Sherman v. Shaughnessy

148 Mo. App. 679 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1910

GOODE, J.

The Simpson Catering Company was a Missouri corporation, incorporated February 19, 1904. The original subscribers for the capital stock of $50,000 were Corinne Simpson, William C. Morgan and S. J. Hoge, the first of whom subscribed for 498 shares and the other two for one share each. Mrs. Simpson had obtained a concession from the Louisiana Purchase Exposition Company and this concession was transferred by her to the incorporated company as full payment of its capital stock. She was named as president of the company, William C. Morgan as vice-president and S. J. Hoge, secretary, and those three persons were named as the first board of directors. ' At a meeting of the company held February 20, 3904, the stockholders voted to increase the board of directors to five, and Jean P. Baerveldt was elected director, but who the fifth was is not shown. After the election of Baerveldt, Morgan resigned as vice-president and Baerveldt was chosen to fill that office. March 24th a motion was adopted, reciting the previous resolution by which the directors were increased from three to five, and at the same time Hoge resigned as director. This left as officers Corinne Simpson, president, Jean T. Baerveldt, vice-president, Wm. C. Morgan as secretary, and S. J. Hoge as treasurer, with Mrs. Simpson, Baerveldt and Morgan as directors. At the meeting February 20th, when the stockholders were the persons stated, it was voted the capital stock of the company should be paid in full by the transfer of all rights of Mrs. Simpson, and that she should transfer $25,000 of the stock subscribed by her to the treasury of the company, to “be set aside as treasury stock to be sold for the purpose of raising funds to build a restaurant and equipping the same, said stock to be sold at par ” Later Mrs. Simpson solicited persons to subscribe for or pur*684chase shares of the treasury stock and among others, solicited defendant. The persons solicited were asked to sign the following paper, and the names of those who signed were shown at the foot of it.

“St. Louis, Mo., Feb. 18, 1904.

“We the undersigned, subscribe and agree to pay for in cash, for the number of shares of the capital stock of the Simpson Catering Company, of St. Louis, Missouri, set opposite our names. Money to be deposited with the Commonwealth Trust Company, of St. Louis, Missouri, as bankers to the credit of the Simpson Catering Company, upon the condition that all the received money is to be used for the general running expenses and the building of buildings, improvements and equipment, according to the plans and specifications and drawings made by the architect, and that upon delivery of the check or cash to the company or the trust company, a certificate of stock to the amount is to be delivered to the purchaser of the stock, of the par value $100 each, paid for at par.

“The concession is granted and is assigned to the Catering Company by Mrs. Corinne Simpson, and the bond and all stipulations have been complied with to the Fair Company.

“The building shall have a seating capacity of 1,000 persons, and shall be conducted as an eating house, restaurant, buffet and general refreshment place, during the term of the St. Louis World’s Fair Exposition is in progress.

“The capital stock of the company is fifty thousand dollars, par value, one hundred dollars each, and fifteen thousand dollars of this stock is to be sold at par, and ten thousand dollars will be left in the treasury for raising further funds if necessary.

“It is agreed by the board of directors that the subscriber of this fifteen thousand dollars will be paid his money back first before any dividends are paid on the *685promoter’s stock, and that there is a sinking fund set aside for the actual daily rental expenses of the cost of the building to not be used for any other purposes until the fifteen thousand is paid back to the holders of the stock, who advanced the money and then the profits derived from the earnings shall be paid in weekly dividends for the whole stock.

“The board of directors shall meet once a week and declare such dividends as may be necessary from the profits derived.

