196 P. 457 | Ariz. | 1921
William B. Duvall brought this suit in the superior court of Santa Cruz county in December, 1916, against the Cerro Cobre Development Company and the American Surety Company, corporations, alleging two causes of action. In the first, he seeks to recover five thousand dollars upon an injunction bond, and in the second, fifteen thousand dollars upon a supersedeas bond, both given in a case entitled “Cerro Cobre Development Company, a Corporation, and H. G. Luphold, Plaintiffs, v. W. B. Duvall, Charles H. Kittredge, and West Coast Copper Mines Company, a Corporation, Defendants,’’ which was filed in the superior court of Santa Cruz county in April, 1914.
In December, 1910, W. B. Duvall had filed a complaint in the superior court (then territorial district. court) of Santa Cruz county, against the Cerro Cobre Development Company, a corporation, in which he sought to have himself declared the owner of 1,000,000 shares of the capital stock of the West Coast Copper
The plaintiffs in case No. 2, which was filed while case No. 1 was being tried, alleged that the original capital stock of the West Coast Copper Mines Company was two million sháres of the par value of one dollar each, and that the Cerro Cobre Development Company was the owner of the one million shares which had been issued to Duvall as trustee, and, among other things, prayed for the appointment of a receiver for the West Coast Copper Mines Company, pending the trial, and for a temporary injunction, restraining W. B. Duvall from selling or transferring any of the said one million shares of stock or of the remaining one million shares of treasury stock which had also been issued to him. On July 6, 1914, two months after it had been adjudged by the superior court of Santa Cruz county, in case No. 1, that Duvall was the owner of this one million shares of stock, a receiver was appointed and a writ of injunction ordered issued in case No. 2, restraining Duvall from selling or in any wise transí erring any of the said one million shares of stock, upon the giving by the plaintiffs in that case of a bond in the sum of five thousand dollars, which was done August 8, 1914, with the American Surety Company as surety. On
The case was tried before a jury, which returned a verdict for the plaintiff in both causes of action — in the first, for five thousand dollars, with interest; and in the second, for fifteen thousand dollars, with interest. Judgment was entered on the verdicts for twenty thousand dollars, with interest on five thousand dollars from August 6, 1914, and on fifteen thousand dollars from May 24, 1915, the dates of the representative bonds. From this judgment and the order denying a motion for a new trial defendants appeal.
The first error assigned is the court’s refusal to give the following instructions:
“(1) You are instructed that as a matter of law plaintiff is not entitled to recover in this action, and your verdict should be in favor of the defendants. .
“(3) You are instructed that as a matter of law plaintiff is not entitled to recover on his second cause of action herein, and your verdict on that cause of action should be in favor of defendants.”
Appellants contend that these instructions should have been given because there wás a total lack of evidence showing, or even tending to show, that plaintiff suffered any damage,. either as a result of the issuing of the injunction originally or by reason of the stay bond’s continuation of it after the order of dissolution. They should have been given, if there was no evidence of damage, but if any substantial proof of this allegation was adduced it was for the jury to say whether the plaintiff had been actually damaged in the manner alleged, and, if so, to what extent. It is only where there is a total lack of evidence, or where the evidence so greatly preponderates one way that there can be no question as to what the verdict should be, that a court is justified in giving a peremptory instruction of this kind.' The weight of the evidence is always for the jury. The duty of this court, under these circumstances, is expressed in Rouillier v. Schuster Co., 18 Ariz. 175, 157 Pac. 976:
“The Supreme Court will not weigh the evidence to determine whether or not it would have reached a different conclusion from that of the trial court,” but confines itself “to ascertain only whether or not the judgment is reasonably supported or justified by any substantial evidence.”
