Bland v. Lee C. Bland Corp.

16 Conn. Super. Ct. 268, 16 Conn. Supp. 268, 1949 Conn. Super. LEXIS 80
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedAugust 4, 1949
DocketFile 78720
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 16 Conn. Super. Ct. 268 (Bland v. Lee C. Bland Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bland v. Lee C. Bland Corp., 16 Conn. Super. Ct. 268, 16 Conn. Supp. 268, 1949 Conn. Super. LEXIS 80 (Colo. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

ALCORN, J.

The plaintiff seeks a receiver and dissolution of the. defendant corporation.

The defendant was organized in the latter part of 1943. The plaintiff’s husband has been president, guiding head, and a director continuously ever since, and the plaintiff became vice president and a director in 1944. The defendant maintains a display room and office in New York City but the nature of its business requires no capital investment in realty or equipment. Its activity centers upon shopping about for items which can be cheaply imitated and manufactured for sale in chain stores, and collecting a commission through obtaining a manufacturer to produce and a retailer to sell them. No personnel is involved beyond a few employees in the office. The outstanding stock is *269 distributed, except for an insignificant number of shares, be' tween the plaintiff, her husband, and trustees for their two daughters. The defendant, in brief, is a elosely'held family corporation serving as a medium for the husband to operate as a commission salesman.

In 1948 the plaintiff’s domestic ties reached the breaking point. Her husband left her, and in May, 1948, they entered into an agreement one of the terms of which was that, in the event that a decree of divorce should thereafter be granted to either party, the plaintiff would surrender her stock in the de' fendant and sever her connection as an officer and director. In furtherance of this agreement she delivered her stock “in es' crow” to her New York attorney to hold, and to deliver to her husband only in exchange for a certified copy of a decree of absolute divorce. No divorce has been granted and the plain' tiff’s stock is still held under this agreement.

The present action is a part of litigation which has followed the domestic break. In June, 1948, the plaintiff brought action in Connecticut for divorce, the husband filed a cross'complaint, and the action is about to be reached for assignment for trial. The defendant corporation has sued in New York for the plain' tiff’s stock, claiming to own it, and that action is pending. The plaintiff’s husband went to Reno, Nevada, in October, 1948, in part at least, to obtain a divorce, but was enjoined by this court from proceeding with such an action.

This background enlightens and explains many incidents in the affairs of the defendant but the issues in the present action must be resolved independently of collateral contentions. The single question now presented is whether or not the plaintiff is entitled to a receiver and a dissolution of this defendant.

It is the defendant’s position, in the first place, that the plain' tiff is not a stockholder entitled to maintain this action under General Statutes, § 5226, either because of the “escrow” under the agreement with her husband or because of a claimed pur' chase of her stock by the corporation. It is undisputed that the stock issued to the plaintiff exceeds the 10 per cent required under the statute. The purchase, which is now claimed to have been made in April, 1948, is not established. The only com' ment necessary upon this issue is that there is no evidence of compliance with the statutory requirements prerequisite to the defendant acquiring its own stock; § 5181; the purported pur' chase finds official recognition in January, 1949, after the pres' *270 ent action was commenced, in a self-serving minute of a directors’ meeting of which the plaintiff had no notice; and the plaintiff’s husband, who dominates the defendant’s affairs, recognized the plaintiff as the owner of her stock in the agreement he made with her only about a month after the belatedly claimed purchase.

As an alternative to the claim of purchase the defendant insists that the plaintiff foregoes her right as a stockholder to obtain the relief sought here by reason of the “escrow.” Carried to its ultimate conclusion, that reasoning, assuming the agreement to be valid, effectually eliminates her as a stockholder forever, should neither party have ground for divorce or if the husband, alone having grounds, should refrain from seeking a divorce.

The deposit of the plaintiff’s stock with her attorney to be delivered upon the happening of an event which has not materialized is legally inoperative to divest her of title. Wolcott v. Coleman, 1 Conn. 375, 381; Huntington v. Smith, 4 Conn. 235, 237; Coe v. Turner, 5 Conn. 86, 92. There is no proof of that intent to make a present delivery which would result in the plaintiff parting with dominion and control over the stock. Grilley v. Atkins, 78 Conn. 380. Since the element of delivery which is essential to transfer title to a certificate under the Uniform Stock Transfer Act (§5187) is lacking, it cannot be said that title to the stock has passed. Neither is it equitable to say, in this transaction between parties who are equally in full possession of the facts, that ownership is to be conclusively controlled by the indorsement appearing upon the certificate under § 5185. Gray v. Graham, 87 Conn. 601. It is concluded that the plaintiff has a stock ownership within the meaning of § 5226 entitling her to maintain this action.

It remains to consider whether she is entitled to a receiver and dissolution of the defendant. The reasons advanced by the plaintiff fall under the four main propositions that an illegal attempt has been made to oust her as vice president and director, the defendant has failed to meet the legal requirements of statutes and its own by-laws in its operations, the plaintiff has been denied access to the defendant’s books and records, and funds of the defendant have been diverted to the individual benefit of the plaintiff’s husband and others.

In the decision of the question presented, the court is invested with a large discretion “to be governed by its judgment, fairly *271 exercised upon die facts before it, as to what, upon the whole, is wisest and best for all concerned.” Ray v. Robert Price Coal Co., 80 Conn. 558, 561. That discretion, nevertheless, is a sound judicial discretion, in the application of which the avail' ability and adequacy of other remedy is a consideration to be carefully weighed. Chatfield Co. v. Coffey Laundries, Inc., 111 Conn. 497, 501. A receivership is a drastic remedy, and if some course less stringent will meet the situation that course should be taken. Massoth v. Central Bus Corporation, 104 Conn. 683, 695; Chatfield Co. v. Coffey Laundries, Inc., supra. In weighing the circumstances in the light of the grounds for the appointment of a receiver specified in § 5226, the final ground described in the statute as “any good and sufficient reason” is to be considered from the standpoint of causes of the same gen' eral nature as those specifically enumerated and such as are recognized on general equitable principles as grounds for receiv' ership and dissolution. Olechny v. Thadeus Kosciuszko Society, 128 Conn. 534, 538.

As previously stated, this corporation benefits largely from the personal efforts of the plaintiff’s husband.

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Bluebook (online)
16 Conn. Super. Ct. 268, 16 Conn. Supp. 268, 1949 Conn. Super. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bland-v-lee-c-bland-corp-connsuperct-1949.