100 P. 927 | Utah | 1909
This is an action for a breach of contract. On the 1st day of August, 1904, John W. White, Francis White, George White, and Frank Nouse, appellants, entered into a certain contract -with Nathan E. Snell, William Finch, David Morgan, and P. Okelberry. P. Okelberry subsequently died, and William P. Okelberry is made a party as administrator of the estate of P. Okelberry. For convenience we shall treat William P. Okelberry as a party to the contract, and shall designate the defendants as respondents. The material parts of the contract, in substance, are: That appellants on said 1st day of August, 1904, were the owners of ninety-three shares of the capital stock in the Goshen Mill & Elevator Company, a Utah corporation organized with a capital stock of $15,000 divided into one hundred and fifty shares of $100 each. It is recited in the contract that the appellants were desirous of placing the management and control of said ninety-three shares of stock into the hands of respondents, and that the respondents (who at that time were directors of the corporation aforesaid) were desirous of assuming the control thereof; that appellants in said agreement constituted and appointed respondents as attorneys in fact to vote said ninety-three shares of stock at. all corporate meetings, and authorized them to collect all dividends that might be declared thereon and to apply the same to their own use and benefit, and, in short, authorized respondents to do all things that the appellants might lawfully do as owners of said stock. The contract was to be in force from the 1st day of August, 1904, until the 1st day of January, 1907. The appellants reserved the right to sell said stock as the owners thereof at any time, subject, however, to the rights of respondents as stated above for the time aforesaid. The respondents were also prohibited from pledging or other
The principal error assigned is that the court erred in holding that the provisions of said contract are void and unenforceable. In support of the ruling of the court, counsel for respondents, as we understand them, insist: (.1) That, by
True it is, that in some states combinations of this character are prohibited by statute; but we have no such sfatute in this state. It is equally true that, where such a combination is formed for the purpose of exploiting the business
But, beyond all this, the agreement was fully executed when this action was commenced. No fraud, misrepresentation, or concealment of any kind or character is alleged, nor can we conceive how respondents could have been misled in any way by appellants. Respondents, as directors of the corporation, were in charge of its business affairs when the agreement was entered into, and must be deemed to have known the condition of the corporation’s affairs, and, in a measure at least, the future prospects or possibilities of the corporate business. With this knowledge the respondents entered into the agreement with a view, no doubt, of so controlling and conducting the corporate business as to make it profitable to all the stockholders, including themselves. In order to maintain this control, they arranged for the right to vote and control appellants’ stock, who were the owners of sufficient to entitle respondents to such control, and for this right respondents agreed to perform the conditions mentioned in the agreement. This agreement does not contain any conditions for which voting pools and other combinations with respect to voting the corporate stock have been held void in the courts. (2 Cook on Corps. (6th Ed.), secs. 622, 622a; 10 Cyc. 341, 342.)
To what extent and under, what circumstances a court might interfere in a case where the minority stockholders are in court to prevent the execution of a pooling contract we need not now determine. All that it is necessary to decide
The contract in our opinion is not vulnerable to the objections urged against it. The judgment is therefore reversed, and the cause remanded, with directions to the district court to grant a new trial, and to proceed with the case in accordance with the views herein expressed. Appellants to recover costs.