“Name. Residence. Shares

“M. Shaughnessy & Co. 10 shares

The Simpson Catering Company fell into insolvency and August 6, 1904, Corinne Simpson, the president, by authority of the board of directors, executed a deed of assignment to plaintiff Mary B. Sherman, conveying to her all the assets for the benefit of creditors of the company. Plaintiff instituted this action as assignee, to recover from defendant, Martin Shaughnessy, $1000, alleged to be owed by him for ten shares of stock subscribed for or agreed by him to be purchased, under the name of M. Shaughnessy & Co., the style under which he did business. It is important to state the dates when the so-called subscription paper was signed. The first two signers, signed February 20th and the remainder at dates ranging from March 3, 1904, to June 4th of said year. These dates are taken from a stock book of the Simpson Catering Company wherein shares were transferred to the various subscribers on the different days between the dates mentioned. Defendant’s name does not appear on the stock book because, in fact, no shares ever were transferred into his name, nor was a certificate of shares ever issued to him; but he was solicited by Mrs. Simpson to take shares about the middle of April, and at that time signed the paper. It was in testimony that Jos. S. Laurie signed afterward, and *686induced Geo. P. B. Jackson to do so, and Laurie testified he signed in reliance on other persons having- signed before, thereby becoming stockholders in the concern. Defendant testified as follows about how he came to sign the paper supra. He was engaged in the wholesale whisky business in St. Louis and also conducted the Lindell Hotel. Mrs. Simpson called on him three or four times about taking some stock and outlined the policy of the company, which was to deposit all the earnings in the Commonwealth Trust Company to pay the preferred shares. She presented á paper to defendant, saying if he would buy ten shares , of the stock of the company, it would buy all its whiskies from him. Defendant looked over the paper and finally said to Mrs. Simpson, in substance, there was nothing to keep the officers from voting themselves any salary they wished’ out of the net earnings but she said they would not do that; that they would deposit their entire earnings with the Commonwealth Trust Company, the officers would receive only a small nominal salary, and they would buy all their whiskey from defendant. She told defendant she wished he would sign the paper for her as she had been greatly disappointed in trying to get things in shape. He declined to sign unless she would put her agreement in writing — i. e., to buy all the whiskey the restaurant would use from him, the salaries of the officials should be nominal, and the earnings should be deposited with the Commonwealth Trust Company. She agreed to sign a paper containing those terms, but asked defendant to sign the paper supra, saying she would come around in a few days and execute his paper. He had an instrument drawn up, embodying the conditions on which he would take stock, as we have stated, and which instrument is in evidence. With the understanding that such an instrument should be signed by Mrs. Simpson for the company, defendant appended his signature to the above paper, for ten shares of stock and either the day he did so or shortly afterward, Mrs. Simpson *687returned to Mm on a matter of business, Avhereupon he presented her with the paper he had had prepared, shoAving theconditions on which hewould take the stock. She became angry, refused to sign the paper, said she would have théir agreement cancelled and walked out of the office. Defendant never saw her afterward, no stock certificate was issued to him, no stock was transferred to him on the books of the company, he never was called on to pay for any shares, never participated in any of the business of the company and the entire transaction passed out of his mind and was not remembered until he was called on by the assignee to pay one thousand dollars. It is in defendant’s testimony, and there is none to the contrary, that when he presented the paper embodying the terms on which he would subscribe for or purchase stock from Mrs. Simpson, she said she would not sign it but would call the deal off and would cancel it. A ledger or stock book of the company was introduced in evidence and shoAved no shares of preferred or common stock in the name of defendant. Said ledger contained a list of the holders of preferred shares, running down to May 21, 1904, and amounting, we estimate, to $15,600, of. outstanding preferred shares, leaving $9400 still in the treasury. Under date of April 19, 1904, the ledger showed $11,300 of preferred shares in the hands of various parties, with $13,700 of said shares still in the treasury. But during April, $4300 preferred shares were taken by other persons, as shown by the ledger, and this would leave $9400 in the treasury. The case was tried without a jury and at the conclusion of the evidence the court found the issues in favor of defendant and entered judgment accordingly, no declarations of law having been requested by either party.

