Allith-Prouty Co. v. Wallace

233 P. 144, 32 Wyo. 392
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 6, 1926
Docket1188
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 233 P. 144 (Allith-Prouty Co. v. Wallace) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allith-Prouty Co. v. Wallace, 233 P. 144, 32 Wyo. 392 (Wyo. 1926).

Opinions

Blume, Justice.

This ease was originally commenced in the district court of Fremont County on March 20, 1917, by the above named plaintiff, Allith-Prouty Company, a Corporation, appellant herein, against Jennie Y. Wallace, defendant below and respondent here. The petition alleges that plaintiff is a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the state *396 of Illinois and is the successor of the Allith Manufacturing Company, which latter corporation was duly dissolved about the first day of January, 1913, and absorbed into and by the plaintiff company. That the defendant was the owner of sixty shares of the capital stock of said Allith Manufacturing Company, of the par value of $100, making a total valuation of $6000. That on March 25, 1911, a motion was duly made and carried whereby the board of directors of said Allith-Manufacturing Company declared a dividend of 100%, making a total amount of $6000 declared for the defendant. That thereafter, on the first day of April, said dividend was paid to said stockholders of said corporation, of which $6000 was paid to the defendant. That said dividend was paid in the form of an additional issue of capital stock in the Allith Manufacturing Company, so that the defendant received sixty additional shares, making a total of one hundred and twenty shares of stock held by her. That thereafter, on or about April 1, 1915, it was discovered that an error in calculation had been made by the board of directors of said Allith Manufacturing Company, in declaring said 100% dividend, making it necessary for the board of directors of said plaintiff company to cancel and annul the said former dividend to the extent of forty percent on each shar e of the stock, leaving the amount that had been correctly paid as dividend only sixty percent thereof. That on account of said error it became necessary to order a refund to the corporation of forty percent of the stock so issued as dividend, which was accordingly done, and that all of the stockholders of said corporation, with the exception of defendant and her husband, made such refund. That a demand for such refund had been made upon defendant, but that she has refused to make the same and that there is due to plaintiff by reason thereof the sum of $2400 and interest.

Tlxe defendant was a non-resident of the state of Wyoming at the time of the commencement of the action, and jurisdiction in the case was obtained by an attachment is *397 sued in said cause, an affidavit having been duly filed that the defendant was a non-resident of the state of Wyoming. Certain property in the town of Lander was attached. The only notice of said action served upon the defendant was by publication, as by law provided, although a copy of the notice did not reach the defendant. The case was tried in the absence of the defendant, and a judgment was rendered therein on December 8, 1917, in favor of the plaintiff for $3686.93 and costs. An execution was duly issued and the property in the city of Lander attached in the case was duly sold to H. C. Smith for the benefit of the plaintiff herein, which sale was subsequently, on June 16, 1919, duly confirmed by the court.

On August 23, 1919, the defendant herein served notice upon the plaintiff of an intended application to re-open, vacate and set aside the foregoing judgment and orders of the court. An application to that effect was filed on September 3, 1919, and an order was entered in said court on September 29, 1919, granting the application and authorizing the defendant to appear and defend. On the same day, the defendant filed an answer and cross-petition in said case, denying the allegations of the plaintiff’s petition and asking damages by way of counter-claim for the wrongful attachment issued in said cause, and also a judgment for the value of the stock dividend heretofore mentioned but not turned over to the defendant.

Said cause came on for hearing before said court on December 8, 1922, and the court found in favor of the defendant and against the plaintiff and appellant, and rendered judgment in favor of said defendant and respondent in the sum of $9304.00 and costs. On December 18th, 1922, said plaintiff filed a motion for a new trial and to have said cause re-opened, which said motion was granted on January 3, 1923, upon certain conditions hereinafter mentioned. Said cause came on again for trial on February 21, 1923, before the court without a jury, at the close of which the court again found in favor of said defendant and against the *398 plaintiff, and rendered judgment for the defendant in the sum of $10,732.00 and costs. From this judgment the plaintiff has appealed to this court. The parties will herein be referred to in the same manner as in the court below.

1. The undisputed testimony shows that defendant owned sixty shares in the Allith Manufacturing Company at the time that the stock dividend above referred to was declared. That was on March 25, 1911. The motion to declare said, dividend was made by Wm. A. Wallace, husband of defendant, who was a director in said company, and who himself owned six shares of stock therein. The dividend stock was, however, never delivered to the defendant. During the year 1911, the plaintiff company took over the property and assets of the Allith Manufacturing Company. About the beginning of the year 1912 negotiations began between IT. C. Smith, president of the consolidated company, and Wm. A. Wallace for the purchase of the stock held by the latter and his wife, and the sale of the stock, namely, sixty-six shares of the Allith Manufacturing Company was soon thereafter actually effected, being made to Charles C. Linthicum for $13,200, or $200 per share. Lin-thicum caused the stock to be transferred to him on the books of the company, and the dividend stock heretofore mentioned, which otherwise would or should have been issued to defendant and her husband, was issued to said Lin-thicum by reason of the purchase aforesaid.

The trial court included in the judgment in the case at bar the sum of $3600 for 60% of the $6000 dividend stock not issued to defendant, but issued, as stated, to Linthicum instead, and also included in said judgment the sum of $1470 for dividends earned thereon to the time of the trial,, making a total of $5070 so included by reason of said dividend stock. This amount was evidently allowed upon the theory that the plaintiff converted this stock, although no such issue was raised by the pleadings. Waiving that point, however, we must examine whether or not the evidence in the record justified the finding. H. C. Smith testified that *399 when the sale to Linthicum of the sixty shares of defendant and the six shares of ¥m, A. Wallace was made, the defendant sold all of her interest in the Allith Manufacturing Company, including the 100 % dividend that had been declared. The trial court held that this dividend was not included in the sale and was doubtless led to this conclusion largely by reason of what it conceived to be the limited authority of the power of attorney given by defendant to her husband William A. Wallace. That instrument is in the usual form and gives power to ‘ ‘ assign and transfer the following shares of the capital stock of the Allith Manufacturing Company, to-wit: (here specifying Nos. 184-189 both inclusive) to Charles C. Linthicum of Chicago, Illinois, at such prices and on such terms as my said attorney may determine” etc.

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Bluebook (online)
233 P. 144, 32 Wyo. 392, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allith-prouty-co-v-wallace-wyo-1926.