Buerck v. Mid-Nation Iron Products Co.

245 S.W. 45, 295 Mo. 263, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 113
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedAugust 28, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 245 S.W. 45 (Buerck v. Mid-Nation Iron Products Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Buerck v. Mid-Nation Iron Products Co., 245 S.W. 45, 295 Mo. 263, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 113 (Mo. 1922).

Opinion

*274 which will be referred to as the “Buerck Case,” comes here upon a special appeal granted by one of the judges of this court from an order of Division No. 14 of the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis, overruling a motion of defendant Mid-Nation Iron Products Company to vacate the appointment of a receiver.

The second of said two cases, which will be referred to as the “Trust Company case,” comes here upon an *275 appeal granted to intervening- plaintiffs and the receiver defendant by the Circuit Court of Butler County from an order refusing to set aside and vacate its order appointing E. E! Penzel receiver for the same property involved in the Buerck Case. The two cases were separately briefed and have been consolidated in this court and were argued and submitted together.

I. In the Buerck Case the petition in substance alleged that plaintiffs, respondents here, are bondholders and stockholders in defendant Mid-Nation Iron Products Company,herein referred to as “Iron Products Company,” and bring the action on behalf of themselves and others similarly situated; that said Iron Products Company is a Missouri corporation, having its principal office and place of business in the city of St. Louis; that on or about January 20, 1917, defendant Earl A. Clemons and others caused said Iron Products Company to be organized as a corporation as an instrument for their, fraudulent purposes and to take title to a certain tract of iron-ore-bearing land in Wayne and Butler counties in this State, comprising about 25,000 acres; that the incorporators of said Iron Products .Company did not own said land at the time said corporation was organized, and falsely swore in the articles of association that they did own the same and that it was of the value of $2,000,000; that said corporation did not acquire deed to said land until several months thereafter; that defendant Clemons and his associates caused stock to be issued to themselves as follows: $1,614,700 par value to Earl A. Clemons; $5,000 par value to William E. Leeper; $5,000 par value to W. F. Groetzinger; $100 par value to J. F. Lindsay; $100 par value to E. Abby Lindsay; $100 par value to F. J. Quinn.

Said petition then proceeded to allege that none of the above named persons invested any real money in said Iron Products Company; that they proceeded to issue bonds in the sum of $1,000,000 secured by mortgage upon said lands and that defendant Clemons sold *276 $160,000 in par value of said bonds before he had secured title in the corporation to more than a small part of said lands; that Clemons and his associates paid to Concrete Investment Company of St. Louis the sum of $120,000 and to a St. Louis bant the sum of $18,000, which represented the total purchase price of said lands, and thereafter had title conveyed to one Cochran, trustee, and by him to said Iron Products Company.

That, upon the conveyance of the property to Iron Products Company, defendant Clemons caused said corporation to issue to himself promissory notes' aggregating $220;000, secured by double that amount in face value of the first mortgage bonds of said corporation as collateral, without any consideration whatever therefor to said corporation; that while said corporation property cost defendant Clemons and his associates only about $140,000, it thereupon became and was subject to a $2,000,000 capital stock issue of said corporation, $220,000 liability to defendant Clemons on said notes and a million dollar bond issue; that out of $160,000 first received from the sale of bondsj $138,000- went to apply on the purchase price of the lands, and $22,000 thereof was wrongfully appropriated by said Clemons to his own use, in addition to the $220,000 note.

That the $160,000 of bonds were sold to Mid-Yale Steel Company, and the real consideration for the payment of the money'by that company was not the security supporting said bonds, but was a contract from the Iron Products Company giving such Steel Company the right to prospect, mine and take ore from the land, and that if said company was not satisfied with the land from an ore standpoint it might cancel the contract and retain the bonds; that after Spending a large amount of time and money said Steel Company rejected the property as not being a satisfactory ore proposition; that after such rejection, defendant Clemons began selling such bonds of the Iron Ore Products remaining in its treasury as he was able to sell to plaintiffs and others sim *277 ilarly situated “under every variety of false representation which could he made,” and sold to plaintiffs and such others approximately $100,000 of such bonds and applied the greater portion of the proceeds from such sales upon the aforesaid $220,000 note payable to himself, so issued to him by the corporation without consideration therefor, and thereby reduced the alleged amount of said note to approximately $140,000; that all but a small amount of the remainder of said bonds have under various pretexts been converted by defendant Clemons and his associate, defendant Thomas B. McPherson, to their own use and ‘ ‘have been traded, bartered, exchanged and pledged by them in a great variety of ways and manner unknown to these plaintiffs” and not disclosed by the books of the corporation, and are now outstanding and an apparent lien against the corporation; that there is now an apparent outstanding indebtedness against the corporation in excess of $700,000 and that the property is worth no more than when it was purchased in the year 1917.

The petition then alleges that no mining machinery has been placed on the property or any buildings erected thereon and that no mining or development work has been done thereon and no ore sold therefrom, and that expenses have at all times been paid from proceeds of bonds sold to plaintiffs and others similarly situated, and that defendant and his associates and defendant directors of said corporation are selling and attempting to sell the bonds remaining in the treasury for the purpose of maintaining their salaries and other expenses and for application upon the said Clemons note.

*278 charge to be in excess of $100,000; that he has already paid himself, as aforesaid, $235,000 on the alleged purchase price of said property, has drawn a munificent salary from said company all these years, all without ever having invested a dollar in actual money in the said company and without ever having done or performed any services of benefit to said company or to anyone else, except himself.

“That defendant Thomas B. McPherson has been an active aider and participant in all the fraudulent acts of said defendant Clemons heretofore enumerated, has received from said company a very large amount of the bonds of said company without any. consideration whatever to said company for the receipt of same, is selling or attempting to sell, is pledging or attempting to pledge, said bonds for his own personal advantage wherever he may be able to do so, and is in addition thereto claiming to own $75,000 of the outstanding stock of said company; that defendants James N. Hull, James P. Pierce and J. Hartzler Redhead are nominal stockholders in said company and constitute the board of directors, were placed there by and with the connivance and solicitation of defendant Earl A. Clemons and defendant Thomas B.

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Bluebook (online)
245 S.W. 45, 295 Mo. 263, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buerck-v-mid-nation-iron-products-co-mo-1922.