Neither Mrs. Simpson, nor the Catering Company ever regarded defendant as a shareholder and neither did he regard himself in that light. Everything that transpired points to this conclusion, which the court, *688as trier of the facts, might draw, even if we allow it was not hound to he drawn. Failure to 'issue a certificate to defendant, to name him as stockholder along with the others on the books of the company, to call on him for payment until he was sued in the present action years after the date of his alleged subscription, are incompatible with the idea that he was looked on as a stockholder. Mrs. Simpson said when she refused to sign the paper she had agreed to sign, the matter of his taking stock would be declared off and the whole transaction can-celled. These being the circumstances in proof, they did not constitute a contract of subscription that would render defendant liable even at the suit of creditors or of an assignee for their benefit clothed with full power to represent them, as plaintiff is clothed under our statute as it now stands. [R. S. 1899, sec. 365; Grand Avenue Bank v. St. Louis Union Trust Co., 135 Mo. App. 366, 115 S. W. 1071.] The abortive transaction between defendant and Mrs. Simpson ought not to be regarded as even an attempt on his part to subscribe for capital stock of the company, and though the papers said the signers subscribed and agreed to pay for shares, the essential nature of the transaction as shown by the facts, ought to be determined and allowed to control the decision. The statutes regarding manufacturing and business companies, provide how stock shall be subscribed, and who shall be the subscribers in the first instance; saying, among other things, the articles of association of the company shall state the number of shares into which the stock is to be divided, the par value thereof, that the same has been bona -fide subscribed and one-half paid up in lawful money of the United States, that the articles shall show the names and places.of residence of the shareholders and the number of shares subscribed by each; further, that if it is desired to class part of the shares as preferred, the articles shall set out the amount of the preferred Stock and the number of shares subscribed by every sub*689scriber. [R. S. 1899, sec. 1312.] When the Simpson Catering Company was organized, all the shares were subscribed as common stock by Mrs. Simpson, Morgan and Hoge, the former taking all but two shares. It is manifest, therefore, defendant did not subscribe originally for any of the capital stock, which be it noted, was all common stock. The scheme for the creation of preferred shares must have been an afterthought or else they were illegal. By the very words of the statute if it was desired when the corporation was organized to have preferred stock, the articles of association were required to show this and show who had subscribed for said stock. The company was incorporated February 19, 1904, and immediately afterward, on the 20th, the scheme was devised, or at least acted upon, to constitute part of the stock preferred. This scheme was for Mrs. Simpson to turn over $25,000 shares par value of her stock to the company, of which $15,000 would be sold at par immediately and $10,000 left in the treasury for raising further funds. The $15,000 worth of shares so to be sold were to be given a preference in this way: The subscribers for those shares were to be paid back their money before any dividends were paid on the promoters’ stock. It wras not contemplated these preferred shares should be subscribed for in the sense subscriptions were taken to the original capital stock; in fact, that would have been an impossibility; for all the capital stock had been previously subscribed. What was contemplated and intended was a sale of the shares turned into the treasury by Mrs. Simpson. This was declared in so many words in the resolution of the then shareholders of the company on February 20th, wherein it was voted and carried that twenty-five thousand dollars of the stock of the. Simpson Catering Company be set aside as treasury stock to be sold for the purpose of raising funds. That motion was adopted at the same meeting when it was voted the transfer of the World’s *690Fair Concession by Mrs. Simpson to the company should be in full payment of the entire capital stock. Plainly, the company and all of the then shareholders, intended the treasury stock should be sold, for they so stated, and what defendant intended to do was to buy ten shares of it on certain conditions; at any rate the court, as trier of the facts might thus find, for defendant so testified, testifying further Mrs. Simpson solicited him to