200 Ky. 208 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1923
Opinion of the Court by
Affirming.
This action was instituted in the Jefferson circuit court by appellees, stockholders of the McCombs Producing and Refining Company, to cancel a number of
The facts relating to the organization and development of the McCombs Producing- and Refining Company are: That J. C. McCombs owned, in the summer of 1917, a tract of about 24 acres of land in Estill county, on which five oil wells had been drilled, with a resulting production of “approximately 300 barrels per day.” He also owned oil and gas leases on about 12,000 acres of land in Knott county. On August 7, 1917, he entered into a contract with Dr. H. A. Moore, of New York, by which they agreed to organize a corporation under the laws of the state of Delaware, with, an authorized capital stock of 5.000.000 shares, of the par value of $1.00 per share or no par value, to which McCombs agreed to sell and transfer the 24-acre tract in Estill county and to assign the oil and gas leases in Knott .county. It was agreed that the corporation should pay $312,000.00 for this property not later than February Í5, 1918, “and in addition thereto 5.000.000 shares of the stock, less 50 shares to the incorporators of said corporation as fully paid and non-assessable.” It was further agreed that the 5,000,000 shares of stock, less 50 shares to the incorporators, should be issued to McCombs, and he would immediately transfer and assign to the corporation 1,000,000 shares, less 50 shares to the incorporators, and transfer and assign 4,000,000 shares in blank and deliver them to the Winchester Bank at Winchester, Kentucky; that the corporation would enter into a contract with II. A. Moore for the sale of the 1.000.000 shares assigned to it upon the terms that none of the stock would be sold at a price less than'55c a share, and Moore should receive as his compensation for selling it 40% of the sale price, but that McCombs, until and including February 15, 1918, should have the right to fix the maximum price at which it should be sold, and that the net proceeds realized from the sales «hould be used,
On September 7, 1917, a corporation — McCombs Oil Company, the name being changed later to the McCombs Producing and Refining Company — was organized under the laws of the state of Delaware, with an authorized capitalization of 5,000,000 shares of the par value of $1.00 each. The entire capital stock was subscribed to by the organizers of the corporation, all of whom were residents of Dover, Delaware, and at the meeting of the incorporators on that day transfers of subscriptions! were presented and approved in the following names: To J. C. McCombs 4,999,950 shares, to Abram Renick 10 shares, to William O. Head 10 shares, to Harvey A. Mohney 10 shares, to Frank W. Davis 10 shares., and to George W. dynes 10 shares. The first five named gentlemen were elected directors of the company. At the first meeting of the board of directors held in Louisville on September 14, 1917, Abram Reniek was elected president, William O. Head, Harvey A. Mohney and George W. Clynes were elected vice presidents, John C. McCombs was. elected treasurer, and Frank W. Davis made secretary. At that meeting a draft of the agreement of August 7 between McCombs and Moore was approved, and by resolution duly passed the company purchased the properties of McCombs at the price mentioned in the agreement and adjudged the price to be the fair and reasonable value of the properties. At the same meeting a motion was. made to appoint Paul M. Wade the sole and exclusive agent to sell the treasury stock of the company, consisting of
It will be noted that under the original contract with Moore, which was entered into with the view of organizing the corporation, McCombs was to be paid $312,000.00 and receive 5,000,000 shares of the capital stock, 1,000,000 of which were to be sold to pay the $312,000.00, another 500,000 shares were to be sold to net McCombs 60c a share, and when this stock had been sold he was to receive 500,-000 additional shares and Moore was to receive the rest, amounting to 3,000,000 shares; that Moore was to be paid 40% of the selling price of not less than 55c a share for the first 1,000,000 shares, and as to the next 500,000 shares he was merely to account for them to McCombs at 60c a share; that at the first directors’ meeting it was provided that 1,999,950 shares should be treasury stock, and that Paul M. Wade should have the exclusive right to sell that stock on a commission of 40% of the sale price, and the rest of the stock was apportioned among various persons, seemingly without reason or any consideration therefor; and that at the stockholders’ meeting immedi
At the time this stock was issued to the directors, as indicated, none of them had done anything to aid or perfect any of the legitimate enterprises of the corporation, but immediately thereafter Wade and McLaughlin began to sell stock on a commission basis, and Renick opened an office in Louisville and likewise engaged in the sale of the stock. Two additional wells had been drilled on the property in the late summer of 1917, and two other wells were shortly thereafter driven. A dividend was declared and paid to the shareholders, except the holders of the stock in escrow. Stock was sold at various prices, ranging from 75c to $2.50 a share, and some of appellees purchased their holdings at the latter figure, one of whom invested approximately' $100,000.00 in the stock of this company. Some months later the earnings of the company began to decline with the decrease in production and depreciation in the price of oil, and at the time this litigation was instituted the value of the stock was far below the lowest price at which it had' been sold to appellees. It appears that the stock held by the United States Trust Company was never delivered to appellants, but several months after it was issued they agreed among themselves to reduce it to 513,752 shares, and they issued -to themselves certificates for that number of shares without any authority from the company. These certificates, as well as the stock held in escrow, were canceled by the court below, except 15,000 shares of the duplicate stock issued in the name of Abram Renick. He was unable to produce that stock, and in lieu of canceling it the chancellor rendered judgment against him for $15,000.00, from which there also is an appeal.
