59 Wash. 550 | Wash. | 1910
The defendants were promoters of the respondent corporation. Prior to the organization of this corporation, the defendants secured options to purchase cer
The defendant C. O. Howard advanced the $15,000 necessary to purchase the mining claims. Thereupon the defendants, including Howard, entered into a writing, whereby they each agreed to transfer to Howard 4,000 shares of stock, to be sold by him and the proceeds thereof applied in repayment of the money advanced for the purchase of the mining claims and expenses of obtaining patents therefor, and said Howard was to account for any balance which might remain from the proceeds of such sale. These 4,000 shares of stock were charged on the books of the corporation against the stock account of each of the defendants, leaving a balance of 136,000 shares to the credit of each of the defendants, and the 40,000 shares thus contributed were credited to defendant Howard as trustee. Thereafter the treasury stock was placed on the market and sold at seventy-five cents per share, less fifteen per cent commission for selling the same. After stock had been sold to the amount of 40,000 shares at seventy-five cents per share, the trustees, who were then the original promoters, took the proceeds and applied it to the repayment of the $15,000 advanced by Howard for the purchase of mines, and also took the further sum of $9,970 which amount Howard had expended in obtaining patents for
The appellant M. A. Lively intervened in the action, claiming to be an innocent purchaser for value of the stock of the defendant L. D. Lively, and also claiming that L. D. Lively was not indebted to the corporation. Upon the trial of the case, the trial court found that each of the original ten stockholders was indebted to the corporation in the sum of $2,497, being his proportionate share of the money taken from the treasury to pay the cost of the mining' claims and for obtaining patents therefor, and that the corporation had a lien on the stock of each for that amount; and directed a sale of the 4,000 shares subscribed for that purpose first to be made, and then a sale of the remaining stock of each of the original trustees, if necessary, to pay the balance. The intervener only has appealed.
It is readily seen that each of the original stockholders obtained his stock without any consideration whatever. The evidence shows that the mines were paid for by Howard. Title was conveyed to the corporation in consideration of the capital stock of the company. Thereafter treasury stock, or stock belonging to the corporation, was sold, and the proceeds diverted to reimburse Howard for the money which he had paid for the mines. So that the net result was that the promoters had their money returned to them, and they also had their stock, less 4,000 shares which had been transferred to the name of Howard as trustee. This stock was, however, issued to purchasers of the treasury stock. It needs no argument or authority to show that this was a fraud upon the persons who purchased the treasury stock, the proceeds of which was to go into development and not to the purchase of the mines. These purchasers of treasury stock afterwards came into control of the corporation and caused this suit to be brought.
“The stock of the corporation shall be held for the indebtedness of the owner thereof to this company, and no transfer of the same shall be made on the books of the company until said indebtedness shall first be paid.”
Mr. Lively was not present, but he sent his proxy, and the stock standing in his name was voted at the time this bylaAV was passed. Mrs. Lively testified that she was fully informed of the manner by which Mr. Lively acquired his stock, and that she was aware of the whole transaction. Under these facts we are satisfied that the court was right in concluding that Mrs. Lively was not an innocent purchaser for value. No new consideration passed at the time she purchased the stock. She took the stock upon an existing debt, and she was fully informed about the whole matter, and she therefore took the stock with notice and held it subject to the claims of the corporation, even if she obtained it before the passage of the by-law. It may be that’the corporation Avould not be authorized to pass a by-law which would have a retroactive effect, but in this case the stock had not been transferred upon the books of the corporation. It still stood in the name of Mr. Lively. No request had been made for a transfer at the time this by-laAV was passed. Mr. Lively, or his agent, voted the stock at that meeting. It must be assumed, therefore, that the stock at that time was the stock of
The judgment of the trial court appears to be right, and it is therefore affirmed.
Rudkin, C. J., Parker, Crow, and Dunbar, JJ., concur.