276 F. 68 | 9th Cir. | 1921
The appellant Korn, a stockholder of the B. Schade Brewing Company, brought a suit against the Spokane & Eastern Trust Company and the officers of the brewing company, to set aside a conveyance of the property of the latter company to the trust company. Another stockholder intervened, praying the same relief as did the plaintiff. Upon a trial on the merits, the bill was dismissed for want of equity.
The brewing company, a corporation of the state of Washington, was incorporated in 1903 for the purpose of brewing, manufacturing, and selling beer, with authority to acquire, purchase, and sell real estate and personal property for the purpose of carrying on and conducting a general malting and brewing business. In 1907 an amendment to the articles of incorporation gave the corporation power to purchase, mortgage, sell, and convey real and personal property “for any purpose which the corporation may deem expedient or necessary to aid in, increase, or protect any business it may now or hereafter become engaged in.” The corporation constructed a brewery in Spo
“The majority stockholders, even as against the protest of the minority, may dispose of all the property when the corporate business has become unprofitable and where it would be ruinous to the corporation and the stockholders to continue the business, or whero there are insufficient funds to continue the business, and no money with which to pay existing indebtedness, or when the corporation is in failing circumstances, or is in fact insolvent.”
Thai doctrine finds support in the decisions of the Supreme Court of Washington (Lange v. Reservation Min. Co., 48 Wash. 167, 93 Pac. 208; Logie v. Mother Lode Copper Mines Co., 106 Wash. 208, 179 Pac. 835; Klosterman v. Mason County Ry., 8 Wash. 281, 36 Pac. 136), and it fully answers the contention that the conveyance here involved was ultra vires.
“It should at least appear that either the corporation or the stockholders are ready and wiling to pay the amount due on redemption. No such readiness or willingness is averred in the pleadings, and no such readiness or willingness was disclosed at the trial. Counsel frankly conceded that the stockholders did not have the means to effect a redemption, and further conceded that if they had the means, it would not be deemed advisable to employ them in that way.”
The decree is affirmed.