The law of the state of Delaware, under which the McCombs Producing and Refining Company was organized, provides that subscriptions to or purchases of the capital stock of any corporation organized under the laws of that state “may be paid for, wholly or partly, by cash, by labor done, by personal property or by real property or leases thereof,” and, “in the absence of actual fraud in the transaction, the judgment of the directors, as to the value of such labor, property, real estate or leases .shall be conclusive.” Appellees pleaded this provision of
It is contended, on the authority of U. S. Cast Iron Pipe & Foundry Co. v. Henry Vogt Machine Co., 182 Ky. 473, and cases there cited, that as no decision of the Delaware courts construing the statute is pleaded this case must be governed by the common law of that state, which, in the absence of pleading and proof, is presumed to be the same as the common law of Kentucky, under which a transaction involving the issue of stock for property could be assailed only on the ground of fraud, and hence, passing the question as to the value of the property turned over to the company by McCombs in the summer of 1917, it was incumbent upon appellees, to show actual fraud in the issuing of the stock, and no implication thereof arises from an overvaluation of the property exchanged for it. The U, S. Cast Iron Pipe & Foundry Co. cáse is not authority for this position, for in that case there was neither pleading nor proof in the record as to what the law of the state of Delaware was, nor were the articles of incorporation made a part of the. record, whereas in the case at bar the' constitutional and statutory provisions of Delaware are pleaded and not denied, and it appears that the constitutional provision is substantially the same as that of Kentucky, and also that the statutory provision of that state is similar to the one in Kentucky, the difference being that the statute of Delaware requires allegation and evidence of actual fraud. This is not, therefore, a case that is controlled by the common law, but one to which the statute of Delaware applies. That statute, as pleaded and undenied, provides that in the absence of actual fraud in the transaction the judgment of the directors as to the value of the property shall be conclusive. That actual fraud or intentional wrongdoing may be and often is proved by or inferred from circumstances is an established principle, and that inadequacy of consideration may be considered in connection with other facts from which fraud may be inferred is also well settled. Taylor v. Citizens Oil Co., 182 Ky. 350, does not militate against these principles, for all that was. held in that case with respect to the leases was that the surrendering of them a 'few months after the dissolution of the'old companies was not a circumstance of great probative weight in determining their value,
Tbe question just indicated is adopted by appellants in this case as the foundation for tbe inquiry, “Was or not there any consideration for tbe stock sought to be canceled?” Tbe trial court found that tbe $312,000.00 paid to McCombs represented more than tbe fair value of the property that be turned into tbe corporation. Tbe evidence relating to that subject is voluminous, and, as indicated in tbe opinion of tbe chancellor, tbe values are variously estimated by tbe witnesses according to interest or point of view. Undoubtedly many of tbe witnesses for appellants fixed the value of tbe 24 acres and tbe leases in Knott county far above tbe money consideration, and some of them in excess of that sum and tbe 5.000.000 shares of stock at its par value. Other witnesses testified to facts from which tbe inference is irresistible that'tbe obligation to pay $312,000.00, with tbe manner in which it was secured, represented more than tbe value of tbe property turned over to tbe company. Tbe stipulation as to tbe output of tbe wells on the 24-acre tract, or rather as to tbe quantity of oil which tbe Cumberland Pipe Line Company took from tbe wells from April 11, 1917, to May 31, 1920, after resolving every doubt in favor, of appellants as to the amount of oil that tbe pipe line company could and did take, indicates a possible maximum production.far below that estimated in tbe contract of August 7, 1917. Aside from, that fact, one may look to tbe conduct of McCombs and Moore, at the time the company was organized and immediately thereafter, as signifying their conception of tbe value of tbe property, and in fact as convincing evidence of its actual value at the time the stock was issued. Considering tbe question from that standpoint, we find that, notwithstanding Moore was. to receive 40 % of tbe proceeds of tbe sale at 55c a share of 1,000,000 shares of tbe stock, and, after, having sold that stock and 500,000 more shares, was to receive 3,000,000 shares of tbe stock or a controlling interest in the company, at tbe first stockholders’ meeting be surrendered bis right to sell tbe 1.000.000 shares on a handsome commission basis, and also the right to acquire tbe 3,000,000 shares, in consideration of 687,490 shares issued in bis name and placed in escrow until tbe 1,000,000 shares bad been sold and McCombs had been paid tbe purchase price. McCombs also surrendered a considerable part of tbe stock that be would probably have received under tbe contract.
