Calivada Colonization Co. v. Hays

119 F. 202, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 5258
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 3, 1902
DocketNo. 6
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 119 F. 202 (Calivada Colonization Co. v. Hays) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Calivada Colonization Co. v. Hays, 119 F. 202, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 5258 (circtwdpa 1902).

Opinion

ACHESON, Circuit Judge.

The complainant is the Calivada Colonization Company, a corporation of the state of Colorado, and the defendant is Milton D. Hays, a citizen- of the state of Pennsylvania. The bill was filed on July 13, 1901, by A. C. Hays, as receiver of the complainant company, and in its name. He was appointed such receiver by an order of this court made on December 30, 1900, on a bill filed at No. 17, May term, 1900. The heading of the bill in this case, after naming the complainant and defendant in the usual form, proceeds thus: “With notice to Elmer E. Stewart” and 52 other named' persons or corporations, who (the bill shows) respectively hold shares of the issue of stock which the bill impeaches and seeks to avoid. There is on file a paper which purports to be an acknowledgment by 17 of these persons of notice of the suit, and an affidavit of service of such notice on 10 others of the named persons. None of the 53 named persons or corporations, however, is a party to the suit. The case was set down by the parties for final hearing, and was so heard, upon the pleadings, namely, the bill, the answer of Milton D. Hays, and replication, and the proofs.

The bill sets forth that the Calivada Colonization Company is a corporation of the state of Colorado, and was incorporated on the nth -day of March, 1895, by letters patent, its authorized capital stock being $250,000, consisting of 250,000 shares, each of the par value of $1; that in said letters patent M. D. Hays, C. C. Marble, Frank Goodnow, .and A. C. Hays were named as directors of said company; that on the 13th day of March, 1895, three of these named persons, to wit, M. D. Hays, C. C. Marble, and A. C. Hays, held the first meeting of the board of directors, the minutes of the meeting showing that M. D. Hays was president, C. C. Marble secretary, and A. B. Grindall treasurer ; and that the said board of directors at that meeting adopted the ■following resolution:

“Resolved, that the board of directors of the Calivada Colonization Company, in consideration of the services, efforts, and information acquired and money expended by M. D. Hays in behalf of the company, hereby directs the issue to him of 126,000 shares of the capital stock at the par value of one ■dollar each in compensation therefor.”

[204]*204The bill avers that at the time of said meeting the persons who acted as directors were not stockholders in said company, and therefore were not qualified for the office of director-, and acted in violation of section 481 of the Annotated Statutes of Colorado; that at the time of the passage of said resolution the said M. D. Hays gave no consideration therefor to said company; that the purpose of the resolution was to secure to him the control and perpetual management of the company; and that soon thereafter all moneys expended by him in behalf of the company were repaid to him by the company. The bill, inter alia, avers that the defendant, Milton D. Hays; while president of the complainant company, on June 9, 1896, submitted to certain named persons now stockholders of the company a statement signed by F. R. Myers, then secretary of the company, setting forth-the liabilities of the company, and that upon the presentation of this statement, or soon thereafter, the defendant, acting as president of the company, sold to these persons 40,000 shares of the company’s stock; that the persons who subscribed for said 40,000 shares of stock “were not advised at the time of said subscription that the controlling interest had been fraudulently and without consideration given to the defendant”; and that the defendant “unlawfully, and with intent to commit a fraud, withheld such knowledge from the' said subscribers, and in violation of his obligation to such corporation misled and deceived the said subscribers,'and unlawfully secured from them their subscription and their money.” The bill further avers that thé “defendant never conveyed any real estate, or any option for the purchase of real estate, or gave any other lawful consideration, for the said stock issue made under the resolution of March 13, 1895”; and that “the adoption of the said resolution and the issue of said stock was a fraud on the said company, and upon all. the bona fide holders and purchasers of the stock of said company, who subsequently became holders and purchasers of stock without knowledge thereof,” and also in violation of the constitution and laws-of the state of Colorado. The bill avers that soon after the passage of the resolution of March 13, 1895, the defendant, as. president of the company, “caused a credit to be entered in the stock books of the company in his name for 126,000 shares of stock, and furthermore caused an' issue to the said defendant, Hays, of certificates-thereof signed by him as president, and, as shown by the record of the said company, had from time to time transferred portions of the-same to persons named herein as owners thereof,” and that these transferees claim and exercise control of said stock. The bill then proceeds to set forth the names of “the present holders of said stock, with the number of shares held by each, as shown by the records-of said company”; and after thus naming 53 present holders of this-issue of stock, with the number of shares held by each, the list concludes thus: “And M. D. Hays, 18,218.” The bill avers that the present holders of “said unlawfully issued stock received the same as gifts from the' said M. D. Hays,” and “charged with notice of the want of' consideration and unlawful issue thereof.” The bill states that “this bill of complaint is filed on the written request of a majority of the board of directors of the said company, and by par[205]*205ties owning and holding the majority of the properly issued stock ■of this company.” The main prayers of the bill are that the court “decree that each and every share of said stock, aggregating 126,000 shares, be declared null and void, issued' without consideration, in violation of law, and in fraud of the said corporation, and the rights •of the bona fide owners and purchasers of the stock of said company,” and that the court decree “that said stock be canceled,” and the “company be reinstated in the ownership of the said 126,000 ■shares of s+ock.”

The answer of Milton D. Hays, the defendant (which is under -oath), responsively and fully denies all and singular the allegations ■of the bill upon which the supposed right of the complainant to relief rests. Specifically, the answer traverses and denies each and every, averment of the bill, charging fraudulent or unlawful intent, purpose, or act in the adoption by the board of directors of the resolution of March 13, 1895, or in the issue of the stock thereby authorized, and the allegation of the want of consideration for the same, .and denies that all moneys expended by the defendant in behalf of the company were repaid to him. In respect to the subscription for 40,000 shares of stock, the answer, while admitting that as president ■of the company, and acting under a resolution of the board of directors, the defendant sold to the named subscribers these 40,000 shares, denies that he misled or deceived them, or withheld from them any information as to the issue of the 126,000 shares to himself, and avers that they were fully advised of the said issue and of the status of affairs, and that they subscribed for and got said stock from the company at the price of only 25 cents per share.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
119 F. 202, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 5258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/calivada-colonization-co-v-hays-circtwdpa-1902.