Adams v. Mid-West Chevrolet Corp.

1946 OK 331, 179 P.2d 147, 198 Okla. 461, 175 A.L.R. 554, 1946 Okla. LEXIS 725
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 10, 1946
DocketNo. 32166
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 1946 OK 331 (Adams v. Mid-West Chevrolet Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. Mid-West Chevrolet Corp., 1946 OK 331, 179 P.2d 147, 198 Okla. 461, 175 A.L.R. 554, 1946 Okla. LEXIS 725 (Okla. 1946).

Opinion

RILEY, J.

This is an action commenced in the district court of Tulsa county by plaintiff in error, herein referred to as plaintiff, against defendants in error, D. B. Winchell, John E. Byers, and Roy F. Godfrey, the directors and officers of Mid-West Chevrolet Corporation, a Delaware corporation, for an accounting and for cancellation of certain shares of stock in said corporation, 'held by defendants Winchell and Byers. The corporation was made- a party defendánt.

Plaintiff asserts that it is a derivative action by him on behalf and for the benefit of the corporation, while defendants assert that it is in truth and-fact an action brought, not for the benefit of the corporation, but for the benefit of plaintiff in that by the cancellation of all the shares of stock of the corporation held by defendants Winchell and Byers, plaintiff would thereby become the owner of substantially all the remaining stock of the corporation and in control thereof.

The corporation was organized in January, 1931, under the laws of Delaware, with an authorized capital stock of 10,000 shares of the par value of $10 each, divided into two classes, A and B (6,000 shares of Class A and 4,000 shares of Class B). It was organized for the purpose of acquiring the assets and business of Mid-West Chevrolet Company, an Oklahoma corporation, the business of which was buying and selling new Chevrolet automobiles, trucks, etc., and buying, selling, repairing and maintenance of used automobiles, trucks, and other motor vehicles, and buying and selling parts for repairs. No [463]*463shares of stock of either class can be sold, assigned, or transferred at any time by any owner or holder other than to another stockholder then of record without first having tendered such stock proposed to be sold, to the corporation for purchase for its own account on equal terms. Class B stock is subject to redemption by the corporation at any time.

At the time of the trial, certificates were outstanding for 2,194 shares of Class A stock and 1,685 shares of Class B stock. Plaintiff Adams was the owner of 344 shares of Class A stock. Defendant Winchell held of record. 1,375 shares of Class B stock and 1,850 shares of Class A stock. Defendant Byers held 200 shares of Class B stock. The other .shares of Class B stock were held by other employees of the corporation who were not parties to this action.

Plaintiff’s amended petition, upon Which the action was tried, contains ten causes of action. The record is voluminous and contains some 1,700 pages of pleadings, oral testimony, and exhibits. The exhibits go largely to the corporate, records.

The Mid-West Chevrolet Corporation, a: Delaware corporation, and the Mid-West Chevrolet Company, an Oklahoma corporation, are separate corporations. Herein, where the Mid-West Corporation is referred to, it means the Delaware. corporation, and where the Mid-West Company is referred to, it means the Oklahoma corporation.

Late in 1930 the Mid-West Company became desirous of selling its business. Defendants D. B. Winchell and Hal Hayes, both having had experience in the automobile sales business, learned of this desire and interested certain individuals, referred to in the record as the “Parriott group,” none of whom were experienced in that business, in a proposition to finance the purchase of the assets and business of the Mid-West Company. The result was that the Par-riott group, including plaintiff, agreed to and did subscribe for $50,000 (5,000 shares) of stock in the proposed new corporation. Winchell and Hayes each agreed to subscribe for $5,000 (500 shares) of stock in the new corporation. To that end, a corporation was organized as above stated. The Parriott group was composed of F. B. Parriott, his wife Kathleen C. Parriott, J. S. Hanlon, secretary to Mr. Parriott, E. D. Robinson, a business associate of F. B. Parriott, and the plaintiff, J. C. Adams, an attorney who had been associated with F. B. Parriott in business and in a profession'al capacity. When the new corporation was organized, the books of the corporation showed ownership, of 5,000 shares of Class A stock as follows:

F. B. Parriott 33 Shares
Kathleen C. Parriott 3,300 Shares
J. S. Hanlon 833 Shares
E. D. Robinson 417 Shares
J. C. Adams 417 Shares
and of Class B stock:
D. B. Winchell 500 Shares
Hal Hayes 500 Shares

The subscription agreement of Winchell and Hayes gave each an option to purchase 1,500 additional shares of Class B stock at par at any time within three years from the date of the original subscription. The first board of directors, five in number, consisted of Winchell, Hayes, Robinson, Hanlon, and H. A. Zellman, Mr. Parriott’s secretary. Class A a*d Class B stock had equal voting power. Thus the Parriott group had voting control of the corporation. At the first meeting of the board, held January 21, 1931, Winchell was elected president, Hayes vice president, and Hanlon vice president and treasurer.'

Winchell and Hayes were unable to pay for the stock subscribed by them, without borrowing the money. They each borrowed $5,000 from the Mid-West Chevrolet Company, from which the business had been bought, and each gave his promissory note therefor and agreed to pledge as security his shares of stock in the new corporation. There was restriction against the pledge of the [464]*464stock as security for the stockholders’ indebtedness and the Mid-West Company declined to accept the stock as a pledge without waiver by the Mid-West Corporation of the restriction against its pledge. Thereupon the corporation, by its board of directors, waived the restriction and the stock was pledged as security for the loans. Winchell was made general manager at a salary of $400 per month. Later Hayes* being unable or unwilling to pay his note, the corporation assumed and later paid the same and his stock was surrendered to the corporation and Hayes dropped out of the corporation. F. B. Parriott was elected director in his place.

When Winchell’s note to the Mid-West Company became due, he borrowed from the First National Bank & Trust Company $5,000 and paid his note :to the Mid-West Company. The note to said bank was later paid in full. The manner in which it was paid gave rise to'one of the controversies in this case.

In December, 1933, plaintiff was elected to the board of directors and served as such until February, 1939.

. About January, 1934, just before Winchell’s option to purchase 1,500 additional shares of Class B stock was to expire, at the suggestion of F. B. Parriott, Winchell exercised his option to the extent of the purchase of 875 additional shares of Class B stock. For some reason, not made clear, the corporation, through the officers then in control, determined that the total outstanding stock of the corporation should not be increased by the purchase of additional stock by Winchell. Thereupon it was decided that the then owners of the 5,000 shares of Class A stock should sell back to the corporation the same number of Class A shares, at par, each holder of Class A stock to sell to the corporation his proportionate number of shares of Class A stock.

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Bluebook (online)
1946 OK 331, 179 P.2d 147, 198 Okla. 461, 175 A.L.R. 554, 1946 Okla. LEXIS 725, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-mid-west-chevrolet-corp-okla-1946.