119 F. 202 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Pennsylvania | 1902
The complainant is the Calivada Colonization Company, a corporation of the state of Colorado, and the defendant is Milton D. Hays, a citizen- of the state of Pennsylvania. The bill was filed on July 13, 1901, by A. C. Hays, as receiver of the complainant company, and in its name. He was appointed such receiver by an order of this court made on December 30, 1900, on a bill filed at No. 17, May term, 1900. The heading of the bill in this case, after naming the complainant and defendant in the usual form, proceeds thus: “With notice to Elmer E. Stewart” and 52 other named' persons or corporations, who (the bill shows) respectively hold shares of the issue of stock which the bill impeaches and seeks to avoid. There is on file a paper which purports to be an acknowledgment by 17 of these persons of notice of the suit, and an affidavit of service of such notice on 10 others of the named persons. None of the 53 named persons or corporations, however, is a party to the suit. The case was set down by the parties for final hearing, and was so heard, upon the pleadings, namely, the bill, the answer of Milton D. Hays, and replication, and the proofs.
The bill sets forth that the Calivada Colonization Company is a corporation of the state of Colorado, and was incorporated on the nth -day of March, 1895, by letters patent, its authorized capital stock being $250,000, consisting of 250,000 shares, each of the par value of $1; that in said letters patent M. D. Hays, C. C. Marble, Frank Goodnow, .and A. C. Hays were named as directors of said company; that on the 13th day of March, 1895, three of these named persons, to wit, M. D. Hays, C. C. Marble, and A. C. Hays, held the first meeting of the board of directors, the minutes of the meeting showing that M. D. Hays was president, C. C. Marble secretary, and A. B. Grindall treasurer ; and that the said board of directors at that meeting adopted the ■following resolution:
“Resolved, that the board of directors of the Calivada Colonization Company, in consideration of the services, efforts, and information acquired and money expended by M. D. Hays in behalf of the company, hereby directs the issue to him of 126,000 shares of the capital stock at the par value of one ■dollar each in compensation therefor.”
The answer of Milton D. Hays, the defendant (which is under -oath), responsively and fully denies all and singular the allegations ■of the bill upon which the supposed right of the complainant to relief rests. Specifically, the answer traverses and denies each and every, averment of the bill, charging fraudulent or unlawful intent, purpose, or act in the adoption by the board of directors of the resolution of March 13, 1895, or in the issue of the stock thereby authorized, and the allegation of the want of consideration for the same, .and denies that all moneys expended by the defendant in behalf of the company were repaid to him. In respect to the subscription for 40,000 shares of stock, the answer, while admitting that as president ■of the company, and acting under a resolution of the board of directors, the defendant sold to the named subscribers these 40,000 shares, denies that he misled or deceived them, or withheld from them any information as to the issue of the 126,000 shares to himself, and avers that they were fully advised of the said issue and of the status of affairs, and that they subscribed for and got said stock from the company at the price of only 25 cents per share. Responding to the averment of the bill that the “defendant never conveyed •any real estate, or any option for the purchase of real estate, or gave any other lawful consideration for the said stock issued under the resolution of March 13,'1895,” the answer states that the scheme of the Calivada Colonization Company originated with the defendant, and that he spent much time and a large amount of money in various states of the West seeking a proper location; that at a great expenditure of time and labor he had procured agreements and options for the purchase of upwards of 100,000 acres of land, and also water rights, in different parts of the West, which agreements and ■options were valuable, and, if properly handled, capable of yielding large profits; that he turned over to the complainant company all his said agreements and rights, and gave the company the information he had acquired, and in all things put the company in the same position he occupied himself; that the 126,000 shares of stock were issued to the defendant to recompense him for the time and money spent by him in and about the work of the organization of the company and procuring the control of said property; that it was the ■defendant’s services and labor that made the stock of the company of any value whatever; that at" the time the resolutipn of March 13, 1895, was passed by the board of directors, it was agreed to by every person who owned stock in the Calivada. Colonization Company, and the stock was issued to the defendant with the knowledge rand sanction of all the stockholders; that there was no concealment
“Moved by F. L. Bo-nta, the members of tbis company present ratify all the acts of the former boards of directors during the years of 1895 and up * to March 17, 1896, at this meeting of the stockholders. Seconded by F. K. Higbie. Carried.”
The complainant not having waived an answer under oath, and the defendant’s answer being under oath and responsive to thé allegations of the bill, what effect is to1 be given to it? This question is solved by the ruling in Conley v. Nailor, 118 U. S. 127, 134, 6 Sup. Ct. 1001, 1005, 30 L. Ed. 112, where the supreme court said:
“The answer, though not called for under oath, is evidence in behalf of the defendant; for, if a plaintiff in equity is unwilling that the answer should be evidence against him, he must expressly waive the oath of the defendant in his bill. See amendment to forty-first equity rule. If he fails to do this, the answer must be given under oath and is evidence.”
In order to overthrow an answer responsive to the allegations of the bill, it is the universal rule that the complainant must have at least one sustaining witness and corroborative circumstances. Now, the minute book of the complainant company (in evidence) shows that the resolution of the board of directors of March 13, 1895, was spread at large upon the minutes at the date of its adoption, and that the ratifying resolution of the stockholders was entered upon the minutes the day it was passed, March 17, 1896, and the company’s stock books (in evidence) show the issue of the stock in question to the defendant,—the great bulk of it on April 23, 1895,—and the various transfers of this stock by him as recited in the bill. If, then, the defendant’s case rested simply úpon his responsive answer and this documentary evidence, the preponderance of proof, in my judgment, would be with the defendant.
