Brennan v. Rollman

145 S.E. 260, 151 Va. 715, 1928 Va. LEXIS 269
CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedOctober 30, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 145 S.E. 260 (Brennan v. Rollman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brennan v. Rollman, 145 S.E. 260, 151 Va. 715, 1928 Va. LEXIS 269 (Va. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinions

McLemore, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Petitioners, Mary Brennan, National Equitable Finance Company, Chippie Williams and others are here asking a review and correction of errors resulting from the entry of two decrees of April 1, 1927, and June.8, [717]*717-1927, by the Chancery Court of the city of Richmond in the consolidated causes hereafter designated as Mary Brennan, et als. v. Albert Rollman, et als. In the first of which the court annulled two previous decrees, one entered March 2, 1927, and the other, a supplemental order of March 16, 1927, thereby practically adjudicating the principles of the cause, and by the order of June 8, 1927, gave effect to the decree of April 1, 1927, and ordered the property then in the hands of the court’s receivers, returned to its owner the National Equitable Investment Company, Incorporated.

National Equitable Investment Company, hereafter referred to as investment company, was incorporated in Virginia January 24, 1920, with its principal office in Richmond, with F. M. Jackson, Edgar P. East and Henry E. Clark, incorporators, and these with Edward B. Arnett, secretary, and B. Webster, composed the board of directors. Of this board Jackson and East were the principal actors, and entirely dominated the corporation.

Seventeen thousand three hundred and thirty-five shares of preferred stock was sold, for which the investment company received $1,733,500.00 and 19.564 shares of common stock was sold for ten cents per share, aggregating $1,956.40, a total of $1,735,456.40. The preferred stock had no voting privileges unless the company had failed for four consecutive quarterly periods to meet the dividend requirements. This stock was placed upon the market, and in large measure sold, by Spence & Company, New York brokers. The common stock was distributed about as follows: To Jackson 3,550 shares, to East 4,550 shares or 8,100 shares out of a total issue of 19.564 shares. The remaining 11,464 shares of the common was distributed over a large area and to numerous purchasers, the result of which distribution [718]*718was, for all practical purposes, to place the control of the corporation in the hands of Jackson and East, the holders of 8,100 shares of the stock.

The charter of the investment corporation was liberal in the powers conferred, but the central purpose of the company seems to have been to conduct a semi-banking business, wherein small loans are made upon high rates of interest, usually upon personal security. To this end the company acquired the stock, or a major portion thereof, of six small loan companies with numerous branches and one shopping system company, all of which were operating north of Virginia — -and in so' far as appears from the record — successfully. The company domesticated in New York and had its principal office there.

On June 16, 1921, American Institute of Medicine, Incorporated, was chartered and organized under the laws of Virginia for the ostensible purpose of publishing a medical journal. The capital structure consisted of 1,648 shares of preferred and 4,645 shares of common stock, of which the investment company owned 1,076 shares of the preferred and 2,886 shares of the common. There seems to have been no reason, justification or excuse for the creation of this American Institute of Medicine, Incorporated, from the standpoint of the investment company.

Jackson and East were also officers of the institute, and caused the investment company to purchase its stock to the extent of $105,414.00 and to lend it the sum of $568,798,04 by the devious methods of having the institute issue to them (Jackson and East) the companies notes, which Jackson and East caused the investment company to purchase, upon their individual endorsement of the institute notes, but without recourse upon them. They also had the investment com-[719]*719party make other cash advances to the institute amounting to $75,000.00. The result of all this being" that the investment company had in stock and unsecured notes of the institute, the sum of $749,212.04.

As to what became of this large amount of money going into the hands of the officers of the institute the record is silent, but the fact does appear in the record that upon a winding up by a receiver appointed by the Chancery Court of the city of Richmond, of the affairs of the American Institute of Medicine, the total assets were about $300.00.

With this tremendous loss, and impairment of the capital of the investment company, it found its credit seriously impaired, dividends on the preferred and common stock had to be discontinued, and discontent on the part of the stockholders became general, and properly so.

A stock salesman employed by E. H. Spence & Company, of New York, in connection with the original sale of the stock of the investment company, Charles B. Frasca by name, now comes into the picture, and representing a small minority of the stockholders, brought vexatious litigation in New York with the ostensible purpose of rescinding the subscription contracts and having the money they had paid on the stock returned. These suits apparently resulted unfavorably to the plaintiffs, but seriously affected the credit of the investment company.

On or about the first of January, 1926, John W. Hatch, another salesman of Spence & Company, himself also a stockholder, organized a stockholders committee of which he was chairman, for the purpose of protecting as best they might the minority interest in the corporation.

Prior to the happening of these last mentioned events, [720]*720investment company, withdrew its principal business office from New York, and its corporate domicile for all purposes thereafter, was, and is, Richmond, Virginia.

In November, 1925, there was organized under the laws of Virginia the Continental Finance Corporation with its principal office in Richmond, and the following officers and directors: Sylvester Z. Moore, of Pennsylvania, president, R. Hill Fleet, of Richmond, vice-president, treasurer and director, W. Fleet Kirk, of Richmond, second vice-president and director, Oscar L. Shewmake, of Richmond, secretary and director, and Edward B. Arnett, Sea Island, New Jersey, director.

This corporation, it is claimed, was organized for two major purposes, first, to‘take over all the assets of the investment company, thereby placing them beyond the reach of the courts of New York and New Jersey, wherein numerous suits were then pending against the company; and, second, to eliminate Jackson and East from control or any part in the management of the affairs of the company. Accordingly the finance corporation caused to be issued 850 shares of its capital stock, which was turned over to the investment company, for which the latter company caused to be transferred to finance corporation all of the stock held by it in the numerous subsidiary operating companies.

The result of all this was to place the operation of the subsidiary companies under the control of Continental Finance Corporation, with National Equitable Investment Company holding all- the capital stock of finance corporation, and therefore leaving the control of the entire properties in the same hands as .before the transfers were made.

This situation was far from satisfactory to those stockholders who knew of the gross, if not criminal, [721]

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Bluebook (online)
145 S.E. 260, 151 Va. 715, 1928 Va. LEXIS 269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brennan-v-rollman-vactapp-1928.