduced in this case, there was evidence tending to show that the whole transaction between the two companies was in good faith apd believed to be for the benefit of the Columbia; there was also evidence tending to show that it was a fraudulent plot on the part of Davis, Lomax, Britton, and others to appropriate and waste the assets of the Columbia. The circuit court, in the case just cited, found that the facts in evidence showed no fraudulent intent on the part •of these men or the directory. The supreme court found that the transaction was a constructive fraud, at least, and that the acts of the two corporations which resulted in the cancellation and retirement of the capital stock, were unlawful. Alexander v. Relfe, 74 Mo. 495.
There is no evidence tending to show that defendant Rollins knew or suspected any fraud. There is nothing in the testimony, so far as we can see, that tends to throw any discredit upon the following very explicit declaration in his testimony in this case : —
“ If any conspiracy or confederacy, as. charged in the petition, existed between the St. Louis Life Association, George J. Davis, and A. M. Britton, or either of them, or any other parties, I never heard of it, suspected it, or knew anything about it. When I received my notes and bonds from George J. Davis in exchange for my stock, I supposed he had become the true and lawful owner, and as such that*117 he had the legal right to sell the same, and I did not know nor have any reasons to believe, that Mr. Davis had become the owner of my notes for any improper motives, or in any improper or illegal manner, or with any intent to wrong or injure the St. Louis Life Insurance Company, or its creditors, or stockholders, or that the company had thereby become weakened in any way, or the stockholders or creditors thereof become any less secure.”
As to actual notice of any fraud, it is clear that defendant Eollins had none.
The attempt is, to hold Eollins on account of notice to Britton, who it is said, was the agent of Eollins in the matter of the sale of stock, and of the position of Eollins as a stockholder of the Columbia.
1. As to the first, we see no evidence to warrant a finding that Britton was the agent of Eollins in any such sense as to affect Eollins with notice of what Britton knew.
Eollins had known Britton slightly for many years ; but he had no intimate acquaintance with him. Eollins positively swears that, to his knowledge, Britton never was his agent, for any purpose whatever; that he never, in any way, authorized Britton to act for him in the matter in controversy, and never saw, spoke, or wrote to Britton about the matter; that it may be possible that Britton forwarded to him the notes and collateral; but that, if this be so, he does not recollect it.
Plaintiff introduced a memorandum of the transaction between Davis and Eollins, which does not appear to have been made by Eollins, as follows: —
“ James S. Eollins......100 shares.
Cash.........$10,450
Paid by collateral 23 ... . . . . 500
$8,500
Interest.........540
Cash........ 1,000 ”
“A. M. B.”
This is dated the day of the check. It was shown that Davis wrote to Rollins at Columbia to send the stock to him, or to some person in St. Louis, for Rollins. This is all the testimony as to that matter; and it is not enough, we think, to affect Rollins with notice of what Britton knew about the transaction.
2. Appellant contends that the stock notes of Rollins were noil-negotiable; that Davis was not an innocent purchaser for value, and that Rollins was bound to inquire how Davis got possession of his stock notes. The notes of Rollins were negotiable in form. It was held by the circuit ■court of the United States for the eastern district of Arkansas, in a similar case arising out of the very same transaction here in litigation (Alexander v. Homer, 11 C. L. J. 111), that insurance companies have the power to take and hold negotiable paper and other securities in the general conduct of their business, and that this includes the power to negotiate them; and that, even if Davis ■obtained the note of a stockholder by fraud, as stock notes, such as the one in suit are negotiable, the maker is discharged from liability to the payee if he paid the note to the fraudulent holder without notice of the fraud ; and that the ■discharge extends to the original consideration. Appellant ■contends, however, that that decision ought not be regarded as in point, for the reason that it does not appear that Judge Caldwell, by whom it was delivered, had before him the Missouri statute. The statute in question (Wag. Stats., p. 744, sects. 19, 20), so far as we can see, says nothing which directly or indirectly, tends to impair the negotiability of a note given for stock in a mutual company. On the contrary the power to accept such paper involves the power to utilize it. We thiuk with the learned judge of the circuit
A balance on the smaller note was, however, overdue. But, as between Davis and the corporation, the title of Davis was perfect. This might have enabled the corporation to recover on the note from Eollins, if Davis had stolen the note and had been paid by Eollins as legal holder for value, when he was not so. It is creditors of the corporation, through its receiver, who claim that Eollins knew that this asset of the corporation was transfered to Davis in fraud of their rights ; and, to recover a second time from Eollins, they must show that such was the nature of the transaction between Davis and the corporation, and that Eollins knew it, or was bound to know it, and would have known it if he had done his duty.
What duty had Eollins in the premises? He held stock
We can not hold, either, that an insurance corporation, as such, can not dispose of its negotiable assets, or that the stockholder of such a company, if he sells his stock for its fair price, to one who offers him in part payment of it the negotiable securities which the stockholder had formerly given to the company, is bound to inquire how and where the purchaser obtained those securities, oris affected with notice of a secret conspiracy between this purchaser and the directory to wreck the company for their benefit.
We think the judgment should be affirmed. It is so ordered.