The stock Duvall was restrained from selling was decreed by both the superior and supreme courts of this state to be his property. The injunction was in force from August 6, 1914, to December 13, 1916, a period
The West Coast Copper Mines Company was organized by Duvall, October 8, 1909, under the laws of Arizona, and its entire assets were five hundred and forty-eight thousand shares of the capital stock of the West Coast Smelting & Refining Company, another Arizona corporation with a capitalization of one million shares of the par value of ten dollars each. The assets of the West Coast Smelting & Refining Company were the capital stock of a Mexican corporation known as the “Tecolote Copper Company, S. A.,” with a capitalization of five thousand shares of the par value of one dollar each. The assets of the Tecolote Copper Company, S.- A., were the Tecolote mines and the Artemisa mine, together with a number of other claims “denounced” or located by Duvall, all in the republic of Mexico. These mines, for which Duvall testified he paid one hundred thousand dollars in gold, on which six hundred thousand dollars had been spent in development, and which, in his judgment, were a good investment at ten million dollars,
“These sales were all made at the same time as the other sales I have referred to, and were made after I left here to go back there. I will explain how they were all made at practically the same time. These gentlemen were anticipating holding, or purchasing the stock, and wanted to hold off to see what was the action of this court in regard to the million shares of stock, and when the court determined that I went right back and closed up the deal. . . . These-people signed subscription blanks. Some paid cash and some signed subscription blanks, and some to pay at some future date. Some were completed, but most of them were canceled. When I reported on the twenty-second day of December, 1914, that a receivership had been issued against the mines company and that I could not elect our board of directors, they all went up in the air and quit. I was dovetailing these companies in, and what affected one affected the others, and I had large negotiations on with the mines company stock, and this injunction prevented
Regarding the value of the stock when the injunction was dissolved, Duvall testified as follows:
“It was worthless from my standpoint because I could not raise any money on the stock. In the first place these injunctions and these different lawsuits had put me in bad with my people, and in the second place the revolution was on in Europe, and the thing went to the bad.”
Previous to the bringing of case No. 2 in the Arizona courts, Charles Keller and other stockholders of the Cerro Cobre Development Company had, in May, 1912, filed suit in the court of common pleas of Allegheny county, Pennsylvania, against Duvall, appellee herein, and others, for the purpose of having the mines, constituting the assets of the Tecolote Copper Company, S. A., decreed to be the property of a Mexican corporation known as the “Sierra De Cobre Development Company, S. A.” Chas. D. Ricker, a stockholder and the secretary of the Cerro Cobre Development Company, had also filed two actions in the same Pennsylvania court previous to that time, to wit, the first, in July, 1912, against the West Coast Copper Mines Company, to recover five thousand shares of its capital stock, in which he alleged that the assets of that company were believed by persons interested, including himself, to be of great value; and the second, in February, 1913, against Duvall, appellee herein, for a debt of seven thousand nine hundred dollars and seventy-three cents, in which he attached Duvall’s million shares of West Coast Copper Mines Company stock. No one of these three cases has been tried or dismissed, and the attachment in the last-mentioned case is still in force. In case No. 2, in which the injunction and supersedeas bonds were given, the complaint, filed in April, 1914, and sworn to by Ricker,
H. G. Luphold, one-time secretary and treasurer of the West Coast Copper Mines Company and the West Coast Smelting & Refining Company, and Charles D. Ricker, plaintiff in two of the actions just mentioned, both testified that the filing of the stockholders’ suit, in May, 1912, in the Pennsylvania courts, against W. B. Duvall, the West Coast Smelting & Refining Company, the West Coast Copper Mines Company, the Tecolote Copper Company, S. A., and the Sierra De Cobre Development Company, S. A., to compel a conveyance of the mining , property standing in the name of the Tecolote Copper Company to the Sierra De Cobre Development Company, S. A., practically destroyed the value of, and stopped all sales of, the stocks and bonds of the West Coast Smelting & Refining Company, and consequently rendered valueless the stock of the West Coast Copper Mines Company, since whatever value the stock of either of these corporations possessed came altogether from the mines belonging to the Tecolote Copper Company, S. A., whose entire capital stock was owned by the West Coast Smelting & Refining Company. John M. Freeman, an attorney of Pittsburg, Pennsylvania, who brought the Pennsylvania suit for the plaintiffs, testified by deposition that if it were successful the West Coast Copper Mines Company would be deprived of all its mining property, and its stock rendered entirely worthless.
The appointment of a receiver for the West Coast Copper Mines Company, on July 6, 1914, the day the injunction was ordered issued, according to Duvall’s testimony, prevented him from voting the five hundred and forty-eight thousand shares of West Coast Smelting & Refining Company stock, owned by the West Coast Copper Mines Company, at the annual
“Both together [injunction and receivership] caused it, and you prevented me electing a board of directors which would finance the company and the receivership [injunction] stopped me from delivering any of the shares which I could sell and get money on.’’
