267 Mass. 7 | Mass. | 1929
This bill in equity is brought in behalf of the defendant Beaudette & Graham Company (hereinafter called the company), to set aside an alleged illegal issue to the defendant Graham of seven hundred fifty shares of the common stock of the company. Upon evidence reported the judge of the Superior Court found that the issue of this stock was illegal, and entered a decree ordering that Graham return to the company for cancellation a certificate of six hundred seventy-five shares held by him; that he procure and surrender to it for cancellation seventy-five additional shares of common stock or, in the alternative, pay into the treasury $2,625, representing the fair value of the seventy-five shares; that he also pay the company $1,350, being the amount of dividends on six hundred seventy-five shares received by him; that the company pay the plaintiffs $1,000 to reimburse them for reasonable expenses incurred in the employment of counsel to institute and prosecute the suit; and that the defendants pay costs.
When the evidence is reported, it is the duty of the court to examine it, reach its own conclusion as to the facts, and decide the case according to its own judgment, giving due weight to the findings of the judge. But findings made by him after a hearing in which witnesses have testified orally before him will not be reversed unless plainly wrong. Cook v. Mosher, 243 Mass. 149, 152, 153. Weinstein v. Miller, 249 Mass. 516, 520.
On February 19,1926, the directors, who were the defendant Graham, being the president and general manager of the company, the defendant French, a brother-in-law of Graham who held two shares of common stock, and the defendant McClintock, an employee holding one share, unanimously voted to purchase Graham’s rights in a contract dated February 18, 1926, between him and the Savage Arms Corporation of New York (hereinafter called the corporation), whereby Graham “acquired valuable and exclusive rights in the sale of ice cream cabinets manufactured by said Corporation”; and in full payment therefor it was voted to issue to him seven hundred fifty shares of common stock of the company, provided that Graham would relinquish and deliver to it on demand one share of such common stock for each two shares of unissued preferred stock when sold by it* for cash. The contract referred to in this vote was in the form of a letter from the corporation to Graham, written at Graham’s request, purporting to give him the selling rights1 in a certain territory and containing a provision for cancellation upon thirty days’ notice by either party. This contract, so called, was assigned to the company by Graham, March 31,1926, the corporation assenting thereto. The first electric
The common stock of the company was found to have a substantial value when the vote was passed, and the value of the seven hundred fifty shares issued to Graham was many times in excess of any value that the so called contract between him and the corporation had at the time the stock was issued to him. The defendants offered in evidence a release under seal of all demands from the plaintiff Joseph Beaudette to the defendant Graham and the company, dated December 1, 1926. The judge excluded the release subject to the defendants’ exception.
When suit is brought by a stockholder in a representative capacity to vindicate the rights of the corporation for wrongs committed by corporate officers, it is the corporation alone whose interests are immediately concerned. Such wrongs have no relation to the stockholder “except as he has a derivative and indirect interest.” Hayden v. Perfection Cooler
Directors of corporations are fiduciaries bound to the •strictest good faith in caring for and managing its property. Their paramount duty is to the corporation and their personal pecuniary interests are subordinate to this paramount duty. Elliott v. Baker, 194 Mass. 518, 523. Allen-Foster-Willett Co., petitioner, 227 Mass. 551, 556. Putnam v. Handy, 247 Mass. 406, 409, 411. Abbot v. Waltham Watch Co. 260 Mass. 81, 96. As a director Graham had the duty of “reasonably protecting and conserving the interests of the corporation.” Manning v. Campbell, 264 Mass. 386, 390. The judge refused to grant the defendants’ request to find that the contract was the private property of Graham and not held in trust. Ten days after Graham joined in the vote to increase the capital stock, and while he was president and general manager of the company drawing a substantial salary, he obtained from the corporation at his own request and in his own name the right to sell cabinets in a designated territory and parted with nothing of value for this right. At this time the company was engaged in selling appliances manufactured by the corporation and others, and the right obtained was of a character which the company would acquire if it could, and Graham was the person to acquire it for the company and on whom the company had a right to rely to act in the matter for its interests. In taking the contract in his own name Graham held it as trustee for the company. American Circular Loom Co. v. Wilson, 198 Mass. 182, 206, 207. York & North Midland Railway v.
It becomes unnecessary to consider other grounds upon which the contention is made that the issue of stock to Graham should be set aside. No reversible error has been shown in the parts of the decree awarding compensation to the plaintiffs and requiring Graham to restore dividends received and to account for the seventy-five shares not represented by the certificate for six hundred seventy-five shares of stock. Cases like Manton-Gaulin Manuf. Co. Inc. v. Colony, 255 Mass. 194, 199, holding that the mere fact that the relation of employer and employee exists is not enough to give the employer a vested right in the invention and patent monopoly of the employee, are decided on principles not applicable to the case at bar.
Decree affirmed with costs.