Beach v. Beach Hotel Corporation

168 A. 785, 117 Conn. 445, 1933 Conn. LEXIS 180
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedOctober 24, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 168 A. 785 (Beach v. Beach Hotel Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beach v. Beach Hotel Corporation, 168 A. 785, 117 Conn. 445, 1933 Conn. LEXIS 180 (Colo. 1933).

Opinion

Haines, J.

Many of the facts leading up to this action are recited in the Reports of this court, Yol. 113, pp. 119 and 716, and Vol. 115, p. 708. The plaintiff Beach contracted with the Development Service Corporation to erect and finance a hotel upon his property in the city of Bridgeport. Pursuant thereto the defendant corporation was organized under the laws of this State; and on September 23d, 1927, the Service Corporation made a contract with the Wark Company — a Pennslyvania corporation engaged in construction work — providing that the latter, upon the execution of a contract by it with the defendant corporation, would subscribe for seventeen hundred and fifty shares of the preferred and a like number of shares of the common stock of the defendant Hotel Corporation; and that the first payment of ten per oent on the subscription — being $18,375 — should be made by the Wark Company in cash. This was in fact paid. The balance was to be paid in instalments *447 as called for by the Service Corporation not oftener than once each month, and no payment to be required for more than two-sevenths of the amount of the architects’ certificate of approval of the construction work — the whole subscription to be paid on or before the receipt of the architects’ final certificate. No calls were ever made until that of the receiver in this action. Further, it was agreed that the Service Corporation would maintain a sales organization for the sale of the capital stock, and also to sell the stock subscribed for by the Wark Company for the account of the latter with the purpose of eventually reimbursing that company in cash for the full amount of its subscription. The Service Corporation thereafter sold seven hundred and thirty-one shares of preferred and a like amount of the common stock to other parties and the full amount of these subscriptions was collected and turned over to the Hotel Corporation.

The contract also contained the following language: “3. As and when cash payments are received from subscribers to said preferred and common stock so obtained by such sales organization, the amounts so received shall be credited against the current or next succeeding subscription instalments payable by the contractor. 4. The sales organization shall be at liberty to sell the balance of the authorized issue of preferred and common stock of said Beach Hotel Corporation provided, however, that the first 1750 shares of preferred and common stock sold by it shall be the stock hereby subscribed for by the contractor.”

It was further provided that “this agreement is collateral to the building contract to be entered into by the contractor and the Beach Hotel Corporation.” It was signed and sealed by the Service Corporation and the Wark Company and the following endorsement made thereon: “Approved and agreed to, Beach *448 Hotel Corporation, by Francis E. Beach, Pres.,” and the seal of the corporation was attached.

The Wark Company completed the erection of the hotel in May, 1929, in accordance with its contract, and has received on account $428,155.11, leaving a balance due, with interest, of $324,741.64. As part of the plan for financing the enterprise, a first mortgage of $500,000 was placed upon the property. Thereafter both the plaintiff Beach and the defendant Hotel Corporation became insolvent and in the action now before us a receiver was appointed for the latter. The Wark Company filed a mechanic’s lien for the $324,-741.64, and in an action to foreclose that lien the amount was contested by the receiver, who sought to set off against it the balance of ninety per cent — or $165,375 — due on the stock subscription of the Wark Company. Upon a reservation, however, this court held that the building and subscription contracts were “obligations independent of each other and there is no basis upon which, in this action at least, the latter could be applied as a credit in reduction of the former.” The demand of the Wark Company was found correct and allowed in full and a foreclosure judgment in favor of the Wark Company granted. Wark Co. v. Beach Hotel Corporation, 113 Conn. 119, 127, 154 Atl. 252.

Upon the foreclosure of the first mortgage, however, to which the mechanic’s lien was subordinate, neither the Wark Company nor any other party redeemed and the title to the property passed to the mortgagee. The Wark Company then filed the adjudicated claim of $324,714.64 against the receiver in the present receivership action, and the court, over objection of the Wark Company, permitted the receiver to file a cross-complaint against the Wark Company for the balance claimed to be due on the latter’s *449 stock subscription. Its motion to strike out this cross-complaint having been overruled, the Wark Company filed an appeal to this court, but it was disallowed, as not based upon a final judgment. Beach v. Beach Hotel Corporation, 115 Conn. 708, 709, 163 Atl. 416.

Issue was joined, and a motion of the Wark Company for a jury trial being overruled, the court, after hearing, gave judgment against the Wark Company in favor of the receiver for the ninety per cent due on the stock subscription — $165,375—and interest. The appellant — Wark Company — in brief and argument makes five main claims in support of its appeal from that judgment: (1) That it was error to permit the cross-complaint to be filed in this receivership action; (2) that the appellant was entitled to a jury trial; (3) that the opinion in 113 Conn. 119, above referred to, does not deny the Wark Company the right to have its claim on the construction contract credited against the amount due, if any, upon its subscription contract; (4) that the entire ninety per cent balance on the subscription contract was in fact and law paid by crediting the balance of the construction account against it under an oral agreement made by authorized representatives of the two corporations while the Hotel Corporation was yet solvent, and (5) that, in any event, the Wark Company is entitled— under its contract with the Service Corporation — to have the proceeds of stock sold thereafter by the latter — $76,745—credited on its subscription indebtedness.

As to the first claim, it is contended by the Wark Company that it was not a party to the receivership action and that the subject-matter of the cross-complaint was not so related to the controversy in that action that it was necessary for the court to consider it in order to fully determine the rights of the parties in *450 the original controversy, within the requirements of Harral v. Leverty, 50 Conn. 46, 63, 64; Downing v. Wilcox, 84 Conn. 437, 440, 80 Atl. 288; Practice Book, p. 286, § 188.

This proceeding for the appointment of a receiver to take possession of all the assets and for the dissolution of the Hotel Corporation, was an action in equity. Barber v. International Co. of Mexico, 73 Conn. 587, 48 Atl. 758. It was brought to the Superior Court which has plenary jurisdiction, both legal and equitable. The Wark Company — claiming to be a creditor of the Hotel Corporation — voluntarily entered an appearance in the receivership action by counsel and thereafter filed its claim for $324,741.64.

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Bluebook (online)
168 A. 785, 117 Conn. 445, 1933 Conn. LEXIS 180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beach-v-beach-hotel-corporation-conn-1933.