107 F. 340 | 6th Cir. | 1901
having made the preceding statement, delivered the opinion of the court.
From the record it appears that in the latter part of June, 1896, the defendants Browne, Stuart, and Bell conceived the project of taking an option to purchase the paper-mill plant of the Leonard Paper-Box Board Company, hereinafter called the “Leonard Company,” located at Carthage, Ind., and organizing a company, obtaining stock subscriptions, and with the proceeds of such subscriptions buying the mill for the company at an advanced price, which would enable them to make a considerable profit. With this scheme in view, and for the purpose of carrying it out, Browne and Stuart, on July 17, 1896, after some preliminary negotiations, secured from the president and secretary of the Leonard Company an option to purchase their plant within 90 days for the sum of $75,000. There was no vote of the stockholders or hoard of directors of that company authorizing the granting of the option. On the 23d day of July, 1896, Browne, Stuart, Bell, Province M. Pogue, and Thomas L. Pogue incorporated the company, with the title of the United States Board & Paper Company, and with a capital of $100,000, under the laws of Indiana, by filing articles of association thereof in the proper-office, and. the said incorporators adopted by-laws for the company. On the 3d day of August, following, these five persons subscribed, but did not pay, for $25,000 of stock, and, they being thus far the only subscribers for stock, elected each other directors. They constituted the whole board. Bell was authorized by the hoard to solicit additional subscriptions to the capital stock. Browne and
*343 “That whereas, the company is desirous of purchasing the paper-making plant located at Carthage, Indiana, from Browne and Stuart, who have purchased the same from the Leonard Paper-Box Board Co.; and whereas, the directors have made careful examination as to the investment and the conditions of the deed provided for by Browne and Stuart from the Leonard Paper-Box Board Company to the United States Board and Paper Company; and whereas, it is for the best interests of the company to further its business in purchasing the same; therefore he it resolved, that pursuant to the authority vested in us by the articles of incorporation and by-laws of the stockholders, that we purchase said plant, with its good will and appurtenances, for §100.-000, and in payment therefor, pay $65,000 cash, and in payment of the balance that bonds of the company, to the value of §35,000, being seventy bonds, pf §500 each, the bonds numbered from one to thirty-live, inclusive, being payable in one year from the date of the execution of the trust mortgage hereinafter referred to, and bonds Nos. 36 to 70, inclusive, being payable in two years after the date of the execution of the trust mortgage, with interest -coupons attached, payable semiannually, at the rate of 7 per cent per annum, he Issued and. duly signed by the president and secretary, who are hereby authorized, empowered, and directed to sign the same; and he it further resolved, in connection therewith, that the president and secretary execute the trust mortgage deed of the company to Louis Leonard, trustee, of Piqua, Ohio, to secure said issue of bonds, and that the said mortgage deed he given on all real estate of the company situated at Cartilage, Indiana.”
On the 22d of December, 1896, a deed with full covenants of warranty from the Leonard Company was executed and delivered. This deed recited a consideration of “one dollar and other valuable considerations.” The officers of the Leonard Company were requested to allow the deed to recite a consideration of $100,000. But as they objected to this, and those managing the business for the new company were not satisfied to have the consideration stated at $75,000, it was finally concluded to put it as it appears in the deed. On the same day the following transaction took place: Browne and Stuart, to pay for the original stock subscription of themselves and their associates, gave to the United States Board & Paper Company their check on the Equitable National Bank for $25,000, without having the money there to pay for it. Browne, as president of the United States Board & Paper Company, gave that company’s check on the same hank to Browne and Stuart for $85,000. To the extent of $25,000, the $85,000 satisfied the check given by Browne and Stuart for their shares, and the remaining $40,000 went through Browne and Stuart to pay the cash part of the purchase price agreed to be paid by Browne and Stuart to the Leonard Company for the mill. A mortgage to secure the bonds was given as contemplated. The result of all this was that Browne and Stuart received from their own company the $25,000 wherewith they paid for their stock subscription, and it is the validity of this stock that is the matter in controversy. Certificates therefor were eventually issued, $8,300 each to Browne and Stuart, $8,200 to Bell, and $Í00 each to the Messrs. Pogue, the two latter having been concerned as attorneys only for the others in the preparation of the papers used in conducting the business, and standing for directors in the organization of the company, presumably for the parties principally interested. But it is not questioned that all these parties were aware of the facts above referred to, as they transpired. The business of the new company went on, and the stockholders, other than as above
The reasons for the enforcement of that principle in such cases as this are obvious. Without it there is nothing to hinder the concoction of schemes which the reports of decisions show are becoming quite too frequent in recent years, during which corporations have so greatly multiplied, whereby one may take an option or conditional contract for the purchase of property, and then turn it over, at a profit to himself, to a corporation to be organized, and be under his own control for a sufficient time to enable him to realize the fruits of his enterprise. Unless the promoter of the company is restrained by. the obligations of a duty which prevents him from bringing the consequences which are liable to result to others who may be led into danger, he may practice such schemes with impunity. Of course, these observations do not apply to a case where the corporation, having knowledge of the facts and freedom of action, consents to a contract proposed by another, even though he may be a stockholder or a director. The corporation could not in. such case complain, nor could a stockholder, if there had been no actually fraudulent purpose towards him. In the present case, while there is some conflict of testimony in the minor details, there is really no room for dispute in regard to the controlling facts.
