91 P. 273 | Utah | 1907
This action was commenced by plaintiff, hereinafter designated respondent, against the defendants, who are appellants in this court, to enjoin them from acting as the officers and board of directors of the Bonanza Mining & Milling Company, a Utah mining corporation, and to enjoin them from holding a certain stockholders’ meeting, and from entering into negotiations for and from making a sale of the property of said company, and for general relief. A restraining order was duly issued pending the hearing on the merits, and upon final hearing the individual defendant E. G. Jones; and four others who were not made parties to the action, were removed as officers and directors of said' company, and others reinstated into such offices, and the appellant E. G. Jones and the four other members of the board of directors were enjoined from holding any stockholders’ or directors’ meeting. They were enjoined from offering for sale or selling the property of said corporation, and from transacting any of its business; and all acts of the board of directors of said corporation from and after March 9, 1903, including the acts on said date, were held illegal and void. The court further decreed that the plaintiff and his associates still were the owners of and entitled to the stock which was sold on the assessment hereinafter referred to. From the findings and the decree "as made by the court, appellants prosecute this appeal.
The principal matters relied on in the complaint consist of three separate agreements, all dated at Robinson, TJtah. Eebuary 16, 1903, namely: (1) An agreement signed by one Ed. Mingle whereby he agreed to enter into a bond and lease with the Bonanza Mining & Milling Company “upon certain mining property in Juab county, IJtah, upon terms and conditions this dáy agreed upon and to he agreed upon on or before April 1, 1903, or in the event of my failure so to do to forfeit and return that certain power of attorney and option to purchase this day given me by D. A. Depue, George Jones, Raymond Jones, A. J. TJnderwood, and the Tintic Lumber Company;” (2) an agreement by the parties last above named as stockholders of the Bonanza Mining & Milling Company to said Ed. Mingle giving him an option on 116,604 shares of the capital stock of said company at the rate of five cents per share to remain in force unconditionally until' April 1, 1904; and (3) a power of attorney or proxy by the five parties above named to said Ed. Mingle whereby he was given the right to vote said shares of stock in the same manner and to the same extent as the parties could do if pres
After the three agreements had been entered into a stockholders’ meeting of the Bonanza Mining & Milling Company was duly called to be held at its office at Robinson, Juab county, at which, according to the notice therefor, a new board of directors was to be elected for said company; authority to bond and lease the property to be obtained from the stockholders and to “ratify the action of the board of directors taken at said meeting.” This meeting was duly held at the time and place designated in the notice and one Wardlaw, holding the proxy given to Mingle with the consent and direction of respondent, who was secretary of the Bonanza Company, and D. A. Depue, its president, elected a new board of directors. We remark here that at the annual stockholders’ meeting of said company, held in the month of January, 1903, as appears from the recorded proceedings of that meeting, the old officers were continued in office until the stockholders should elect others. At the stockholders’ meeting held on March 9, 1903, Mingle was not present, nor was the appellant C. W. 'Jones. When this meeting adjourned, the newly elected directors, as is claimed by respondent, were to meet on the same day at Salt Lake city to organize while the appellants claim such
It further appeared that the officers, before the assessment was levied, made frequent attempts to dispose of treasury stock to raise money to defray the necessary expences of the corporation, and that they had disposed of treasury stock, realizing about two cents per share therefor, hut could not find sale for any more, so that at the time the assessment was levied there were about five thousand shares of the treasury stock undisposed of; hut it is not seriously contended by any one that those shares had any market or other substantial value at that time, cr that they were saleable. It further appeared that at least two assessments had been levied on the stock prior to the assessment of July, 1903, arid that whsn these assessments were levied there was a large amount of stock in the treasury and unsaleable, and that respondent and his associates assented to these first two assessments, all
