126 Va. 22 | Va. | 1919
delivered the opinion of the court.
After this contract had been executed, the stockholders of the complainant company ratified it at a meeting, duly called for the purpose. Jackson then interested Liggett, Hichborn & Co., Inc., in the matter and sold his rights under the contract to that corporation for Si consideration named in his letter at $125,000 and in the letter to him accepting his proposition as $75,000 in cash and $50,000 or one-fifth of the common stock to be issued by the new company. Jackson’s letter describes the transaction thus:
It is clear, then, under the original contract which John E. Liggett, for Liggett, Hichborn & Co., Inc., assumed, that the complainant company undertook to control the disposition of the proceeds of the $800,000 of bonds by providing therein for the payment to itself of $526,800, the sum of $1,800 to pay expenses of incorporation and organization and to pay the bond and floating debt other than accounts payable and pipe-line contracts, and that the remainder was to remain in the treasury for working capital and improvements to the property.
The matter proceeded as contemplated by all the parties interested, except that Liggett, Hichborn & Co., Inc., under the direction of John E. Liggett, who is also its president, having control of the proceeds of the sale of the $800,000
There are three assignments of error.
1. The first is that the complainant has not shown a sufficient excuse for its failure to apply to the directors of stockholders to take action for the recovery of the funds involved in this case. The complainant is suing as a stockholder of the new company. In the discussion of this assignment we are referred to numerous authorities, but in as much as counsel agree upon the general doctrines of law which are applicable we do not deem it necessary to review them. It is sufficient to say that the evidence submitted shows a prima facie case in favor of the complainant, making it reasonably certain that because of the personal interest of John W. Liggett, the president of the Roanoke Water Works Company, and also of Liggett, Hichborn & Co., Inc., and of his intimate business relations with other directors of the Roanoke Water Works Company, a demand for corporate action by the other directors against him, or against Liggett, Hichborn & Co., Inc., would have been useless. This inference which may be fairly drawn from the testimony is made absolutely conclusive by the answer of the Roanoke Water Works Company, which justifies and vigorously defends the action of John E. Liggett in making the payment complained of. The suggestion in argument that possibly this answer was not authorized by the directors cannot be entertained, because it is filed by reputable counsel who also represent John E. Liggett, and it has not been disclaimed by the company. The defendant, Liggett,
2. The second assignment of error is that the suit cannot be maintained because the act complained of was one which the stockholders or directors of the Roanoke Water Works Company could in the exercise of their discretion have properly exercised. This takes us back to the contract under which the Roanoke Water Works Company acquired the property and issued the bonds. The complainant as the original owner of the property had the right to impose conditions upon its transfer. That the proceeds of the bonds to be issued were to be used for certain specified purposes was one of the conditions actually imposed, and one of these specified purposes was the provision for a substantial sum of money for working capital and improvements to the property. This condition has been violated by the defendant, John E. Liggett, and consequently the company is left without such working capital to the detriment of the complainant and its other stockholders who have the right to insist upon the observance of the conditions imposed by the contract under which the property was transferred. This contract is exhibited with and relied upon in the bill.
The evidence sustains the conclusions of the trial judge.
Affirmed.