It was only a matter of calculation for the jury to deduce from this testimony that the par value of the five hundred and forty-eight thousand shares of West Coast Smelting & Refining, Company stock, owned by the West Coast Copper Mines Company, was five million four hundred and eighty thousand dollars, and that if this stock was being sold, or negotiated for, just previous to the injunction, at five dollars per share, as testified by Duvall, the value of the five hundred and forty-eight thousand shares at that time was two million seven hundred and forty thousand dollars, and that Duvall, consequently, owned one-half of the capital stock of a corporation which owned in another corporation stock valued at two million seven hundred and forty thousand dollars, though the latter corporation had sold its bonds in the sum of four hundred and fifty thousand dollars, for which its assets had been pledged. In addition to this, the jury had the statements of Duvall as to the value of the mining property which gave the stock of these various corporations whatever value it possessed, together with, Ricker’s sworn statement in two separate complaints that the stock of the West Coast Copper Mines Company was of great value, as well as Luphold’s and Ricker’s testimony, in contradiction of the latter, that the stock of neither the West Coast Smelting & Refining Company nor of the West Coast Copper Mines Company had any value after the filing of the
“There are various tests for determining the value of stock in a corporation. In the absence of any other evidence of value, the par value is presumptively the value of the stock. ... In this case, however, evidence was introduced tending to show the insolvency of the corporation, the value of its property, and its liabilities. This evidence may be properly looked to for the purpose of determining the value of the stock of the corporation. ‘There is no better or safer criterion to determine the value of stock of an insolvent corporation than a comparison of the value of its assets with the amount of its liabilities.’ ”
In discussing this proposition, the Supreme Court of Kentucky, in the case of White v. Jouett, 147 Ky. 197, 144 S. W. 55, used this language:
“In the absence of a known market value, it is proper to admit evidence of the value of the corporation’s assets and indebtedness, for the purpose of fixing the value of the stock.”
Appellants urge that there is no evidence of any depreciation in thg value of Duvall’s stock after the issuance of the injunction, but that, on the contrary, it clearly appears that it remained the same during the life of the restraining order because the mining property, upon which its value was based, still belonged to the, Tecolote Copper Company, S. A., and
The court’s refusal to give the following instruction is assigned as error:
“The court instructs the jury that if you find from the evidence that the one million shares of stock of the West Coast Copper Mines Company owned by-plaintiff, W. B. Duvall, and which he was restrained from selling under the injunction, had been attached, as alleged in defendant’s answer herein, prior to the issuance of said injunction, and that said attachment remained in force all the time the said injunction was in force, and that said attachment prevented said plaintiff from selling said shares of stock, then your verdict should be in favor of defendants on both causes of action.”
The plaintiffs in the injunction suit did not rely on the attachment to prevent Duvall’s selling his stock, for it was in effect and had been for eighteen months when they procured the restraining order. It is true that possession of the stock could not have been given while the attachment lien was in force, yet there are several methods by which this handicap could have been overcome by Duvall if he had been free to sell, namely, he could have paid Bicker’s indebtedness and the costs of court, in which case the attachment would have been released; or he could, under the laws of Pennsylvania, have filed a bond in the sum of twenty thousand dollars, the amount fixed by the order directing the issuance of the writ, in which case the attachment would have been released; or he could have sold the stock subject to the attachment. In view of the last alternative, the instruction would only have been proper in case the evidence had shown that the stock could have been sold for no greater
The jury awarded five thousand dollars and interest on the first cause of action, and fifteen thousand dollars and interest on the second cause of action. The court interpreted this to mean that the plaintiff was entitled to interest from the date of- the respective bonds and so entered the judgment. The authorities hold:
“That interest on an injunction bond can only be recovered from the date that the complaint therefor is filed.” City of Tacoma v. Sperry, 82 Wash. 393, 144 Pac. 544.
The judgment is modified by allowing interest on the twenty thousand dollars from December 21, 1916, the date the complaint was filed, and, as modified, stands affirmed. <
ROSS, O. J., and BAKER, J., concur.