It is clear that the purpose to organize a corporation to take the mill property, if it should be purchased, was formed in the begin
When, on August 3, 1896, Browne and Stuart made their proposition to sell the mill to their company, and they and their cooperating associates, acting as the hoard of directors, accepted it for the company, the company was completely in fetters. While it was made to be a purchaser, it was dominated by the seller. It had no organ for seeing, hearing, or even knowing what was going -on. Its whole constituency was engaged in bringing about the sale for the sellers. We have, on several occasions, held that where one who assumes to act as the agent of another in a given transaction is really acting as the agent of a third person, or in behalf of some scheme of his own, his apparent principal, having no knowledge of such alien purpose, is not bound by such pretended agent’s acts, nor by any notice or knowledge of facts which such agent had at the time the transaction was going forward. Thomson-Houston Electric Co. v. Capitol Electric Co., 12 C. C. A. 643, 65 Fed. 341; Wilson v. Pauly, 18 C. C. A. 475, 72 Fed. 129, 134; Louisville Trust Co. v. Louisville. N. A. & C. R. Co., 22 C. C. A. 378, 75 Fed. 433, 469. And see Surety Co. v. Pauly, 170 U. S. 133, 18 Sup. Ct. 552, 42 L. Ed. 977; Innerarity v. Bank, 139 Mass. 332, 1 N. E. 282. This rule is supported by still stronger reasons where the principal is in such condition that it can by no possibility either learn the facts or have any judgment to form its own course with regard to them.
The farcical nature of this transaction must have been apparent to the actors, for it was subsequently arranged that it should be confirmed after the cash subscriptions to the stock had been obtained and paid in. Then, three of the directors stepped out, and three new ones were brought in, hut the efficiency of the board for consummating the scheme was not thereby affected. Browne and Bell remained, and Yeiser was a nominee of Browne and Stuart, under a pledge of co-operation. Duncan and Wrigley, the other new members, although they had no knowledge of the purpose of the others, and therefore no motive to wrong the corporation, were, from the very fact of their want of knowledge, of no service in defending the interests of the company. It seems probable that Stuart’s resignation, at least, was made for the purpose of giving a fairer show to the directorate, and inspiring confidence in the good faith of the transaction. In truth, however,- the corporation was still as completely in the hands of the parties who were seeking to sell the mill to it for $100,000 as before. They had a majority
And thus, again, when the transaction was finally consummated, the company not only had no notice of the fact, but was helpless to protect itself if it had had such notice, and all of the stockholders who were not in the scheme were still equally ignorant of the fact thus purposely concealed. It is evident that the actors planned that the stockholders should remain ignorant. They not only refrained from communicating any information on the subject themselves, but they framed their prospectus in a way to mislead. They secured a promise of secrecy from Yeiser. They silenced Hill with a premium. They gave their check for the $25,000, which they never paid, and inserted a blinding consideration in the deed from the Leonard Company. The stockholders had visited and examined the mill property at Carthage, and were satisfied with it and the price to be paid. How it should have happened that no one of them should have learned of the price at which it was to be bought on the occasions of these visits, is left a matter for inference.
