This is a stockholders’ bill in equity to compel the defendant corporation (called Merger hereafter) and its President, the defendant Pearson, to perform a, contract between them in a manner equitable to all the stockholders. In order to confine this opinion to reasonable bounds, I am filing simultaneously herewith a detailed opinion as to the facts.
Merger is an Arizona mining development concern which is completely dominated by the defendant Pearson. Its principal place of business, where all its books and records are kept, is in Spokane, Washington. The properties it is developing are in Idaho. It has an authorized capital of 3,900,000 shares of common stock of which approximately 2,963,000, from time to time, have been issued. In 1936, Merger owed money to various persons. It was obligated to deliver stock to numerous persons entitled thereto under the agreement signed at the time of the company’s organization. It had no funds and practically no unissued authorized stock. To save the company, the defendants Pearson agreed that they would loan! Merger their own stock to meet its needs. This loan was to be repaid with stock as soon as available out of the new issue of 1,000,000 shares to be authorized by an increase in Merger’s capital stock. This agreement was evidenced in writing by the corporation minutes and entries in its books of account, all entered under Pearson’s direction and control. Acting thereunder during 1936, the defendants Pearson transferred 772,541 shares to the corporate treasury. That stock was community property of the Pearsons. Thence, it was reissued to sundry persons in accordance with the understanding. In September, 1936, the additional 1,000,000 shares were authorized. Merger has not repaid Pearson his loaned stock except , as to *992 63,000 shares which he took on his-own-responsibility and sold for his own benefit against the advice of his accountant and over the objection of two of his codirectors.
Meanwhile, development work' of the company and the payment of its expenses, including Pearson's salary, have been financed by 15 assessments levied against the outstanding shares. Just how much has thus been realized the record does not disclose, but, if the 'Pearsons had kept their stock and paid the assessments levied against it, such assessments would have amounted to $61,223.82. Of this amount, the Pearsons paid only $1,303.30.
Defendants excuse the failure to' carry out the contract by claiming that the new stock could not be delivered to Pearson until each other stockholder had been offered his preemptive .right of participation in the issue. Assuming that to be correct, the excuse fails. because the defendants let five years go by without making the offer. , The other excuse is that the stock could not be delivered to Pearson without registration with the Securities and Exchange Commission; Clearly defendants could not register with S.E.C. without blasting any future hopes of raising funds by the assessment device. This because the company does not own any of the mining claims which ’ it has carried on all of its : balance sheets which the directors permitted to be distributed among stockholders as of a value in excess of $1,600,000. All it has*.is; a. possessory right under color of title which will require adverse possession actions to perfect. N.on-registration, however, did not deter Pearson from selling ,63,000 of the new shares on his own account when he needed the money. The testimony did not disclose the amount received by Pearson for this stock. He; did, however, testify that the market price for which the Merger stock sold between 1936, and 1942 ranged from 1‡ to lijé per share. .So, non-registration must be characterized as an explanation rather, than an excuse for the failure to perform the contract. fi
The fact of the stock -loan and the failure to repay it was concealed .from plaintiffs and other stockholders-by refusal to ’permit them to inspect those corporation records which would have revealed the situation. Merger’s directors ■ persisted in this refusal from -1938 through 1940. Only after'a hotly contested trip to the State Supreme Court .was inspection forced through the use of a writ of mandate. See: State ex rel. Grismer et al. v. Merger Mines Corporation et al.,
The value to the stockholders of the properties which Merger is developing rests upon two contingencies: (1) Perfection of title to the mining claims in Merger and (2) discovery of ore in commercial quantities. The properties are in the silver belt in Idaho adjacent to silver-bearing ore of immense value. The vice of the situation lies in the fact that, under present arrangements, Pearson can stand by without expense to himself and force the other stockholders to finance the development work. He can take his stock or leave it depending on its value. The other stockholders carry the burden while he is waiting to cash in on the results. I recognize that Pearson saved the Company in 1936. Consequently, I am anxious not to penalize him. On the other hand, what he did cost him nothing and he profited thereby along with the other stockholders. He was more interested in saving the company then than any one of the others. The stock which he loaned was worthless unless the company was saved. The failure to fully perform the 1936 contract gives Pearson an -unconscionable advantage. Equity cannot- permit a corporation director to use the power of his office to attain such an end.
Defendants urge the court to decline to, exercise its jurisdiction because plaintiffs ask the court to interfere with the management of the internal affairs of a foreign corporation. That plaintiffs do so ask is clear. Tolbert v. Modern Woodmen of America,
The rule on which defendants rely is bottomed on the desire to protect against unreasonable harassment those corporations whose business requirements involve activities outside of the states of their domicil. When corporations seeking the advantages of friendly statutes establish their domicils hundreds of miles away from their places of abode, all reason for the rule evaporates. To apply the rule under such circumstances would not only result in injustice but would demonstrate a complete lack of awareness of the realities of the situation.
A few days before the trial and thirty days after the pre-trial hearing, defendants moved to amend their answer by pleading the statute of limitations. This motion was granted subject to the right of the plaintiffs to reply. At the trial, plaintiffs proved without objection the facts concerning the concealment of the status of the stock-loan arrangement by the defendants. During the presentation of plaintiffs’ case, plaintiffs’ counsel, in response to inquiry by defendants’ counsel, stated that such was the purpose of the testimony. Defendants now contend that the statute bars prosecution of this action.
