Brolaski v. Carr

105 S.W. 284, 127 Mo. App. 279, 1907 Mo. App. LEXIS 496
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 5, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 105 S.W. 284 (Brolaski v. Carr) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brolaski v. Carr, 105 S.W. 284, 127 Mo. App. 279, 1907 Mo. App. LEXIS 496 (Mo. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

BLAND, P. J.

Omitting caption and signatures the petition is as follows:

“Plaintiff for cause of action states that the defendant is a corporation duly organized and existing under and by virtue of the laws of the State of Missouri, and that the defendant John Frank Carr was at the time and times hereinafter mentioned and now is president thereof.

“Plaintiff further alleges that said corporation is organized for the purpose of manufacturing a gate or gates for the purpose of starting horses to run on race tracks throughout the United States.

“Plaintiff further states that heretofore, to-wit, on or about the twenty-third of September, 1903, the said John Frank Carr, for himself or acting for and representing said company, but whether he was so acting as the representative of said company or for and in his individual behalf and capacity, plaintiff does not know, for the purpose of inducing plaintiff to purchase shares of stock in said corporation, represented to H. Brolaski, acting then and there as the agent of plaintiff, that said corporation was a full paid-up corporation in currency of the United States, in the sum of $30,000; that one O. A. P. Tilles, an influential and moneyed man, was a large stockholder in said company; that the plan and device owned by said company for starting horses as aforesaid had been tested, and found to be a success, and that said corporation had contracts in the city of St. Louis and Hot Springs, Arkansas, for the erection, maintenance and operating of said gates, whereby the said company would receive large sums of money; that said company was in a solvent and thriving condition.

“Plaintiff further states that the defendant John Frank Carr further represented to her that the stock so about to be sold was the stock of the company, and was sold by the company to plaintiff, and that the money to be derived from said sale was to be used by said com-[282]*282party, and not for the individual benefit of the said John Frank Carr.

“Plaintiff further alleges that each and every one of said above representations were false and fraudulently made by the said John Frank Carr, for the purpose of fraudulently inducing plaintiff to purchase ten shares of stock in said company for the sum of one hundred dollars each, or a total sum of one thousand dollars, and when so made were well known by said Carr to be false.

“That the plaintiff relying upon said representations purchased of the defendant John Frank Carr, ten shares of stock for the sum of one hundred dollars each, and plaintiff alleges that said stock was the stock of the said defendant John Frank Carr or the stock of the defendant company, and that the said John Frank Carr was acting for himself when he made said representations to plaintiff as aforesaid, and sold said stock to plaintiff, or was acting in his capacity as representative of the defendant company, and plaintiff states that she is ignorant whether the former or latter is true; that said stock is utterly worthless, and that said right to make and sell the said electric horse starting gate is also worthless. That said company has no valuable assets, but on the contrary its entire assets are worthless.

“Plaintiff herewith files said ten shares of stock in the defendant company and offers and tenders the same to defendants.

“Wherefore, by reason of the premises, plaintiff asks that said contract be held to be false, fraudulent and void, and that the defendants be required to return to her the said sum of one thousand dollars so paid by her to him for it, and for costs.”

The answer is as follows:

“The defendants by their attorney, for answer to plaintiff’s petition, admits that the defendant Carr Electrical Horse Starting Machine Co., is a corporation as [283]*283alleged, and that defendant John Frank Carr is president thereof, and that said corporation is organized for the purpose of manufacturing a gate or gates for the purpose of starting horses to run races on race tracks "throughout the United States. And further answering both defendants deny each and every other alleged cause of action in plaintiff’s petition set forth.

“And having fully answered, defendants pray to be discharged with their costs.”

The court found" the ten shares of stock sold to plaintiff was the individual property of Carr, and that the sale was fraudulent, cancelled the sale and, on a tender of the stock to Carr, rendered judgment against him for one thousand dollars from which he appealed. Carr had secured letters patent on the device named in the petition, from the government of the United States and from the governments of other countries. At the date of the formation of the corporation, he also had some machinery and leases on shops fitted up to manufacture the device, all of which he transferred to the corporation. The capital stock of the company was $30,-000. The original subscribers for the stock are as follows :

No. of

Name. Residence. Shares.

John F. Carr, St. Louis, Missouri, 260

Daniel J. Waugh, St. Louis, Missouri, 10

W. H. Wiedmer, St. Louis, Missouri, 10

Frederick Wiedmer, St. Louis, Missouri, 10

John F. Gilbride, St. Louis, Missouri, 10

One-half the stock was paid up in the following manner : Carr had $15,000 in bank, against this deposit he drew four checks for $1,000 each, in favor of each of the other four incorporators. These incorporators deposited these checks in bank, and then drew their separate checks in favor of the corporation for the same amount. Carr then drew his check for the balance of the $15,000, [284]*284in favor of the corporation, and in this manner Carr’s deposit of $15,000 was transferred from his account to the credit of the corporation. A few days after the incorporation was perfected, the board of directors, by unanimous vote, bought for and in the name of the corporation, all of Carr’s patents, machinery and leases on shops for the sum of $15,000 and in this manner Carr became repossessed of the original $15,000, and the corporation was left with patents, machinery and shops but had no cash. The incorporators other than Carr took and paid Carr for one share of stock each, leaving him the holder of 296 shares. Ten of these shares he sold to plaintiff for $1,000; ten others he sold to another person for the same sum. He made one of the starting gates or machines, mentioned in the petition, which was tested on several race tracks near the city of St. Louis in 1904, and was used on one of these tracks in regular competing horse races for a prize; and the testimony tends to show the device was eminently successful in protecting the horses on the start and in securing a fair and even start, but since 1904 the machine has not been operated upon any race track at any place. Why it has not been introduced where horse racing is permitted by law is not explained in the evidence.

Plaintiff’s evidence tends to show that Harry Brolaski, her son, was her general business agent, and her agent to make the purchase of stock in the corporation. He testified Carr told him that, “This starting company had been organized and incorporated for thirty thous- and dollars paid up, and that almost all the shares had been sold, probably fifteen or twenty left, and he went on to tell me what contracts he had; that he had tested the machine, and the contracts that he had at Hot Springs and St. Louis for this starting machine.

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147 S.W. 136 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1912)

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Bluebook (online)
105 S.W. 284, 127 Mo. App. 279, 1907 Mo. App. LEXIS 496, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brolaski-v-carr-moctapp-1907.