buy. Looking on his transaction with her as an attempt to sell, it is governed of course, by the law of sales of personal property generally; one part of which is that a person to whom a seller proposes to dispose of an article, may buy on any terms he wishes, provided the seller will assent to them. The condition on which defendant was willing to buy was that Mrs. Simpson, who was representing the company in an attempt to sell to him, should sign a paper in behalf of the company by which it would agree to buy all the whiskey it would use from defendant; agree, further, the salaries of the officers should be nominal (to-wit, at a sum agreed on between Mrs. Simpson and defendant) and that the company should deposit all its net earnings with the Commonwealth Trust Company for paying off the preferred stock at the close of the World’s Fair. Mrs. Simpson agreed to sign such a paper as part of the contract for the sale to defendant of ten shares of stock, but she subsequently refused to sign it, and we see no possible conclusion except that, as she said, this ended the proposed sale and cancelled the matter; the contract not having been fully executed. [1 Cook, Corporation, sec. 137, p. 398.] To hold defendant responsible on those facts would be to carry into effect as a complete agreement, one that broke down because a party to it repudiated the main condition on which it was understood it should become effective. That stock may be turned in to a company by the original subscribers to be held and sold by the company as treasury stock is settled law and such a transaction has been recognized *691as valid by tbe courts.. [1 Cook, Corp. (6 Ed.), sec. 46, p. 182; Lake Superior Iron Co. v. Drexel, 90 N. Y. 87; Ins. Press v. Montauk, etc., Co., 103 N. Y. App. Div. 472, and other cases cited in note.] And that the conditions and promises assented to by the company in the purchase of treasury stock are concurrent and dependent, so that neither party can require the other to perform without first offering to perform himself, has been ruled; as it naturally would be, inasmuch as a contract of sale must be enforced according to its terms, if at all. [Railroad v. Robbins, 23 Minn. 439; Baltimore, etc., Railroad v. Hambleton, 77 Md. 341; Green v. Sigua Iron Co., 88 Fed. 203; Id., 104 Fed. 854.] It is also the law that fraudulent representations which induce a purchase of corporate stock, constitute a good defense against an action for the price. [Tinker v. Kier, 195 Mo. 183, 94 S. W. 501.] However, the decision ought not to be put on the ground that defendant was induced to buy the stock by fraudulent representations; but rather on the ground that he was induced to sign the paper wherein he appeared to subscribe or purchase, by Mrs. Simpson’s promise to sign another paper as part of the transaction which should set forth the terms of the deal, and that Mrs. Simpson repudiated her promise, not with an intention to defraud defendant as a purchaser, but rather because, on reflection, she preferred to let the sale fall through. Properly regarded the case is totally different from cases in which the facts showed the defendants had subscribed originally for part of the capital stock of the company and where the action was for the price of the subscription. This distinction has been noticed in numerous decisions and where the contract is essentially one of purchase, even if it is a completed contract, it is held the purchase price cannot be recovered without a tender of the stock. [Wood Harv. Co. v. Jefferson, 57 Minn. 456; Clark v. Improvement Co., 57 Ind. 135; Thrasher v. Railroad, 25 Ill. 393; Gettysberg Nat’l Bank v. Brown, 95 Md. 367.] Plaintiff re*692lies on various authorities, including the following: New Lindell Hotel Co. v. Smith, 13 Mo. App. 7; Kirkwood, etc., Co. v. Van Ness, 61 Mo. App. 361; Shelby Co. v. Railroad v. Crow, 137 Mo. App. 461, 119 S. W. 435; Business Men’s Assn. v. Williams, 137 Mo. App. 575, 119 S. W. 439; Kansas City Hotel Co. v. Hunt, 57 Mo. 126; Haskell v. Worthington, 94 Mo. 560, 7 S. W. 481. Those cases are totally unlike this one in two regards: The contracts sued on were subscriptions to the original capital stock of the company, or else to an increase of the capital stock, and it appeared the subscriber had been recognized as a stockholder and had acted as such, thereby' estopping him to deny he had taken shares even though no certificate had been issued to him. The most essential difference is that the contracts declared on were complete contracts, or else constituted subscriptions to the stock. As there was no complete contract to purchase, the judgment should be affirmed.

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