This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of the plaintiff, after the second trial, the ease having once before been before the appellate court.
(Highland Park Inv. Co.
v.
List,
The action was brought to recover a sum of money alleged to have been secured by appellant R. D. List as a secret profit upon a sale of certain lots of land to plaintiff corporation. The facts are fully and succinctly stated in the opinion of the court on the former appeal, and do not need to be repeated.
The decision of the appellate court on the former appeal is in full accord with these authorities, and establishes the law of this case, with which, on the facts before us, we are in full accord.
When the decision of the lower court in the first trial of the case was reversed on appeal (Highland Park Inv. Co. v. List, supra), it was on the ground, solely, as we read the decision, that one of the essential findings of fact was not sustained by the evidence. That finding of fact was, in substance, that, prior to August 25, 1908, the date of the meeting of the directors of the plaintiff corporation, authorizing the purchasing of the Withington lots, appellant R. D. List learned that the directors of the corporation would vote for the purchase of said lots for the price of eight thousand dol *756 lars, and that thereupon, without disclosing the fact to his fellow-directors, List purchased the lots, taking the title in his wife’s name at a less price, and, without disclosing to the corporation that he had so purchased them, completed the transaction for transfer at the price of eight thousand dollars, to the corporation, thereby reaping a profit of $3,326.
The judgment sought and recovered in the case, and based on the findings made at the first trial, was not one of rescission. The corporation elected to retain what it had received from List, and to secure from him the profits which he had made on the sale of the land.
Considering the findings, and the judgment entered in the case, the appellate court said: "There is no doubt but that such a judgment would have been proper were it shown that while the board of directors, of which List was one, was negotiating for the purchase of this property, List secretly obtained title thereto and thereupon resold the property to the company, making a profit thereon. The evidence as it is set out in the transcript does not show that the directors had taken up the matter of the purchase of these particular lots prior to the meeting of August 27, 1908. It appeared without dispute that List had purchased the lots five days prior to this time. None of the witnesses, directors, and stockholders of plaintiff corporation testified to having talked with List regarding the desire of the corporation to purchase the lots prior to the day upon which the directors’ meeting was held at which the resolution authorizing the purchase was adopted. Upon this state of the evidence, the legal situation presented is no different than had it appeared that List had become the owner of the lots thirty or ninety days, or more, prior to the twenty-seventh day of August. . . . The facts and circumstances shown in evidence do not support the findings as to the essential matters indicated herein.” (Highland Park Inv. Co. v. List, supra.)
The judgment recovered in the lower court on the first trial and again on the second trial, from which judgment this appeal is taken, was the proper form for a judgment in such a case. “The plaintiff corporation was simply seeking to recover such profits as were made by one of its officers in a transaction wherein he was forbidden to make any such secret profits, which profits, in view of the rules we have discussed, belonged to the corporation.”
(Western States Life Ins.
*757
Co.
v.
Lockwood, supra; Ex-Mission Land & Water Co.
v.
Flash,
*758
The judgment is affirmed.
Richards, J., and Kerrigan, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing of this cause was denied by the district court of appeal on September 18, 1919, and a petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on October 16, 1919.
All the Justices concurred.
