53 Vt. 669 | Vt. | 1881
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The defendant was the owner of an undeveloped marble quarry in Rutland. The plaintiffs were its principal stockholders, owning and controlling a majority of the capital stock. February 17, 1871, the defendant leased to parties who are represented in this suit by the plaintiffs, a portion of its property whereon they agreed to erect a mill for sawing and manufacturing the marble of the defendant, and by a contract between the parties to the lease contemporaneously executed, and which formed a part of the same transaction, the defendant contracted to furnish the other party marble from its quarry sufficient to stock the mill for a term of ten years, and the other party agreed to manufacture the marble thus furnished, sell, and collect the pay therefor without expense to the defendant. The avails of the sales of the marble thus manufactured and marketed, it was agreed should be divided equally between the parties. The contract evidenced by the lease and cotemporaneous written agreement, was previously authorized by the defendant.' The fairness and justness of this contract has not been attacked. Because the plaintiffs owned the controlling interest in the stock of the defendant, and were most of them officers as well as stockholders, and so stood in a quasi trust relation to the other stockholders of the defendant, if the fairness and good faith of the contract were attacked, the court would carefully scrutinize its provisions, and, if found to operate to the prejudice of, and to have been made without the knowledge or acquiescence of the other stockholders, would ordinarily refuse to enforce its unjust provisions against the defendant even. But no such question arises on the facts found by the referee.
The first question made by the defendant is, that the plaintiffs and defendant were partners in the manufacture of the marble,
The result is, the judgment of the County Court is reversed, and judgment is rendered for the plaintiffs for the amount reported, less the unpaid balance of the Thomas Lynch claim.