The cases in which the principle of equity which we have endeavored to state has been declared and illustrated are quite numerous, both in England and in this country. We shall refer to a few of them only. The leading English case is that of Phosphate Co. v. Erlanger, 5 Ch. Div. 73, in the court of appeals; the same case in the house of lords, 3 App. Cas. 1218, the names of the parties being reversed. The facts were that the Baron Erlanger and his associates, who were under his control, purchased, for the purpose of speculation, a lease of the island of Sombrero, on which were phosphate mines, for the sum of £55,000. Having procured the lease to be assigned to one Evans, an agent of Erlanger, they proceeded to organize a company for mining purposes, to which they intended to sell the lease at a large profit. They established a board of directors, consisting of five members, of whom two were out of the country. Of the other three, one was Evans, who held the lease; another was MacDonald, who was a near friend of Erlanger, and to whom Erianger transferred some stock to qualify him; and the other was Dakin, who was a large stockholder, but who knew nothing of the purpose of selling at a profit. At a meeting of the board of directors, consisting of those last named, a proposition from Erlanger to .sell the lease to the company for £110,000 was accepted. A prospectus was issued, which stated, among other things, that the lease of the island had been secured for £110,000, and reciting numerous facts to show the value of the bargain. A large number of subscribers were induced to take and pay for shares in ignorance of the profit which was being made by Erlanger and his associates in selling the lease to the company. The truth eventually leaked out, the board of directors was reconstituted, and the neAv board was authorized to bring suit to recover the amount of profit which the promoters had made on the sale to the company of the lease, and this was done. There were other facts on which incidental ques
In this country the courts have accepted the essential principle Í aid down in the English cases, and hold, with scarcely any variation, to the doctrine that the promoter of a company stands in the relation of a trustee to it and those who become subscribers to its stock, so long as he retains the power of control over it. There is some difference of opinion, as there is íd the English cases, in regard to the time when he becomes such promoter, within the meaning and operation of the rule. Some courts are of opinion that he is chargeable with the duties of a trust when he enters upon the execution of the scheme which is intended to result in the transfer of the property to a company to be organized and controlled by him. All, however, agree that he comes within the rule when he begins to organize the company, and that from that time he is bound to deal openly and fairly, and in such a way as that those having independent charge of the company, as well as those who are induced to become subscribers to its stock, may be fully advised of the relation he bears to the property which he proposes to sell, in like manner as one who assumes to act as the agent of another in the purchase of property. We refer to a few of the well-considered cases in this country which support what we regard as the doctrine settled upon sound reasons: Brewster v. Hatch, 122 N. Y. 349, 25 N. E. 505; Land Co. v. Case, 104 Mo. 572, 16 S. W. 390; Hebgen v. Koeffler, 97 Wis. 313, 72 N. W. 745; Oil Co. v. Densmore, 64 Pa. 43; Hayward v. Leeson (Mass.) 57 N. E. 656; Burbank v. Dennis, 101 Cal. 90, 35 Pac. 444; Stove Co. v. Wilcox, 64 Conn. 101, 29 Atl. 303, 25 L. R. A. 90. The particular subject does not seem to have been before the supreme court of the United States for consideration, but there have been at least two decisions at the circuit, and they are in harmony with the views we have expressed. Chandler v. Bacon (C. C.) 30 Fed. 538, per Colt, C. J.; Cortes Co. v. Thannhauser (C. C.) 45 Fed. 730, per Wallace, C. J.
The company, as well as the stockholders, are entitled to the benefit of the independent judgment of the trustee in regard to the value of the property to be purchased, and the price to be paid, as well as its fitness for the intended use. It is said that the property was worth what the' company paid for it, and is adapted to the company’s requirements. It happens so. But this in no manner affects the
With regard to the kind of relief which should be awarded, it must be adapted to the situation at the time when it was applied for; that is, when the suit was commenced.
There could not he a rescission without gross injustice to the parties wronged. The business has gone on with the use of the mill. It could not be restored without serious prejudice to the interests of the company. We do not think the defendants have any equity to have it restored. It was the company’s money which paid for it. It is quite clear that the defendants did not intend to make the purchase for their own use. The substance of the whole matter is that through their breach of trust they were enabled to get $25,000 of the company’s stock without paying for it. It seems to us that a decree annulling their title to it is an appropriate remedy. The decree of the circuit court is affirmed.