Butler v. Beach

74 A. 748, 82 Conn. 417, 1909 Conn. LEXIS 69
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedDecember 17, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 74 A. 748 (Butler v. Beach) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Butler v. Beach, 74 A. 748, 82 Conn. 417, 1909 Conn. LEXIS 69 (Colo. 1909).

Opinion

Baldwin, C. J.

This suit is brought for the price of goods sold to the defendants by the insolvent corporation, Hills & Company, Incorporated, on and before April 24th, 1905. The receiver was appointed in May, 1905.

Hills & Company, Incorporated, was organized to succeed to the grocery business of Hills & Company, copartners. In November, 1903, this partnership owed the defendant Mary B. Beach, and James G. Batterson, about $19,000, to *419 recover which they sued the firm in July, 1904, and levied an attachment on goods and moneys amounting to more than the sum of the indebtedness. Subsequently they agreed with the firm and their creditors to accept one third of their claim in full payment. This the firm promised to pay, but afterward, at their request and that of their creditors, Mary B. Beach was induced to agree to accept, in lieu of her share of it, $2,000 in cash and $1,500 in preferred stock of a corporation which the creditors proposed to organize under the general incorporation laws of Connecticut. This agreement was conditioned on the insertion in the articles of association, the by-laws, and the certificates of preferred stock of the new corporation, of a provision for her special benefit and protection, that in case the holder of any shares of the preferred capital stock should be indebted to the company at the time of any regular annual stockholders’ meeting for goods purchased, or in other manner, the company should, upon request, call in the stock of such stockholder at par to an amount not exceeding $1,000 in any one year to' one stockholder, and not exceeding the amount of such indebtedness; and thereupon such stockholders should be released and discharged from such indebtedness to the amount of such stock so called in at its par value, and such stock might afterward be reissued and sold to other persons. This provision and the right to purchase goods of Hills & Company, Incorporated, and to discharge her liability therefor by the surrender of her preferred capital stock, were held out to Mary B. Beach by the creditors and said firm as an inducement to her to take ■ the $1,500 of the preferred capital stock in lieu of money, in part payment of the percentage of her claim agreed upon in settlement.

Relying upon this inducement, the representations of the creditors and said firm in relation thereto, and the right to discharge any liability for goods purchased of Hills & Company, Incorporated, by procuring the calling in of her stock, *420 Mary B. Beach dismissed her action in the Superior Court, released her attachment lien and became a party to the organization of Hills & Company, Incorporated, and a stockholder therein to the extent of $1,500 of its preferred capital stock.

The creditors who made these representations and stipulations were, with few exceptions, the same who were creditors of the corporation when the receiver was appointed. In August, 1904, its organization was effected and the stipulations fulfilled; Mary B. Beach receiving the $2,000 in cash and $1,500 in the preferred stock.

Within the next few months she purchased groceries of Hills & Company, Incorporated, to the amount sued for by the receiver, which was less than $1,000; the creditors who are represented by him knowing that she bought on the faith of the special agreement that she could pay in shares of preferred stock, and that she would insist upon exercising that right, and but for that would not have made the purchase.

In July, 1905, at the regular annual meeting of the stockholders of Hills & Company, Incorporated, it did, upon her request, call in her preferred stock at par, to an amount not exceeding $1,000, in settlement and discharge of her indebtedness to it; and she then and there surrendered her stock to that amount.

Including the value of the groceries so bought, Mary B. Beach has received less than twenty-five per cent of her claim against the copartnership. The general creditors of the corporation (being with few exceptions the creditors who were parties to the special agreement with her) have been paid by the receiver dividends amounting to forty per cent of their claims.

In constituting such a corporation as that of which the plaintiff is a receiver, its promoters have the right to provide in the organization papers for more than one class of shares in its capital stock, provided “a description of the different *421 classes with the terms on which they are respectively created,” be set forth in the certificate of incorporation, and this “may also contain any lawful provisions which the incorporators may choose to insert for the regulation of the business of the corporation or for defining and regulating the powers of the corporation,, its officers, directors, and stockholders or any class of stockholders.” Public Acts of 1903, p. 169, § 63, p. 170, § 64. Hills & Company, Incorporated, was organized upon the basis of having more than one class of shares, and a description of the terms on which the preferred stock was to be issued, including a provision for trading it out in purchases from the corporation by those who held it, was duly inserted in what the pleadings term the “articles of association,” which we understand to mean the statutory certificate of incorporation.

This provision was a lawful one. The object of having a class of preferred shares is always to give a preference to those who hold them over other shareholders, but what this preference shall be it is, within reasonable limits, for the corporators to determine. That given in the present instance does not exceed such limits. It converted a creditor of the old concern into a stockholder in the new concern, with the privilege of trading out the amount of her stock, to the extent of $1,000, in buying groceries from it, before the next annual meeting of the corporation. Hills & Company, Incorporated, when it came into existence, received its franchise burdened by this condition in favor of its preferred shareholders. It had then contracted .no debts of its own. It was therefore solvent, and the statutory provision that no corporation shall purchase any of its own stock when it is insolvent, or would by such purchase render itself immediately insolvent (Public Acts of 1903, p. 153, § 11), had no application to the feature of its organization papers now in question.

The defendant’s right was conditioned on her request for the calling in of her stock at a regular annual meeting of the *422 company. She made such a request, and the company’s compliance with it in July, 1905, was no violation of the statutory prohibition. True it was then insolvent, but it was simply doing what it had bound itself irrevocably to do when it was solvent.

There is nothing in the claim that the shareholders could hold no annual meeting, nor take such action, while the company was in the hands of a receiver. His appointment did not ipso facto dissolve the corporation. It remained, so far as the record discloses, in full life. The shares of its capital stock could be transferred from one to another as freely as before, and its shareholders could still meet and take any action not inconsistent with the relations incident to the existence of the receivership.

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Bluebook (online)
74 A. 748, 82 Conn. 417, 1909 Conn. LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/butler-v-beach-conn-1909.