157 Mo. App. 405 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1911
— This is a proceeding by the plaintiff as a judgment creditor of the defendant, Crocus Hill Mining Co., by separate motions under the statute, asking for •■execution against defendants, Bendelari and Cook, for unpaid subscription to the stock of the Crocus Hill Mining Company. Trial was had and the issues found for •defendants and plaintiff has appealed. •
The facts which afterward led to the procurement ••of the judgment which appellant is seeking to collect were as follows:
The Crocus Hill Mining Company was indebted to a number of parties including these defendants, Bendelari and Cook, and executed a deed of trust with plaintiff as trustee upon all its property to secure these creditors. In this deed of trust each creditor is named and the amount due each specified. The total debts secured ■amounted to $5814.49 of which the amount stated to be ■due these defendants is $425. Afterwards the deed of trust was foreclosed and the proceeds of the sale applied pro rata upon these debts. The plaintiff, trustee in the •deed of trust, and representing all the creditors named therein brought suit against the corporation for the balance due on these debts, and secured judgment for '$3499.89, and it is upon this judgment that he now seeks ■execution against these parties. It will thus be seen that about forty per cent of the debts were paid from the pro
The important question to be determined upon this appeal is whether tbe finding of tbe trial court is for therigbt party.
Counsel for tbe respondents insist that this is not an equitable proceeding, but one at law, and that therefore tbe finding of tbe trial court is binding upon us and tbe judgment should be affirmed. To support this contention we are cited to Colonial Trust Company v. McMillan, 188 Mo. 547, 87 S. W. 933 and other cases. These cases were brought under what is now section 3006, Eevised Statutes 1909. Actions under that section are law actions as held by tbe cases to which we have been referred, but as the present case is a proceeding under another section of tbe statute, tbe cases cited are not in. point in this case.
Tbe creditor of a corporation who seeks to reach unpaid subscription "to stock to satisfy bis debt may bring-an action in equity or proceed under tbe statute by motion'for execution against tbe owner of tbe stock, as was done in this case; or be may bring an action at law undersecion 3006. These are concurrent remedies, and the-creditor should be guided by tbe facts in tbe case in determining which remedy be will pursue. [Shields v. Hobart, 172 Mo. 491, 72 S. W. 669; Steam Stone Cutter Company v. Scott, 157 Mo. 520, 57 S. W. 1076.
Tbe Supreme Court of this state has held in tbe case of Erskine v. Lowenstein, 82 Mo. 301, that this statutory proceeding by motion for execution is a substitute for an action in equity to accomplish the same end. By-, this decision of tbe Supreme Court we are bound, hence,, it becomes our duty to review tbe testimony and 'dispose of tbe case in the same way as if it were an action inequity. Tbe Saint Louis Court of Appeals has in a very
In equity cases it is settled law in this state that while an appellate court will defer somewhat to the finding of the chancellor, it will not be bound thereby, but if satisfied that .the result reached by the chancellor is wrong, will review the testimony and render such judgment as the facts warrant. [Benne v. Schnecko, 100 Mo. 250, 13 S. W. 82; McElroy v. Maxwell, 101 Mo. 294, 14 S. W. 1; Patterson v. Patterson, 200 Mo. 335, 98 S. W. 613.] Following this rule we shall examine the testimony and determine for ourselves whether or not the finding of the trial court was for the right party.
The evidence produced upon the hearing of the motion for execution disclosed the following state of facts. The State Lead and Zinc Company was the owner of a mine in Jasper county. The defendants, Bendelari and Cook, were partners and conceived the idea of organizing a corporation for the purpose of buying and operating the mine owned by the State Lead and Zinc Co. To accomplish this purpose they took in another partner by the name of White who was a resident of St. Paul, Minnesota, and these three consituted a partnership' known as the Bob White Mining Company. The sole purpose of the formation of this partnership seems to have been to organize and start a new corporation for the purpose of buying and operating the mine in question. To accomplish this purpose Cook went to St. Paul and he and White induced parties there to invest in this mining venture and to put up money to them for that purpose for which they were to receive stock in the new corporation when it was organized. On May 10,1907, the Bob White Mining Company opened an account with the Miners Bank, .and from that date until June 10th, when the account closed, made deposits totaling $36,500, and drew •checks for the entire amount. The corporation was organized on May 16, 1907, and named the Crocus Hill
A close examination of the testimony in this case convinces us that the real facts in connection with the organization of the Crocus Hill Mining Company and the handling of its stock are about as follows:
Defendants, Bendelari and Cook, were its promoters. Their purpose in promoting it, of course, was to make what they could out of it. The evidence shows that they received a commission of $500' in the deal when the property Avas transferred to the new corporation. This is not explained, but on the contrary is denied until, by a close •examination, Cook was forced to admit that they had received it. This of itself shows that these promoters were not acting in good faith with the prospective investors in the corporation. The fact that 898 of the shares of this •corporation were certified to by these defendants in the -articles of association as being bona fide subscribed and fully paid up when, in fact, these shares Avere not subscribed at all, and not a cent paid thereon, but was held
Respondents insist that the corporation is indebted to them and that they should at least be permitted to offset the amount of their debt against the judgment in plaintiff’s favor. In this we think they are right. The evidence shows the corporation indebted to them in the sum of $255.00 at the date of the judgment, and this judgment, having been obtained by plaintiff in behalf of all the creditors of the corporation named in the deed of trust, including these defendants, they are interested in the judgment to that extent, and we see no reason why this amount should not be credited upon the judgment.
Defendants also insist that the case was tried in the lower court as a law case, and since a demurrer to plaintiff’s testimony was sustained it was unnecessary for them to offer any testimony j and that if it is to be held to be an action governed by equitable rules of procedure, the cause, if the judgment be not affirmed, should be remanded for a new trial, and they be given a chance to offer further testimony.
Prom the record in this case it does appear that both parties regarded the proceeding as one at law when the case was tried, and ordinarily we should be disposed under such circumstances to remand the case for a new
Our conclusion is that the finding of the court ■should have been in plaintiff’s favor and that the amount defendants owe for unpaid subscription to stock of the corporation is $4500. The amount of .the judgment after allowing defendants’ offset of $255 is $3244.89 with interest since its rendition in April, 1909. The debt of •defendants to the corporation for unpaid subscription to stock after allowing their offset is greater than the amount of the judgment.
The judgment of the circuit court will be reversed ■and the cause remanded with directions to set aside the finding in defendants’ favor, and to enter1 2an order awarding execution in plaintiff’s favor against defendants, A. E. Bendelari and Frederick Cook for the sum of $2250 each, to be satisfied by the payment of the amount due upon the judgment.