In this connection it is not easy to see why Mingle should want an option to purchase the property at precisely the same figure he had an option to purchase the stock apart from the fact that respondent wanted Mingle to advance for them $700 for assessment work for which Mingle received absolutely no consideration in view of the right he had to purchase the stock. This fact also shows that there was no good reason why respondent and his associates wanted the bond and lease! except to obtain from Mingle the assessment work. Be that as it may, the election of the board of directors of March 9, 1908, was not based, upon the condition that the' election should he void if Mingle failed to enter into the bond and lease. This, however, is the claim now made by respondent’s attorney, and, as he asserted at the trial, this whole case is based upon such claim. The agreement discloses no such condition, and it seems to us that to permit the authority of the board of directors and officers of a corporation to rest upon Such a frail tenure,would be a reproach to both law and morals. Whatever the rule might be in case of a direct and timely attack made against the directors elected upon such a condition, we think it too obvious to require discussion that such condition, even if absolutely established, could have no effect whatever on a collateral attack against the acts of the directors. • All irregularities in corporate elections, and even the
At this time the stock remained unsold — the assessment unenforced. If respondent and his associates had taken charge then, they could have recalled the assessment under the statute, and, if they desired, could have provided the means required to protect the mining claims in some other
But it is further contended that at least one of the directors, appointed in May, 1903, to fill the vacancy occasioned by the failure of the two to qualify, vitiated the acts of the board in levying the assessment for the reason that the acting director was not eligible as a director when elected because not holding sufficient shares of stock to qualify him under the articles of incorporation. The records, however, affirmatively show that at the time the assessment was levied he was a stockholder in amount sufficient to qualify him as such, and hence until removed from office was at least a de facto if not a de jure director, and the acts of the board’ of which he was a member were not subject to collateral attack, under the authorities above cited. The assessment was therefore not void, but at most might perhaps have been directly attack for irregularities, if action in some proper form had 'been taken in time. In view that the respondent and his associates not only had-means of knowledge respecting all the circumstances of the assessment, but about the time it was levied and before the sale made an investigation of the acts of the board through a competeut lawyer, and could thus have arrested the consequences of the assessment had they desired to do so, they cannot now be heard to complain in a court of equity for the reasons urged by them. The facts and circumstances of this case bring it squarely within the decision of Hatch v. Lucky Bill Min. Co., supra. The irregularities in that case were in some respects much greater than in this case, and the equities much stronger, and still the court refused relief from the assessment there involved. Counsel for respondent, however, seeks to distinguish this case from the Hatch Case upon the ground of fraud, which, it is asserted, makes it peculiarly one for equitable relief. In a proper case this contention would be of great force, and might be conclusive, but the difficulty
We have read with great care and attention the entire evidence contained in the original bill of exceptions. We did this for the reason that the respondent contends that the findings of the trial court are conclusive upon us, unless clearly contrary to the evidence. We concede this to be the rule adopted by this court in equity eases. But there are als'o other elementary rules in force in all 000143 of equity, which are, that he who seeks equity must do equity; that he who charges fraud assumes the burden of establishing it; and, finally, that when a party comes into a court to obtain relief from the acts of others in matters such as are involved in this case, he must act with reasonable diligence or present some good excuse for not having done so, or he must fail in his action. The foregoing doctrine is especially applicable, and is generally enforced in eases like the one at bar. (Great W. M. Co. v. Woodmas A. M. Co., 14 Colo. 90, 23 Pac. 908; Rabe v. Dunlap, 51 N. J. Eq. 40, 25 Atl. 959 ; Speidel v. Henrici, 120 U. S. 387.
Tbe evidence in this case utterly fails to establish fraud. The most that can be said is that there are some facts from which one might conjecture fraud and that is insufficient. The evidence equally fails to show any reasonable diligence upon the part of respondent to correct the alleged wrongful acts, and he offers no excuse why he did not act sooner. The evidence, therefore, fails to sustain the findings upon which the decree is based, and it thus cannot stand, for want of support. With regard to the lack of diligence to prosecute this action, and the failure to take appropriate action in proper time in the absence of fraud, the case of Hatch v. Lucky Bill Min. Co., supra, is conclusive, and leaves us no alternative but to reverse the judgment upon that ground as well. This view makes it unnecessary to pass upon the question whether the court exceeded its power in removing officers not before the court and in reinstating others in an action like this. It is also apparent from the entire record that the plaintiff cannot make a proper case for relief at this time under the facts as set forth in the complaint, or under any proper amendment thereof.
The judgment, therefore, is reversed, with directions to the district court to dismiss the action. Appellant to recover costs.