275 Mass. 99 | Mass. | 1931
This is a suit in equity brought in behalf of the plaintiff L. E. Fosgate Company, and other stockholders of the defendant corporation who desire to become parties thereto, against the defendant corporation, its directors and clerk, seeking to enjoin them from issuing
According to the findings of the master, the plaintiffs are individuals, partnerships and corporations each engaged in the wholesale fruit and produce business in the city of Boston, and each owning one share of stock in the defendant corporation. The defendant Boston Market Terminal Company is a Massachusetts corporation organized July 27, 1922, for the purpose principally of establishing and maintaining a fruit and produce market in the city of Boston. In the year 1922 and for some years previously the dealers engaged in the wholesale fruit and produce business in Boston had discussed the establishment of a terminal market for handling fruit and produce in order to get a distributing center for the wholesale t trade. Prior to the organization of the corporation, largely attended meetings were held and invitations to attend these meetings were given generally to the wholesale dealers in Boston. It was finally decided to form a corporation for the purpose of securing a location for the terminal with suitable buildings and railroad facilities, the market to be solely for the use of receivers of wholesale car lots of fruit and vegetables. “Each concern agreeing to become a member of the corporation was to subscribe for its stock to the amount of $2,000.” A meeting was planned for July 25, 1922, at which it was proposed to organize the Boston Market Terminal Company and notices were sent to those who had shown interest in the proposed corporation and willingness to
On August 16, 1922, twenty-nine of the thirty-two original subscribers, including all the defendants, signed the following subscription offer for nineteen additional shares of stock: “The undersigned, each for himself if an individual, for themselves if a co-partnership, and for itself if a corporation, doth each hereby subscribe for nineteen (19) shares of the capital stock of the Boston Market Terminal Company, and doth each hereby agree to pay for the same in cash at the rate of one hundred (100) dollars per share, the same to be accepted and paid for at such time and times as said directors shall request, and doth each hereby agree to hold such shares, together with the one share now owned by each of the undersigned, subject to such rules and regulations as are or may hereafter be contained in the By-laws of said corporation,
After the incorporation of the Boston Market Terminal Company the directors proceeded to work on different propositions for the establishment of the terminal market. They had numerous conferences with State and railroad officials looking toward the erection of a terminal, but the proposed schemes involved too great an expenditure and hence were abandoned. In the fall of 1926, after a series of negotiations, an arrangement was made with a railroad company by which certain freight houses in the railroad yards were to be remodelled and used as a terminal market by the defendant corporation. The agreement, dated October 15, 1926, provided that the premises would be used as a terminal for at least two years, and that the agreement might be cancelled thereafter by either party on six months’ notice. The defendant corporation was to pay $3 for each car unloaded and promised to unload a minimum of three thousand cars per year. The terminal market as thus established was opened for business April 4, 1927.
During the period from December, 1926, to April, 1927, twenty wholesale dealers in fruit and produce who were not theretofore stockholders of the defendant company each subscribed and paid for one share of stock. Of these twenty new stockholders, fourteen are plaintiffs in this suit, the other three plaintiffs having been among the incorporators. The rules of the defendant corporation in force when these fourteen plaintiffs became stockholders required that dealers desiring to use the facilities of the terminal market must be stockholders. Late in April, 1927, the directors- decided not to sell any more stock, and the regulations were changed so as to permit the use
In the summer of 1927 it became evident that there would be large profits to be distributed, the business conducted by the corporation having turned out to be unexpectedly successful. Thereupon the defendant Rolfe, treasurer of the corporation, suggested to the directors “ that it would be a good time to call in ” the subscriptions which had been made for nineteen additional shares. “ His reason for the suggestion was that he felt that the people who had backed the organization from the start and had agreed to put up $2,000 to back it were entitled to have their subscriptions accepted and the shares issued to them when the undertaking had become an assured success.” The directors approved the suggestion and held informal discussions regarding a distribution. Rolfe also consulted counsel on the matter. On January 24, 1928, adjourned annual meetings of the stockholders and the directors were held. At the stockholders’ meeting it was voted: (1) that the subscription offers dated August 16, 1922, for five hundred thirty-two additional shares be accepted;
After the master’s report was filed, the case was heard by a judge of the Superior Court who ruled “ that the so-called ‘ subscription agreement ’ of August, 1922, constituted merely offers to take and pay for the stock subscribed for and not contracts to do so; that such offers were limited to being accepted by the corporation within a reasonable time; that the time from August, 1922, to January, 1928, was more than a reasonable time and that the offers contained in the subscription agreement had expired when the stockholders passed the vote accepting
The “ subscription agreement ” of August 16, 1922, whereby the individual defendants subscribed for nineteen additional shares of stock, was a mere voluntary offer until acted on and accepted by the corporation. Boston & Maine Railroad v. Bartlett, 3 Cush. 224. Sewall v. Eastern Railroad, 9 Cush. 5, 12. People’s Ferry Co. v. Balch, 8 Gray, 303, 311. Athol Music Hall Co. v. Carey, 116 Mass. 471, 474. Hudson Real Estate Co. v. Tower, 156 Mass. 82. Since no definite time was specified in the instrument, the offer was open for a reasonable length of time. As all the facts appear in the master’s report, it is a question of law as to what was a reasonable time for the acceptance of the offer. Park v. Whitney, 148 Mass. 278. Holland v. Cheshire Railroad, 151 Mass. 231, and cases cited. Starkweather v. Gleason, 221 Mass. 552. Chatham Manuf. Co. v. Avery Chemical Co. 235 Mass. 340. What is a reasonable time depends upon the facts and circumstances of the case. Loring v. Boston, 7 Met. 409. The subscription agreement properly construed does not import perpetuity, it means that the stock to be issued must be issued within a reasonable time. The offer was not to continue forever, and upon the facts found by the master the judge rightly ruled that it was not accepted by the defendant corporation within a reasonable time.
The individual defendants who were directors of the corporation were acting in a fiduciary capacity and were required to exercise their authority in the utmost good faith. Stratis v. Andreson, 254 Mass. 536. Reed v. A. E. Little Co. 256 Mass. 442, 448. Abbot v. Waltham Watch Co. 260 Mass. 81, 96. Beaudette v. Graham, 267 Mass. 7, 12. Calkins v. Wire Hardware Co. 267 Mass. 52, 66. They could not “ rightly manipulate the affairs of the corporation primarily with the design of securing the control of the corporation to one particular group of stockholders, or of excluding another group from the exercise of its corporate rights.” Albert E. Touchet, Inc. v. Touchet, 264 Mass. 499, 507. From the master’s findings and the reasonable inferences to be drawn therefrom, it is manifest that the conduct of the defendants was in violation of the duty they owed the plaintiffs. Their sole purpose in voting to accept the lifeless offer of August 16, 1922, over five years after it had been made, was to secure for themselves and their associate subscribers a large and disproportionate share of the corporate assets at the expense of the minority stockholders. The honesty of purpose of the defendants is not a decisive test of the propriety of their conduct. The right of the plaintiffs to prevent an issue of stock by the defendants to themselves for their own gain does not rest on fraud but on the fiduciary duty of the directors. A necessary and obvious consequence of the issuance of the nineteen additional shares to the individual defendants and the other subscribers would have resulted in destroying the equality of stock ownership which had obtained since the organization of the corpora
Interlocutory and final decrees affirmed with costs.