“But that statute has no application to suits in equity in the courts of the United States. The act of congress providing that the practice, pleadings, forms, and modes of proceedings in civil causes in the courts of the United States shall conform, as near as may be, to the practice, pleadings, forms, and modes of proceedings existing at the time in the courts of record of the state expressly excepts equity and admiralty causes. 17 Stat. 197, e. 255, § 5, Rev. St. § 914 [U. S. Oomp. St. 1901, p. 684], So that, when the plaintiffs used the depositions of Dippold and Fabel, taken ‘as under cross-examination,’ they made those parties their own witnesses. While the plaintiffs were not concluded by their evidence, and might show they were mistaken, it could not be properly contended by the plaintiffs that they were unworthy of credit. The evidence must be given such weight as, under all the circumstances, it is fairly entitled to receive.”
Applying the rules thus laid down to the present case, the fair conclusion, I think, is that the defendant’s testimony has not been successfully met. It seems to me that his answer and testimony in all material respects stand unshaken. At the organization of the company he turned over to it all his agreements and options for lands, which were numerous. Many of these the company saw fit to let die. The company, however, acquired through the defendant all the lands, including the Pahrump ranch, with which it has conducted its operations. Whether or not the defendant at the date of the transaction held.living written options for these lands we need not stop to inquire. The company got these lands, and got them through the defendant, and not otherwise. This is the important fact. The title, indeed, was made directly to the company, but this is not material. The result was the same, whether the legal title came to the company through the defendant as a conduit or directly from the former owners. Upon the proofs I am not persuaded that the issue of stock under the resolution of March 13, 1895, was an extravagant and unreasonable compensation to the defendant, especially in view of the understanding as to the use the defendant in his discretion was to make of the stock in promoting the interests of the company,— an understanding which the defendant seems to have faithfully carried out, reserving to his ’ personal use a comparatively small portion of the stock. The transaction was not concealed, but was disclosed by the minute book and stock books of the company. It
Under the constitution of the state of Colorado, art. 15, § 9, and the general laws of the state, a corporation may issue stock for “labor •done,” or “services performed,” or “property actually received.” In Land Co. v. Stevens, 13 Colo. 534, 22 Pac. 823, it was declared that '“a corporation may issue shares of its stock in payment for services rendered to it, and, where an agreement so to do is entered into in good faith, the fact that the result shows that the price agreed to be paid is extravagant does not of itself furnish a ground to release the corporation from its contract, particularly where no claim is made that the contract is prejudicial to creditors.” There the court -sustained an agreement by the corporation to issue 5,000 shares of ■stock to one who borrowed $15,000 for it. The general rule is that to invalidate an issue of stock because of overvaluation of property received in payment it must not only be shown that there was an ■overvaluation, but that it was intentional, and consequently fraudulent. I Cook, Corp. § 35.
The bill does not allege that the subscribers for the 40,000 shares ■of stock had no knowledge of the fact of the issue of 126,000 shares to the defendant, but guardedly charges that they “were not advised at the time of said subscription that the controlling interest had been fraudulently and without consideration given to the defendant,” ■etc. The defendant testifies that all of them had actual and full knowledge of that issue. There is much in the case to corroborate the defendant in this. Six of those subscribers, whose joint subscription amounted to 26,000 shares, were holders severally of shares ■of the 126,000 issue of stock, which shares they received from the defendant to interest them in the company, and promote its welfare, and upon no other consideration. If any of the subscribers for the 40,000 shares did not have full knowledge in respect to the issue of the 126,000 shares to the defendant, it was not because anything was 'concealed from them. They had the means of knowledge within reach; “and the possession of such means of knowledge is, in equity, the same as knowledge itself.” City of New Albany v. Burke, 11 Wall. 96, 107, 20 L. Ed. 155. There is no convincing evidence to show that the defendant deceived or misled those subscribers. He made no false representation to any of them. They bought this stock from the company for 25 cents a share, one-fourth of its par value. They bought on speculation, and either knew, or might have known, upon the slightest investigation, of the prior issue of stock to the defendant and all the circumstances.
Even if the resolution of March 13, 1895, and the issue of stock thereunder, had been avoidable originally, the lapse of time before the filing of this bill, on July 13, 1901, should prevent relief. To let in such a defense it is not necessary that a foundation be laid by any averment in the answer. Sullivan v. Railroad Co., 94 U. S. 806, 24 L. Ed. 324. Where the evidence discloses laches on the part of the complainant, a court of equity will refuse relief. Id. Nothing can call a court of equity into activity but conscience, good faith, and reasonable diligence. Hayward v. Bank, 96 U. S. 611, 618, 24 L. Ed. 855. In So
By the showing of the bill the defendant holds only 18,218 shares of the issue of stock sought to be avoided, the other 107,782 shares being held by persons who are not parties to the suit. Of course, upon this showing a decree for the cancellation of the whole issue could not be made even if a case for relief as against Milton D. Hays were made out. But, as we have seen, the proofs do not make out a case against him.
I observe, finally, that the creditors of the Calivada Colonization Company have no concern in this controversy. In the first place, without doubt the assets of the company are more than sufficient to pay all its debts; and, secondly, the cancellation of this stock would not increase the assets of the company.
The bill must be dismissed.