Blair v. F. H. Smith Co.

156 A. 207, 18 Del. Ch. 150, 1931 Del. Ch. LEXIS 37
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedAugust 8, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 156 A. 207 (Blair v. F. H. Smith Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blair v. F. H. Smith Co., 156 A. 207, 18 Del. Ch. 150, 1931 Del. Ch. LEXIS 37 (Del. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

The Chancellor:

The issuance in May, 1928, by the defendant company of fifty thousand shares of common stock to Pitts as trustee, is defended by no one who has appeared to offer testimony. Pitts himself, however, in the answer which was filed before he repudiated the authority of his solicitor to represent him, avers that the fifty thous- and shares were issued to him for a valuable consideration. He does not say what the consideration was. The company, according to its answer, knows of no consideration other than that shown in the resolution authorizing the issuance of the stock. The only testimony in the case shows the [158]*158resolution to be falsely stated in the minutes in that it empowers Pitts to give the entire fifty thousand shares, with all dividends accumulated thereon, if any, to himself in whole or in part. Pitts is no longer an officer of the company. He is confined in jail. None of the fifty thousand shares was ever distributed to any of the employees. The holding of the shares by Pitts is in behalf of the company and for its welfare. If Pitts does not choose to come forward and justify his right to hold the stock, it would seem that under the circumstances, it ought to be cancelled. The stockholders who have invested their funds in this company to the extent of over one million dollars would be highly prejudiced if the fifty thousand shares were left in the hands of Pitts under a purported trust whose duration is determinable by him alone, and whose terms are so arbitrary as not only to allow Pitts to name his successor but also to permit him to appropriate all or any part of the shares to himself. The stockholders never authorized the trust which the directors’ minutes purport to express. The circumstances surrounding the transaction are such that the shares should be cancelled.

I now direct my attention to the one hundred and fifty thousand shares which were authorized to be issued to Powell, West, Pitts and Henry by the stockholders’ resolution of May 12, 1921. The only consideration for that stock was the thirty thousand shares then standing in the names of these four persons, which were to be exchanged for the larger number. The resolution plainly states that fact. Whether, therefore, any consideration whatever underlay the one hundred and fifty thousand shares depends in turn on whether the thirty thousand shares were supported by a consideration. I do not understand it to be controverted that the one hundred and fifty thousand shares must look back for the discovery of the consideration underlying them to the consideration, if any, which was given for the original thirty thousand shares. The whole argument was had on that assumption. I shall proceed on that assumption. [159]*159In the view I take of the case, it is unnecessary to discuss whether or not, under the charter of this company, it would be proper for the directors to give one hundred and fifty thousand shares of its no par stock in exchange for thirty thousand shares of the same stock without additional consideration.

The question therefore is narrowed to whether the thirty thousand shares should be cancelled if it were all that is outstanding, because of a lack of lawful consideration. If it should, then so also should the one hundred and fifty thousand shares given in exchange for it.

Before taking up that question, it is pertinent to pause for the purpose of noticing the contention that even if the thirty thousand shares were issued for no lawful consideration, yet the stockholders in their meeting of May 12, 1921, when they authorized the exchange of one hundred and fifty thousand shares for the thirty thousand, ratified and confirmed the validity of the latter. The stockholders there present were, it is true, all the then existing stockholders, and the vote was unanimous. And so, it is contended, all the constituent parts of the corporation, stockholders and directors, then in existence, placed the seal of approval on the thirty thousand shares; wherefore, it is said to follow, they and all stockholders subsequently coming into the corporation are estopped to attack the validity of the thirty thousand shares.

There can, however, be no estoppel based on that ground for the following, if for no other, reason.

It appears that of the thirty thousand shares of common stock present at the meeting, Powell, West, Pitts and Henry held and voted it all; and of the fifteen hundred and eighty preferred shares present, the same four individuals voted five hundred shares in person and two of them voted six hundred and thirty-five shares as proxies, a total of eleven hundred and thirty-five. Thus the beneficiaries of the so-called ratification and approval were the ones who [160]*160voted it. There is no showing to the effect that the holders of the six hundred and thirty-five shares that were represented by proxies were notified that such a proposal would be submitted to the meeting. General proxies given to an agent cannot be used by the holder to commit the principals to acts done by the agent for his own aggrandizement so as to estop the principal from complaining thereat, unless the principal was advised of the proposed action in advance and expressly or impliedly approved thereof. Rice & Hutchins v. Triplex Shoe Co., et al., 16 Del. Ch. 298, 147 A. 317, affirmed 17 Del. Ch. 356, 152 A. 342, 72 A. L. R. 932.

The action of these four men in thus casting the votes that authorized the giving to themselves of one hundred and fifty thousand shares of stock for thirty thousand of the same kind of shares without additional consideration, does not have the effect of estopping the stockholders from objecting to the exchange or from questioning the validity of the original issue of the thirty thousand shares.

I recur now to the question of the consideration for the thirty thousand shares originally issued to Powell, West, Pitts and Henry, as the nominees of the old F. H. Smith Company and its sole owners.

This question assumes three aspects. The first is a question of fact and the other two are questions of law.

As to the question of fact. This has to do with what was the actual consideration for the thirty thousand shares. The resolution of the directors authorizing the issuance of the shares was adopted at the first meeting of the board on June 1, 1920. It is set out in full in the statement of facts supra. An offer came from the old F. H. Smith Company to the defendant “to sell such amount of the preferred stock of this company (the defendant) as may be determined, at such price as may be determined, in consideration of the issuance to them (it) of the common stock of this company to the amount of thirty thousand (30,000) shares without par value.”

[161]*161The offer was accepted and the directors authorized the issuance of the stock. The offer was considered by the directors as being one “to sell to this corporation the services herein above described,” that is, the services of selling preferred stock.

This is what the official minutes of the corporation show. Yet the attempt is now made to engraft something else upon the consideration. The defendant Henry undertakes to do this.

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Bluebook (online)
156 A. 207, 18 Del. Ch. 150, 1931 Del. Ch. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blair-v-f-h-smith-co-delch-1931.