But it may be said that the lack of consideration for this stock is not a material question, since if it rightfully belonged to McCombs and Moore they had a right to donate it to others. And that is quite true. But the fact that they did distribute it among seven or eight different persons “for the labor they were to extend to the company” shows, when viewed in the light of the fact that none of those persons performed any service to pay for the stock, that McCombs and Moore did not regard it as valuable or as representing any real asset, and that the property that the company acquired was fully covered by the consideration of $312,000.00. McCombs’ method of safeguarding the payment of the $312,000.00, his improvidence in dealing with the stock, his entering into a contract with Moore without knowing what character of man Moore was, his association with the other pro
In Cooney Co. v. Arlington Hotel Co., 101 Atlantic 879, which was an action to collect from the stockholders of a company the money not paid on their shares of stock in order that the receiver might pay the debts of the company, in speaking of the issue of bonus stock the Court of Chancery of Delaware said: “Whether it be moral, legal or actual fraud, or not fraudulent at all, the obvious purpose in issuing all the common stock to Howard, Andrews and Archibald, as set forth in the resolution of the directors at their first meeting on February 27, 1911, was to give them the stock without their having given the legal equivalent therefoi. The most that could be claimed for it was that it was issued for services rendered and to be rendered, without stating what part of the $2,900,000.00 of common stock was issued for past services rendered and what for future services to be rendered.” After referring to the fact that the stock was issued in the earliest stages of the corporate existence, the court said: “With such scanty opportunity for having done work for the corporation after its organization, and in the absence of any statement of the character or value of such services theretofore rendered, or evidence of any valuation thereof by the directors, the issuing of $2,900,000.00 worth of stock for services rendered and to be rendered was of itself palpably indicative of an intention to avoid the statute and Constitution, without reference to the other features of the resolution. ’ ’ It was held that the stock was bonus stock, issued without value, and the holders thereof were liable for the unpaid part of its value. The quotations from this opinion aptly describe the situation presented in this record, and it is our conclusion that the chancellor correctly held that the stock was issued neither in good faith nor for actual value.
It is contended by Renick that the judgment rendered against him for $15,000.00 to reimburse the company for
The objection to the judgment on the ground of the deficiency of the petition cannot be sustained. It is true that the suit was for a cancellation of the stock, but the petition contains a prayer for all other general, equitable- or special relief. Renick failed to surrender the stock for cancellation. It is an outstanding liability against the-company. His first excuse for failing to produce it being held insufficient, he offered another, contradictory of the first, that is likewise insufficient. Not having produced the certificate, the chancellor had the power, under the general prayer of the petition, to render a personal judgment against Renick for the value of the stock. But it is suggested in brief that-the chancellor would not permit him to purchase a like amount of stock on the market and substitute it for the stock in question. We find nothing in the record indicating that he ever made such an offer. Besides, the stock was wrongfully issued and delivered to him, and, as he did not comply with the order of court, the measure of liability was the value of the stock at the time it was converted, and this was -shown to be not less than $15,000.00.
The judgment is affirmed on both appeals.