In so far as plaintiffs seek enforcement of the contract for the return of the stock, this is “an action upon a contract in writing, * * Rem.Rev.Stat. of Wash. Sec. 157, subd. 2. The contract consists of the corporate minutes and entries made under Pearson’s direction and control. Voorhees v. Nabob Silver-Lead Co.,
10] Defendants next contend that the court should not undertake to substitute its judgment for that of the board of directors in solving this problem. In this, defendants rely on McQuillen v. National Cash Register Co., 4 Cir.,
That this is a case for equitable cognizance is certain. The failure to. levy and collect the assessments ratably among all the stockholders violates a fundamental of corporation law. Seyberth v. American Commander Mining & Milling Co.,
The problem here - is to work out a formula by which Pearson’s unfair advantage over other stockholders will be eliminated and the wrong which he has visited upon his stockholders remedied. The task is pregnant with difficulties. I do not wish unduly to penalize Pearson and I seek to avoid harming the corporation itself. After study, I have determined that the judgment and decree to be entered should provide:
1. Merger shall have judgment against the Pearsons in an amount equal to the amount to which the 63,000 shares of Merger stock would have been liable for the assessments levied by Merger had such stock been outstanding in Pearson’s hands between October 1, 1936, and the dates on which such stock was sold by Pearson, with interest thereon at six per cent (6%) per annum from the date that each assessment would have become payable.
2. Defendant corporation and its officers, directors, employees and agents will be enjoined permanently from settling or compromising that judgment for anything less than its amount or for its payment in anything other than cash.
3. Unless judgment provided in item one hereof shall have been paid in full in cash on or before one year after the entry of the judgment and decree in this case, the defendants Pearson and any claiming by, through or under them will be enjoined permanently from receiving any of the remainder of the stock loaned by them to Merger and Merger will be enjoined permanently from issuing any of its stock for the purpose of repaying the stock loan to the Pearsons or to any person, firm or corporation claiming by, through or under them.
4. If, on or before one year after the date of the entry of the judgment herein, the Pearsons pay the judgment provided in item one in full in cash to Merger, then, at any time during five (5) years thereafter, they shall be entitled to receive out of the new issue, on demand from Merger without registration with any governmental regulatory body and without the offering thereof to any other stockholder or stockholders, 354,771 shares of the stock of Merger provided that, before the stock is issued to the Pearsons, they shall have paid to Merger in cash an amount equal to the amount of assessments that would have been levied against such shares had they been held by them from October 1, 1936, to the .date of the judgment, less $1,303.30, with interest thereon from the date of each assessment to the date of payment at the rate of six per cent (6%) per annum, and provided, further, that the Pearsons shall have paid on the 354,771 shares an amount equal to the amount to which such shares would become liable for assessments hereafter levied if they had held such stock when the assessments were levied. These latter sums to be paid, from time to time, on the dates on which future assessments upon Merger stock shall become due and payable.
5. If the Pearsons reclaim the stock as provided in item four, the remaining 354,-770 shares shall immediately be offered ratably to the other stockholders of record on the date that the Pearsons reclaim thei.r stock. This offer shall be made by mailing to each of such stockholders, at the address shown upon Merger’s stock register, notice of his right to purchase his proportionate share of such stock at any time within ninety (90) days after the date of mailing by paying therefor the sum of eleven cents (11$5) per share plus an amount equal to the amount which would have been levied for assessments against such shares had they been outstanding between October 1, 1936, and the date of the offer, with interest at six per cent (6%) per annum from the date of the levying of the assessments until paid. It will not be necessary to register this offer, with any governmental regulatory body, and each stockholder shall have the privilege of purchasing all or any part of the stock so offered to him.
6. To the extent that the stockholders have failed to accept the offer provided in item five, the defendants Pearson shall have the right, within thirty (30) days after the expiration of the ninety (90) day period for the acceptance by the stockholders has expired, to purchase the stock on the same terms and conditions that it was purchaseable by the other stockholders except that they shall not be required to pay the eleven cents (11^) per share.
7. The corporation will pay to the Pear-sons such money as it shall receive from *996 the. stockholders under item five to the extent of eleven cents (11^) per share.
8. The defendant corporation, its officers, directors, agents and employees shall be enjoined permanently from making any other disposition or settlement concerning the loaned-stock transaction than is provided in the decree including the right to circumvent the decree herein by a reorganization or transfer of Merger’s mining claims.
9. The decree will provide that the court will retain jurisdiction over the parties and subject matter of this action in order that the provisions of the decree may be enforced or to modify the decree so as to protect or implement the rights of the stockholders thereof.
10. During the time that the right to receive the 772,541 shares shall exist either in the Pearsons or the other stockholders of Merger, the corporation and its officers and agents will reserve from issuance out of the new stock authorized September 12, 1936, the 772,541 shares necessary to comply with the provisions of the decree and Merger and its officers will be enjoined from issuing such stock for any other purpose.
11. In the event of an appeal from the decree herein, the time within which the Pearsons may pay the judgment as provided in item one and may reclaim their stock as provided in item four will be extended so as to have such times commence on the date of the final disposition of this case by the Appellate Court.
Plaintiffs ask for the' allowance of attorneys’ fees for their counsel. Such an allowance is proper. Drain v. Wilson,
